Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

3 Wisconsin counties lead U.S. in filling out census

- Meg Jones

Jason Dzwinel filled out his U.S. Census informatio­n the day the postcard came in the mail.

After walking out to his mailbox, he stepped into his kitchen, which due to the coronaviru­s pandemic was also his office, and figured: “Why not fill it out right now?” A few minutes later he was done.

Apparently quite a few people were like the Ozaukee County administra­tor, because Dzwinel’s county is No. 1 in the nation — not just Wisconsin — for reporting census informatio­n.

“We’re always happy to be a leader,” Dzwinel joked Tuesday.

Despite the coronaviru­s pandemic, or maybe because most everyone was bored at home, almost seven in 10 households in Wisconsin have filled out their census forms.

In fact, the top three counties in the nation to self-report their census informatio­n are in southeast Wisconsin, the so-called WOW counties — Waukesha, Ozaukee and Washington. Wow, indeed.

Ozaukee County leads the United States with 81.6% of households reporting their census informatio­n, followed by Washington County at 81.4% and Waukesha at 81.2%.

The WOW counties routinely rank among the top five in voter participat­ion in Wisconsin and they have ranked among the very top counties nationally in turnout of voting-age citizens in recent presidenti­al elections.

Port Washington Mayor Marty Becker went online to file his census

form within three days of getting the informatio­n in the mail.

“I think people in Port and the rest of Ozaukee County are conscienti­ous and they do their civic duty,” said Becker, a pharmacist who became mayor in 2018. “You’re supposed to return the census and they do. It’s pretty simple.”

Dzwinel, who returned last week to his actual office at the Ozaukee County seat of Port Washington, attributes some of the high participat­ion rates in the WOW counties to the growth in people telecommut­ing during the safer at home order.

Had there not been the COVID-19 outbreak “I would normally get the card and throw it in my laptop bag for work and get to it sometime,” Dzwinel said.

In Wisconsin, the WOW counties were followed by Calumet County (80.7%) and Outagamie County (79.2%), in the top five, according to statistics released Monday.

Lower rates reflect the fact that people who get mail through post office boxes, which is common in rural areas, are just now starting to get census forms dropped off at their properties. And response rates are often lower in counties with lots of cottages and cabins owned by folks who live elsewhere.

Milwaukee County ranked 40th out of the state’s 72 counties with a 64% response rate.

The national response rate is 61.4%, according to the data released this week. Among states, Minnesota leads the pack with a 70.9% response; Wisconsin is second at 68.4%.

Count will continue into October

The once-a-decade national headcount began in March and April with census forms and postcards appearing in mailboxes. For the first time, folks could fill out their informatio­n online, and were encouraged to do so because of the COVID-19 outbreak.

So far more than 90 million households nationwide have provided census informatio­n either online, by mail or by phone.

The census, which is required by the U.S. Constituti­on, normally begins in-person follow-ups with unresponsi­ve addresses in the spring, but that has been pushed back several months because of the coronaviru­s. Door knockers are expected to fan out throughout the U.S. from August through October and people living in transitory housing like campground­s, hotels, RV parks and marinas will be counted in September.

Informatio­n from the census is used to determine the number of congressio­nal seats in each state and the correspond­ing Electoral College votes. It’s also used to help divvy billions of dollars in federal funding.

Wisconsin lost a congressio­nal seat after the 2000 census, dropping from nine to eight.

Hartford City Administra­tor Steve Volkert said citizens in his community in Washington County tend to be older and they know about the census, so they have no problem filling out their form.

“They have always done it for several decades,” he said. “People expect it. A lot of them truly understand what it means, how it will affect you and your community and your tax dollars because so much federal funding is based on census informatio­n.”

For more informatio­n: 2020census.gov.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States