Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Census set to study grouping race, ethnicity questions

- Mike Schneider

U.S. Census Bureau officials said Friday they are ready to start examining changes that would combine race and ethnicity questions and add a Middle Eastern and North African category to the 2030 census questionna­ire, but they have to wait for another federal office to start the conversati­on.

That office is the White House Office of Management and Budget, which sets the definitions on race and ethnic background for all federal agencies. The Census Bureau has been using Office of Management and Budget standards that were set in 1997.

If the proposals are adopted for the 2030 census, they would mark one of the biggest changes to the census questionna­ire in recent years.

Several years before the last census in 2020, support was growing for combining the race and ethnicity questions into a single question and adding the Middle Eastern and North African category, also known as MENA. Census Bureau research said doing so would increase the accuracy of the once-a-decade U.S. head count, particular­ly among Hispanics and people of Middle Eastern or North African descent who are unsure how to answer the race question.

But those efforts were dropped after President Donald Trump became president. As a result, there was no MENA category, and the race and ethnicity questions were separated on the 2020 census form, leading to overwhelmi­ngly large numbers of Hispanic respondent­s to answer “some other race” for the race category, Census Bureau officials said.

“We are not surprised by the results. Our research predicted them,” Merarys Rios-Vargas, chief of the Ethnicity and Ancestry Branch at the Census Bureau, told members of the Census Bureau’s National Advisory Committee on Friday.

One of the committee members, Helen Hatab Samhan, a retired executive at the Arab American Institute, said it was preferable to add MENA as an ethnic category, such as Hispanic, rather than a race category like white, black, Asian, American Indian or Native Hawaiian.

Among the items the Census Bureau wants to research is the lack of responses to the race question among Hispanics, how Hispanics identified their race when they did answer the question and whether the location of the respondent­s made any difference in whether they answered those questions, officials said.

Once the conversati­on with the Office of Management and Budget gets going, it will be “jump-started” because the Census Bureau already has a trove of research, Census Bureau Director Robert Santos told committee members.

The census data are used for allocating congressio­nal seats among the states, redrawing political districts and distributi­ng federal funding.

In a statement on Friday, the Office of Management and Budget didn’t provide a timetable for when it would examine the issues raised by the Census Bureau.

“We are actively working to help ensure the Federal statistica­l system efficiently, effectively, and accurately captures the diversity of the American people,” the statement said.

 ?? JOHN ROARK/ THE IDAHO POST-REGISTER VIA AP, FILE ?? U.S. Census Bureau officials say they are ready to start examining changes that would combine race and ethnic questions and add a Middle Eastern and North African category on the 2030 census.
JOHN ROARK/ THE IDAHO POST-REGISTER VIA AP, FILE U.S. Census Bureau officials say they are ready to start examining changes that would combine race and ethnic questions and add a Middle Eastern and North African category on the 2030 census.

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