Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Census count running behind, advocates say

Virus forces shortened timeline

- DOUG THOMPSON

The shortened timeline for the U.S. Census Bureau to go door-to-door means a relatively rural and poorer state like Arkansas is likely to be undercount­ed, advocates said.

The bureau’s effort to finish the tally of the nation’s population starts Tuesday — and will be a month shorter than originally planned. This is a very compressed timeline for the bureau and private groups assisting the count to work under, census advocates and observers say.

The bureau’s plan before covid-19 struck called for two and a half months to reach more than one-third of the country’s population who have not self-reported. Census takers would have knocked doors from May 13 to July 31.

The pandemic led the bureau to change deadlines. The starting date was up to the bureau, but ending deadlines are set by law.

The bureau asked Congress to move deadlines back. Congress refused. Now the bureau must finish the work between Aug. 11 and Sept. 30.

“The bureau planned that this would take two and a half months. Now they have a month and a half,” said Jeff Hawkins, executive director of the Northwest Arkansas Regional Planning Commission.

Census-takers will attempt to collect data on the roughly 37% of people to date who have not responded voluntaril­y through the internet, mail or telephone.

People can still answer census questions online though Sept. 30.

The announceme­nt of the Sept. 30 deadline was made Monday.

“This is a one-month loss we learned about literally overnight,” said Brad Cameron, communicat­ions chairman for the Arkansas Counts statewide committee. The nonprofit group encourages and coordinate­s census participat­ion statewide.

The short schedule leaves a variety of groups working with Arkansas Counts scrambling, he said.

Arkansas is a very rural state and has a relatively high proportion of people with low incomes, Cameron and Hawkins said. Internet service is spotty over much of the state too, they said. While larger towns devoted city staff to encouragin­g census responses, many small towns and rural communitie­s lack such resources.

“This is the first time the census has used a mainly online platform, and Arkansas ranks 48th or 49th, depending on which study you look at, for internet access” among the 50 states, Cameron said.

The census takes place every 10 years, as required by the U.S. Constituti­on. The census is used to divide among the states based on their population­s the money in many federal programs.

It determines, among other things, how many representa­tives in the U.S. House each state receives.

The census numbers serve as the basis for redrawing congressio­nal and legislativ­e district lines every 10 years. If a county in Arkansas has a lower-than-accurate census count, it loses out on representa­tion.

Northwest Arkansas has a large population of Marshalles­e Islanders and Hispanic immigrants. Both of those groups are known to be reluctant to participat­e in the census, said Mireya Reith and Celine Reyes of Arkansas United, a nonprofit immigrant advocacy group. Reith is executive director and Reyes is program director for the group’s census participat­ion efforts.

This compressed time for in-person efforts to complete the census will make a full count of hard-to-reach groups even harder, they said.

Hawkins and his commission have helped with census efforts in Northwest Arkansas since 1980. Asked if a month and a half was enough time for the bureau to do the job door to door, Hawkins forwarded a letter from the National State Data Center Steering Committee. This bipartisan group is made up of state agencies cooperatin­g with census efforts who use the data the census generates.

“Planning and services to the American people for the next decade will suffer from a rushed and inaccurate 2020 census,” the July 31 letter says.

“The credibilit­y of the U.S. Census Bureau as the gold standard of data in the United States will be undermined by rushing an incomplete census count to release deadlines.”

“As of July 30, 2020, nearly 40% of households have not responded to the 2020 Census,” the letter also says. “The U.S. Census Bureau must be given the time to accurately count, tabulate and report the resident population of the country. Reducing census data collection to Sept. 30 puts the Census Bureau at risk of failing the constituti­onal mandate of the U.S. Census and providing inaccurate data for redistrict­ing and funding to every state, congressio­nal district and community.”

The Census Bureau responded to these concerns with a statement from bureau Director Steven Dillingham. The bureau will hire more census-takers, provide awards to those census-takers who perform best and conduct additional training, the statement says.

U.S. Sen. John Boozman, R-Ark., said the federal government is speeding up efforts.

“We’ve been actively promoting the census through our channels and amplifying the message of statewide initiative­s formed with the purpose of getting an accurate count of residents in the state,” he said in a statement Friday. “I’m committed to continuing to support state efforts while helping the Census Bureau meet its statutory deadline.”

Arkansas Counts and Arkansas United are stepping up phone banks, text campaigns and social media, Cameron and Reyes said. The pandemic’s refusal to let up continues to be a serious obstacle, they said.

“The pandemic struck other parts of the country earlier and is now hitting us at the same time as the Census Bureau is trying to finish,” Cameron said.

That prevents many of the meetings and other person-to-person efforts groups like his had planned for this stage of the census effort.

“The pandemic’s just now starting to happen in the rural communitie­s which are hardest to reach for the census,” he said.

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