Orlando Sentinel

Census takers to visit homes that have not responded

- By Mike Schneider

ORLANDO, Fla. — Thousands of census takers are about to begin the most labor-intensive part of America’s once-a-decade headcount: visiting the 56 million households that have not yet responded to the 2020 questionna­ire.

The visits that start Thursday kick off a phase of the census that was supposed to begin in May before it was delayed by the pandemic, which forced the Census Bureau to suspend field operations for a month and a half and to push back the completion of the census from July 31 to Oct. 31.

Census takers will ask questions about who lives in a household and the residents’ race, sex and relations to each other. Because of the virus, they have been instructed to pose questions from outside and to decline invitation­s to come indoors. The workers will wear cloth masks and come equipped with hand sanitizer, gloves, laptops and cellphones.

The first visits will be focused on six locations — West Virginia, Idaho, Maine, Kansas City, New Orleans and the Oklahoma City area. Separate from the temporary census takers, Census Bureau staffers will also start visiting groceries and pharmacies this week in neighborho­ods with low response rates to assist residents in filling out questionna­ires.

The door knocking will expand next week to parts of Connecticu­t, Indiana, Kansas, Pennsylvan­ia, the Virginia suburbs of the District of Columbia and Tacoma, Washington. Next month, hundreds of thousands more temporary census workers will fan out across the entire nation in the largest peacetime mobilizati­on the federal government undertakes.

Because it costs money to deploy census takers, the government is making one last push through advertisin­g and social media to get people to respond online, by phone or through the mail over the next several weeks before workers head out in large numbers.

As of this week, more than 62% of U.S. households had answered the census questions on their own. The Census Bureau reached its goal of a 60.5% self-response rate six weeks ago, though it had more time to get there because of the virus-related delays. The 2020 census started for most U.S. residents in March.

The locations chosen for this week’s door-knocking mix rural and urban areas by design. They were picked to achieve that variety and to ensure safe operations during the pandemic, including the availabili­ty of workers and safety equipment, according to the Census Bureau.

Louisiana is among the places that have seen recent spikes in infections, forcing the governor to mandate masks in public and shut down consumptio­n in bars this week.

The virus “adds some stress to it,” particular­ly if the person being questioned is elderly “because we’ve been really trying to protect that population,” said Cyndi Nguyen, a New Orleans councilwom­an.

The 2020 census will determine the distributi­on of $1.5 trillion in federal spending and the number of congressio­nal seats in each state. Because of the pandemic, the Census Bureau has asked Congress for a delay in turning over data for apportionm­ent and redistrict­ing.

 ?? TONY GUTIERREZ/AP ?? Children hold signs that make reference to the 2020 census as they wait in the car with their family last month at an outreach event in Dallas. The 2020 census started in March.
TONY GUTIERREZ/AP Children hold signs that make reference to the 2020 census as they wait in the car with their family last month at an outreach event in Dallas. The 2020 census started in March.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States