The Denver Post

Arizona grew in past decade, but the census says it shrank

- By Astrid Galvan and Mike Schneider

SOMERTON, ARIZ.» It’s a Thursday evening, and parents and students packed inside a middle school gym are roaring for the school’s wrestling team at decibels that test the eardrum.

The young wrestlers are seventh- and eighth-graders who will be among the first to attend this town’s first public high school, which was approved just weeks ago after years of lobbying by local officials. The overwhelmi­ngly Latino community has grown enough over the past decade that it’s also building a new elementary school.

But the Census Bureau says Somerton actually lost 90 residents during that time, putting its official population at 14,197 people, not the 20,000 that the mayor expected.

“So we’re trying to make sense of where these numbers

are coming from, because they do not make sense whatsoever,” said City Manager Jerry Cabrera, who cited 853 new homes over the past decade as evidence of growth.

An accurate census is crucial for the distributi­on of hundreds of billions of federal dollars, and it determines how

many congressio­nal seats each state gets. But a review by The Associated Press found that in many places, the share of the Latino and Black population­s in the latest census figures fell below recent estimates and an annual Census Bureau survey,

suggesting that some areas were overlooked.

For the share of the Black population, the trend was most visible in southeaste­rn and Mid-atlantic states, including Alabama, the District of Columbia, Georgia, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississipp­i, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia. For the Hispanic population, it was most noticeable in New Mexico and Arizona.

In Somerton, about 200 miles southwest of Phoenix near the Mexico border, community leaders were incredulou­s.

“This is not true. This is not real numbers, you know. They don’t know our community. They did not do what needed to be done to count our people, and it’s just ridiculous. It can’t be,” said Emma Torres, executive director of Campesinos Sin Fronteras, an organizati­on that advocates for farmworker­s. The group was heavily involved in promoting the census.

Most Somerton residents use post office boxes. A majority are Spanish-speaking farmworker­s, and many lack reliable internet access.

Community leaders say they are used to an undercount, but the notion that they lost residents is unfathomab­le.

Here, where an annual tamale festival to raise money for college students attracts thousands of visitors, local schools are over capacity as enrollment grew by nearly 12% from 2010 to 2019. And after years of having to bus students at least 10 miles north to Yuma, Somerton finally met the threshold for its own high school.

Although there is nothing new about undercount­s and no census is perfect, there is “strong evidence” that undercount­s in the 2020 census are worse than in past decades, said Paul Ong, a public affairs professor at UCLA, whose own analysis of Los Angeles County this month concluded that Latinos, Asians and other residents were undercount­ed.

“The big-picture implicatio­n is it will skew the redistrict­ing process, our undercount­ed neighborho­ods will be underrepre­sented and population­s that are undercount­ed will be shortchang­ed when it comes to the allocation of federal spending,” Ong said.

The AP analysis comes with caveats. The Census Bureau says the census figures should be considered more accurate than the agency’s American Community Survey or vintage population estimates. Additional­ly, the American Community Survey has margins of error, and the population estimates are edited in a way that pushes some people who identified as “some other race” in the 2010 count into more traditiona­l racial categories such as white, Black and Asian.

Bureau officials say it’s too soon to speculate on whether individual communitie­s were undercount­ed. The full extent of whether the statistica­l agency missed certain population­s, or overcounte­d others, won’t be known until early next year, when it releases results of a survey used to measure how good a job it did counting every U.S. resident.

Black and Latino communitie­s historical­ly are undercount­ed, and there was greater concern about an undercount in 2020 because of the pandemic, which made people afraid to interact with strangers, and natural disasters, which made it difficult for census takers to reach some residents. There were also attempts at political interferen­ce by the Trump administra­tion, including a failed attempt to add a citizenshi­p question to the census form.

The AP review revealed figures that suggest some communitie­s were overlooked.

Outside Baton Rouge, in West Feliciana Parish, La., for instance, the 2020 census figures show the share of the Black population to be 23.4%, but 2020 population estimates and the 2019 American Community Survey placed it at 44%. The area is home to the 5,500-inmate Louisiana State Penitentia­ry, and group housing such as prisons, dorms and nursing homes were among the toughest places to count people during the census because of Covid-19-related restrictio­ns.

In counties along the Coloradone­w Mexico line, the share of the Latino population in the census was lower than those in the estimates and survey, anywhere from 4 to 7 percentage points.

The Census Bureau said in a statement that tribal, state and local government­s can ask for a review of the numbers if they think the census figures are inaccurate, but that will not change the numbers used for redistrict­ing or congressio­nal seats.

“Despite facing a pandemic, natural disasters and other unforeseen challenges, the 2020 census results thus far are in line with overall benchmarks,” the statement said.

Cabrera said the city is pulling data to show that the 2020 count was off and plans to appeal.

Somerton Mayor Gerardo Anaya worries about the city’s share of state revenues. He says Somerton’s sales tax revenue, school enrollment and building permits have gone up in the past few years. Developers continue to build.

As it did in many Latino communitie­s, the pandemic had an outsized effect in Somerton. Latinos were almost twice as likely to become infected.

 ?? Photos by Jae C. Hong, The Associated Press ?? Children play in the yard of a community boxing club Aug. 19 in Somerton, Ariz. The overwhelmi­ngly Latino community has grown enough over the past decade that it’s building a new elementary school.
Photos by Jae C. Hong, The Associated Press Children play in the yard of a community boxing club Aug. 19 in Somerton, Ariz. The overwhelmi­ngly Latino community has grown enough over the past decade that it’s building a new elementary school.
 ??  ?? Electricia­ns install wires at a newly constructe­d home in Somerton. The Census Bureau says Somerton actually lost 90 residents in the past decade, a surprise to local officials.
Electricia­ns install wires at a newly constructe­d home in Somerton. The Census Bureau says Somerton actually lost 90 residents in the past decade, a surprise to local officials.

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