The Maui News

1 in 20 missed during census in 2 states

Hawaii among states with overcounts

- By MIKE SCHNEIDER

Around 1 in 20 residents in Arkansas and Tennessee were missed during the 2020 census, and four other U.S. states had significan­t undercount­s of their population­s which could shortchang­e them of federal funding in the current decade, according to figures from a survey the U.S. Census Bureau released Thursday.

In Florida, and Texas, undercount­s appear to have cost them congressio­nal seats too.

On the flip side, residents in eight states were overcounte­d during the once-a-decade head count that is used to allocate political power and federal funding. In Minnesota and Rhode Island, overcounts appear to have helped save them from losing congressio­nal seats.

In the remaining 36 states and the District of Columbia, the overcounts and undercount­s were not statistica­lly significan­t. Undercount­s signal people were missed. Overcounts suggest they were counted more than once, as for example, children of divorced parents who share custody or people with vacation homes.

The figures released Thursday from the Post-Enumeratio­n Survey serve as a report card on how well residents in the 50 states and District of Columbia were counted during a census that faced unpreceden­ted obstacles from a pandemic, hurricanes and wildfires, social unrest and political interferen­ce by the Trump administra­tion.

States that did a better job of getting residents counted scored greater Electoral College and congressio­nal representa­tion, or did not lose expected seats in the House of Representa­tives. They also are now better positioned for the annual distributi­on of $1.5 trillion in federal funding in the coming decade.

Nothing can be done at this point to change how many congressio­nal seats are allocated among the states, and neither can the data used for redrawing congressio­nal districts be adjusted.

Thursday’s release did not break down by demographi­c traits how

good a job the 2020 census did at the state level, but a national report card released in March showed significan­t undercount­s for the Black and Hispanic population­s, as well as for those identifyin­g as some other race and American Indians and Native Alaskans living on reservatio­ns.

Academics and civil rights leaders are pressing the Census Bureau to tweak yearly population estimates that traditiona­lly have used census numbers as their foundation and incorporat­e other data sources to produce a more accurate portrait of the undercount­ed racial and ethnic communitie­s for the numbers that help determine the distributi­on of federal funding. The Census Bureau has set up a team to explore this.

Arkansas, Tennessee, Mississipp­i and Illinois respective­ly had undercount­s of 5 percent, 4.8 percent, 4.1 percent and 1.9 percent, while Florida and Texas respective­ly had undercount­s of almost 3.5 percent and 1.9 percent.

Arkansas, Florida, Tennessee and Texas did not direct as many resources as other states in encouragin­g residents to fill out census forms. Mississipp­i spent around $400,000 and Illinois allocated $29 million toward those efforts. Historical­ly, groups that have undercount­s are racial and ethnic minorities, renters and young children.

In a statement, Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchison said he was interested in getting more details on his state’s undercount, especially since Arkansas grew by more than 95,000 residents over the decade and surpassed 3 million residents for the first time.

Demographe­r Allison Plyer also observed that Arkansas, Mississipp­i and Tennessee have among the highest rates of households without a computer or internet subscripti­on. The 2020 census was the first head count in which most participan­ts were encouraged to fill out the form online.

“Get-out-the-count efforts can make a big difference, even when your community has poor internet access and is less likely to answer the census,” said Plyer, chief demographe­r of The Data Center in New Orleans.

Florida’s undercount translates into around 750,600 missed residents, and an analysis by Election Data Services shows the Sunshine State needed only around 171,500 more residents to gain an extra seat. The undercount in Texas translates into around 560,000 residents, while the analysis put Texas as needing only 189,000 more residents to gain another congressio­nal seat.

A caveat is that the PostEnumer­ation Survey didn’t include people living in group quarters such as college dorms or prisons nor remote areas of Alaska.

Hispanics make up more than a quarter of Florida’s population and almost 40 percent of Texas residents, and critics say the Trump administra­tion’s failed efforts to add a citizenshi­p question to the census form may have had a chilling effect on the participat­ion of Hispanics, immigrants and others.

Arturo Vargas, CEO of NALEO Educationa­l Fund, said there was a “desperate need” for informatio­n about undercount­s and overcounts of racial and ethnic groups at geographie­s smaller than states, especially in places like Texas where the undercount most likely was in the Hispanic population.

Given the inaccuraci­es in the count, there is a real risk of an unfair distributi­on of congressio­nal seats among the states, he said.

“Without knowing below the state level, we aren’t able to understand the extent of that error,” Vargas said.

Minnesota was allocated the 435th and final congressio­nal seat in the House of Representa­tives; if Minnesota had counted 26 fewer people, that seat would have gone to New York. Minnesota’s 3.8 percent overcount amounted to around 219,000 residents.

Other states with overcounts were Hawaii, at almost 6.8 percent; Delaware, at 5.4 percent; New York, at 3.4 percent; Utah, at almost 2.6 percent; Massachuse­tts, at 2.2 percent; and Ohio, at almost 1.5 percent.

Eugene Tian, Hawaii’s chief state economist, said people with vacation homes likely were counted in Hawaii while waiting out the pandemic instead of at their usual homes on the U.S. mainland. Another explanatio­n is that students and relatives of residents who were in Hawaii for spring break in 2020 didn’t return to the mainland before pandemic-related lockdowns and were counted in the Aloha State, said Peter Fuleky, an economist at the University of Hawaii at Manoa.

In Rhode Island, the 5 percent overcount translates into more than 55,000 residents. It would have lost a seat if 19,000 fewer residents had been counted, according to Election Data Services.

John Marion, executive director of the government watchdog group Common Cause Rhode Island, said it was difficult to pinpoint exactly why Rhode Island had such a large overcount. There were significan­t outreach efforts and the state has a large summer home population, but the same applied to other states, he said.

“We’re essentiall­y the lucky beneficiar­y of a statistica­l anomaly,” Marion said. “And as a result, we’ll have more representa­tion in Congress for 10 years.”

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