The Oklahoman

Watchdog: Census lacks door knockers needed for 2020 count

- By Mike Schneider The Associated Press

ORLANDO, Fla. — The U.S. Census Bureau is short by more than 25% of the door knockers needed for the 2020 census, according to its watchdog agency, and it's about to let go of its least productive census takers.

Both developmen­ts highlight persistent questions about whether the bureau has enough manpower to get a complete and accurate head count under an accelerate­d time frame preferred by the Trump administra­tion. Bureau officials, though, say they are pleased with the progress made by census takers and are on pace to finish the job.

The Office of Inspector General' s alert this week says it's concerned about the bureau's ability to hire and retain workers, with six weeks left in the count that helps determine the distributi­on of $1.5 trillion in federal spending and how many congressio­nal seats and Electoral College votes each state gets.

The bureau needed more than 300,000 census takers by the end of August but by midmonth, just 220,000 census takers were trained and ready to start knocking on the doors of households that haven't yet responded to the census. Thirty-seven of the nation's 248 census offices aren't even halfway toward reaching their hiring goals, the office said.

“Without taking timely action, the bureau is at risk of not conducting a complete and accurate 2020 Census,” the memorandum from the Office of Inspector General said.

The bureau acknowledg­es that more than a third of people hired to be census takers aren't showing up for either training or their assignment­s.

Despite the greater-thanexpect­ed attrition, the bureau said it has increased productivi­ty while aggressive­ly training new workers to fill the slots of no-shows.

The statistica­l agency is still recruiting and hiring census takers to fill the jobs of people who have dropped out over coronaviru­s f ears or other concerns, and it's giving cash awards to the most experience­d census takers.

Census take rs have been given face masks and hand sanitizers, and they're instructed to maintain at least six feet of distance while asking households in-person questions about their race, sex, Hispanic origin and relationsh­ips to each other.

“Our census take rs are working more hours and completing more cases than we had planned,” the bureau said in statement.

The census taker shortfall is coming as the bureau's operationa­l plan calls for it to let go of less productive door knockers and transfer their caseloads to higher performers so that the most experience­d census takers can work on the hardest-to-reach households.

The low-performing census takers will stop working before the census ends on September 30, according are view of operationa­l plans, interviews and bureau emails obtained by The Associated Press.

“They say ,` Thank you. Your work is over,'” said John Thompson, a former bureau director in the Obama administra­tion. “If the person is doing a bunch of work and not getting completed cases then ... at that point, you are better off without them.”

The 2020 census has been hampered by the pandemic and a shortened schedule caused by congressio­nal inaction.

Starting later than planned because of the pandemic, the door-knocking phase of the 2020 census began in some areas in July, but widespread doorknocki­ng didn't begin until earlier this month, and it was expected to last through October.

However, that planning was contingent on Congress extending bureau deadlines for turning over figures used for the redrawing of congressio­nal and legislativ­e districts into next year.

The requested ex tensi ons passed the Democratic-controlled House, but the Republican-controlled Senate hasn't acted on it. Without them, the bureau earlier this month announced the census would stop at the end of September instead of the end of October.

 ?? [JOHN RAOUX/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? A briefcase of a census taker is seen as she knocks on the door of a residence Aug. 11 in Winter Park, Fla.
[JOHN RAOUX/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] A briefcase of a census taker is seen as she knocks on the door of a residence Aug. 11 in Winter Park, Fla.

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