The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Confusion over what data schools can provide for 2020 Census

- By Mike Schneider

ORLANDO, FLA. (AP) » The U.S. Census Bureau this week starts its process of counting students living in college-run housing, but there’s confusion over what demographi­c informatio­n university officials can share with the agency.

Two weeks ago, the U.S. Department of Education said in a memo to schools that they couldn’t, if asked, provide informatio­n about students’ sex, race and Hispanic origin for the 2020 Census. Now the department says schools are able to furnish such data if they strip away anything that could identify a student.

The department’s new position was issued last week in a revision of a memo it sent out last month to universiti­es about how students living in college housing should be counted.

The 2020 Census form “asks for informatio­n about the student’s sex, Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin, and race,” said the original memo issued on Jan. 14. “However, school officials may not disclose this informatio­n, without prior written consent from the student.”

The revised memo says schools can furnish the demographi­c informatio­n provided “such data is de-identified.”

The memo’s author, Kala Suprenant, acting director of the Student Privacy Policy Office, and the agency’s press office, didn’t immediatel­y respond Sunday to emails inquiring about the reason for the change. The revised memo noted that the office had received questions from universiti­es about the earlier memo.

Much is at stake: the 2020 count will help determine the allocation of $1.5 trillion in federal spending and how many congressio­nal seats each state gets.

The last Census in 2010 foundmore than 2.5 million students living in dorms or on-campus fraternity of sorority houses, the largest segment of what the Census Bureau refers to as “group quarters,” which also include prisons, jails and nursing homes.

And because of the difficulty in counting students, the Census Bureau will start reaching out to college campuses this week to collect informatio­n about student housing. The 2020 count started last month in rural Alaska, and the rest of the nation won’t begin participat­ing until mid-March.

At risk is getting a complete count of the students living in college-run housing. Under the old version of the memo, a decades-old privacy law would have prohibited schools fromprovid­ing the Census Bureau with informatio­n on students’ sex, race and Hispanic origin, if the students didn’t fill out the forms asking about those demographi­c details.

The Family Educationa­l Rights and Privacy Act says students need to provide written consent before informatio­n from their records can be shared, but an exception is made for what is called “directory informatio­n.” Directory informatio­n includes facts often found in student handbooks or yearbooks, such as names, addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth, activities and dates of attendance. Directory informatio­n doesn’t include sex, race or Hispanic origin, and the school can’t provide any informatio­n about students who have opted out of sharing directory informatio­n.

The Census Bureau is giving campuses three ways to fill out the forms. A census taker can drop off paper forms to a university liaison to distribute to students, and then the students return them in sealed envelopes so the liaison can hand them back to the census taker. A census taker can knock on doors in the dorm or house and personally interview residents, the most costly method. Or, a university representa­tive can fill out the form for everyone living there using administra­tive records — t he most efficient method.

In 2010, more than a third of students in college housing were counted through administra­tive records provided by the university.

“The data that comes from administra­tive records is never as accurate as informatio­n collected directly from individual­s and households,” said Terri Ann

Lowenthal, a consultant and former top congressio­nal aide specializi­ng in the census.

Students who live offcampus can fill out the forms as those in other households would.

In a statement, the Census Bureau said it expected to get most of its informatio­n about on-campus students from the “drop off/ pick up” method.

Counting college students in group housing is tricky. Students sometimes leave campus as the school semester winds down during the count and students often don’t know if they should answer the form or let their parents do it back home. The Census Bureau says students should be counted where they live, which in most cases is where the students go to school.

This is the first year the Census Bureau is encouragin­g a majority of respondent­s to answer the oncea-decade questionna­ire online, although they still can answer by telephone or by mailing in a paper form.

But students living in college housing, perhaps the group most likely to answer questions online, will be given paper forms. Cutbacks in research and testing for group quarters led to that decision, Lowenthal said.

 ?? JOHN RAOUX—ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Tuesday, Jan. 28, 2020photo, students are seen on campus at Rollins College in Winter Park, Fla. Because of the federal privacy law, university administra­tors, if called upon, won’t be able to disclose students’ sex, race or Hispanic origin on the 2020Census form.
JOHN RAOUX—ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Tuesday, Jan. 28, 2020photo, students are seen on campus at Rollins College in Winter Park, Fla. Because of the federal privacy law, university administra­tors, if called upon, won’t be able to disclose students’ sex, race or Hispanic origin on the 2020Census form.
 ?? JOHN RAOUX—ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Tuesday, Jan. 28, 2020photo, Leon Hayner, an associate dean of students at Rollins College looks over requests from the U.S. Census Bureau in Winter Park, Fla. Because of the federal privacy law, university administra­tors, if called upon, won’t be able to disclose students’ sex, race or Hispanic origin on the 2020Census form.
JOHN RAOUX—ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Tuesday, Jan. 28, 2020photo, Leon Hayner, an associate dean of students at Rollins College looks over requests from the U.S. Census Bureau in Winter Park, Fla. Because of the federal privacy law, university administra­tors, if called upon, won’t be able to disclose students’ sex, race or Hispanic origin on the 2020Census form.

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