The Union Democrat

Census estimates US population at 330 million

- By MICHAEL MACAGNONE Cq-roll Call

WASHINGTON — At least 330 million people lived in the United States as of April, according to a Census Bureau estimate released Tuesday that will serve as one of the first accuracy checks for forthcomin­g decennial census results.

The agency produces the estimate, referred to as demographi­c analysis, in parallel to the count each decade. This year outside experts are watching closely to see how much the decennial census will reflect, or miss, the total population in the United States. Ron Jarmin, the agency's deputy director for operations, acknowledg­ed the “extraordin­ary challenges” the census faced this cycle, primarily due to the coronaviru­s pandemic. “We know that data users are eager for this informatio­n, and as are we, because of the important role these quality metrics play did only at once in counting telling and in us the everyone how right well place,” once, we Jarmin said in a call with report-ers. With the stakes so high for census results — they determine distributi­on of House seats and guide more than $1.5 trillion in federal spending annually — the agency releases several measures of how accurately it counted the country.

The Census Bureau builds its population estimate from birth and death records, Medicare rolls and estimates of immigratio­n into and out of the United States. In comparison, the actual census relies on a combinatio­n of household responses and a physical count by census workers.

Eric Jensen, who works as a senior technical expert for the Census Bureau's demographi­c analysis, said the estimate will help the agency calculate the undercount­s and overcounts for the decennial census.

The population estimate released Tuesday will provide one check on census results that have many unknowns around them. The agency still hasn't said when it will be able to release the results; officials said they aimed to finalize the numbers “as close as possible” to an end-of-year statutory deadline.

However, the agency has publicly acknowledg­ed errors in close to 1 million records that could take weeks to fix, pushing the apportionm­ent delivery into late January.

Last week, the agency said it would provide detailed informatio­n about self-response to the census — considered the most accurate method of responding to the count — but less detailed data about how it counted people with door-to-door workers or through administra­tive records.

Overall, the agency estimates that between 330 and 335 million people lived in the United States as of April 1, the reference day for the 2020 census. That's about 20 million more people in the country than in 2010, roughly a 6 percent change. The country's growth has slowed over the last several decades, last increasing by more than 10% between 1980 and 1990.

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