USA TODAY US Edition

On Census Day, celebs urge being counted

Responses can be done by phone, online or mail

- Deborah Barfield Berry

WASHINGTON – Amid the coronaviru­s outbreak, grassroots groups, faith leaders and national voting rights organizati­ons have shifted gears in their census outreach campaigns, abandoning plans to host block parties, leave pamphlets at front doors and set up informatio­n tables at community colleges.

Instead, they hosted Zoom parties and teleconfer­ences and posted videos featuring celebritie­s such as Tom Hanks and Kerry Washington on Wednesday to mark national Census Day.

Community leaders said responding to the census, even during the middle of a pandemic, is important, and they hope people hear the message and fill out the forms while confined to their homes. The decennial count is used to distribute federal funds for schools, roads, bridges and lunch programs. It’s also used to determine the number of House seats a state has in Congress.

“We still need to remind folks that we have $1 trillion” in federal funds at stake, said Trupania Bonner, founder of Crescent

City Media/Center for Civic Action, a New Orleans-area group spearheadi­ng the #SouthCount­s2020 Census Campaign. “We’re going to get people counted.”

For When We All Vote, a nonprofit civic engagement group launched in 2018 by Michelle Obama, Hanks, LinManuel Miranda and others, and media company ATTN, that effort meant turning to famous co-chairs to help make the pitch in a video released Wednesday.

“We can all take care of our communitie­s – from the comfort of our couches!” Hanks, who himself had the coronaviru­s, said in a statement. “Participat­e in the 2020 Census online, over the phone or by mail. These few minutes will make a difference and impact our democracy for years to come. Come on, everyone! Let’s do it!”

Stephanie Young, When We All Vote’s managing director for culture, communicat­ion and media partnershi­ps, said the goal is to get more young people and people of color – communitie­s often underrepre­sented in the census – more politicall­y engaged.

Young said Obama has repeatedly said throughout the group’s get-outthe-vote effort that there’s power in voting and participat­ing in the census.

“That is why we really want to make sure that people are counted and represente­d,” Young said.

The coronaviru­s outbreak has had a major impact on census operations. Invitation­s to respond to the census by phone, online or mail arrived in most households by mid-March, when many states began announcing stay-at-home restrictio­ns.

Officials pushed back plans to send census takers to knock on doors, as well as the deadline for people to respond to the survey from July 31 to Aug. 14. They twice delayed the start of some field operations. This weekend, they pushed that start back again to April 15.

“We have a little more time with this quarantine,” Bonner said.

Partying with the census at home

Initially, the community groups behind the #SouthCount­s2020 Census Campaign planned to host events across the South featuring music, food and, of course, plenty of census materials, in big and smaller cities, including Dallas; New Orleans; Utica, Mississipp­i; New Market, Tennessee; Mobile, Alabama; Atlanta; and Durham, North Carolina. There would have been a table with voter registrati­on informatio­n.

Instead, the groups hosted two census Zoom parties Wednesday where census officials could answer questions and offer help filling out the survey. “It is Plan B,” Bonner said. Louisiana is one of the hardest-hit states in the country, with 5,237 coronaviru­s cases and 239 related deaths, most of them in New Orleans. Bonner said Oliver Stokes Jr., also known as DJ Black N Mild, a deejay who helped promote the census in 2010, died last month from the coronaviru­s.

“This thing is hitting close to home,” he said.

Census Day is the latest effort from community leaders to get people to fill out the population survey as the coronaviru­s takes up government resources. Last week, a coalition of national civil rights and voting rights groups hosted a series of virtual events during what they called “Black Census Week.”

“The reality is people are at home, so this is the opportunit­y to really encourage folks via social media,” said Melanie Campbell, head of the National Coalition on Black Civic Participat­ion.

Many community groups hope to soon return to traditiona­l outreach efforts because they’re worried about limited internet access, particular­ly in rural areas and in some low-income communitie­s.

Bonner said the groups will encourage people to fill out the census by phone.

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