Yuma Sun

Census 2020: An accurate count is essential

- BY TOM PURCELL

Ihope we get it right. Data collection for the 2020 U.S. Census ends soon. This census, the 22nd in U.S. history, has faced its share of challenges and controvers­ies.

The goal of the census has remained the same throughout its 230-year history: to count every person living in the United States.

The Constituti­on requires the federal government to do so every 10 years. The population count determines the number of U.S. House seats each state will have – which can become highly political.

When a state gains or loses seats, the party in power sometimes redraws congressio­nal districts in hopes of making it impossible for the other party to win. That’s why census results are so important to politician­s.

The census also determines how much federal funding your neighborho­od will receive. The more people counted in a region, the more money that region will receive for roads, bridges and other government programs.

From the start, this census has faced no small number of controvers­ies and challenges.

“From cybersecur­ity issues to administra­tive problems to a legal drama over a possible citizenshi­p question, there are plenty of reasons to worry about the decennial head count,” noted The Atlantic in July 2018.

Cybersecur­ity certainly is a concern. This is the very first census that allows answering questions online – which may put respondent­s and their data at risk of cyberattac­k, particular­ly amid COVID-19, which has brought thousands of scammers out of the woodwork.

Wired reported in 2019 that

“experts fear the (census) bureau is opening itself up to a range of new risks, from basic functional­ity and connectivi­ty failures to cybersecur­ity threats and disinforma­tion campaigns.”

Disinforma­tion in the era of social media? I’m shocked.

To stay secure, remember that the Census Bureau will never ask for your full Social Security number, or your bank account or credit card numbers, or for money or donations – but scammers pretending to be from the bureau will.

Ten questions ask about respondent­s’ name, sex, age, race, telephone number and whether they own or rent. There are no questions about religion, whether one is a legal resident or whether one has a Social Security number.

When the Trump administra­tion proposed adding a citizenshi­p question, opponents cried foul. They said the question would intimidate noncitizen­s into not responding, which would result in undercount­s in districts with many noncitizen­s. The administra­tion eventually dropped that idea.

Here’s the latest battle, according to Roll Call: “Under pressure from the Trump administra­tion to end the count early, the (Census) agency will conclude all enumeratio­n efforts on Sept. 30, and then comb through data before wrapping up the whole process by Dec. 31 – half the time the agency originally anticipate­d after delaying its initial schedule because of the pandemic.”

Trump opponents say this could cause undercount­ing in minority communitie­s. The administra­tion says modern technologi­es and efficienci­es enable an accurate count and meeting its statutory deadline of Dec. 31, 2020.

In an era when everything is hopelessly political and political opponents loathe and distrust each other, one thing really matters.

It’s essential that we get our census data right.

Copyright 2020 Tom Purcell. Tom Purcell, author of “Misadventu­res of a 1970’s Childhood,” a humorous memoir available at amazon.com, is a Pittsburgh Tribune-Review humor columnist and is nationally syndicated exclusivel­y by Cagle Cartoons Inc. Send comments to Tom at Tom@TomPurcell.com

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS APRIL 1 FILE PHOTO, people walk past posters encouragin­g participat­ion in the 2020 Census in Seattle.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS APRIL 1 FILE PHOTO, people walk past posters encouragin­g participat­ion in the 2020 Census in Seattle.
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