Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Board approves Fort Smith plan for 2020 census

City to form count committee

- THOMAS SACCENTE

FORT SMITH — The Fort Smith Board of Directors took a step meant to ensure all city residents are accurately counted in the upcoming 2020 United States Census.

The board approved a resolution endorsing the creation of a Local Complete Count Committee during its regular meeting Tuesday. In a memo to Fort Smith City Administra­tor Carl Geffken, Deputy City Administra­tor Jeff Dingman said the committee is a tool used by many communitie­s to engage all segments of the community to make sure they are counted in the census, including people and communitie­s that are considered “hard to count.”

Among communitie­s considered hard to count, Dingman wrote, can be small children, senior citizens, university students, those who are homeless or transient, ethnic and religious groups, non-English speaking people or others who are reluctant to participat­e in the census. The census will be important in determinin­g the allocation of federal monies to state and local programs for the next 10 years, making an accurate count of all Fort Smith residents key.

After the meeting, Dingman said the committee will be made up of about 20 to 25 people who represent a “good cross section” of the community, specifical­ly the hard to count communitie­s who can help these groups feel comfortabl­e participat­ing in the census. Identifyin­g and inviting specific individual­s to join the committee will take place soon.

Fort Smith Mayor George McGill is currently serving as the chairman of the Arkansas Complete Count Committee, which was establishe­d by Gov. Asa Hutchinson via executive order Aug. 28 to promote statewide participat­ion in the 2020 census, according to a news release from Hutchinson’s office the same day.

The Board of Directors was also given the opportunit­y to provide its input regarding the appointmen­t of a new police chief for the city during an executive session at the meeting. The three finalists for the position, which include Fort Smith Interim Police Chief Danny Baker, Little Rock Assistant Police Chief Alice Fulk and Palestine, Texas, Police Chief Andy Harvey, participat­ed in a candidate-Board of Directors luncheon that was open to the public on Monday, according to a Tuesday post on the City of Fort Smith Facebook page.

Geffken estimated an appointmen­t to the position would take place within a week.

“There’s some more informatio­n that I’d like to get from our panels for police chief and have those conversati­ons with them so they can give me their full input, like I just received from the Board of Directors,” Geffken said.

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