Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Bella Vista leads in census response

Maumelle’s ranks No. 2 among cities in Arkansas, federal bureau data shows

- DOUG THOMPSON

FAYETTEVIL­LE — Bella Vista has the highest response rate to the U.S. census of any city in Arkansas, the most recent federal figures show.

And, Benton and Washington counties have rates above the state and national averages, the figures show.

The U.S. Census Bureau posts a self-response rate based on the number of households in a town, county or state. The rate is the percentage of those dwellings where someone has responded to the census survey.

As of Tuesday, 79.7% of households in Bella Vista completed the survey online, by mail or by phone, according the bureau’s website. The next-highest response of any city in Arkansas — Maumelle — was almost 4 percentage points lower at 75.8%.

The national average is 62.7%, census figures show. Arkansas’ average is 57.5%.

Being ahead of the census curve is something of a Bella Vista tradition, said Cassi Lapp, city spokeswoma­n.

“It appears Bella Vista also led the state in responses in 2000 and 2010,” she said Thursday.

“Mayor Peter Christie addressed the importance of the census in every public speech or appearance he has given as far back as October of last year,” Lapp said. “The city approached the churches in the area asking [that] they help encourage their congregati­ons to respond. We also pushed the informatio­n out early on to help people be more aware, and provided a laptop with internet access at our City Hall for those who didn’t have the ability at home to respond.”

Benton County as a whole has a 65.8% response rate, putting the county in a three-way tie with Lonoke and Faulkner counties for the best county response rate in Arkansas.

Washington County is close behind with 63.1%, enough for sixth place among the state’s 75 counties.

Local census advocates warn, however, that response rates in the 60% range are poor. The census count is also falling into a pattern that they feared: Hard-to-count population­s such as immigrants and the area’s Marshall Islander population are not well-represente­d.

The covid-19 pandemic is making the situation worse, they say.

Springdale’s Complete Count Committee, a nonprofit community group formed to boost census participat­ion, held its first meeting in two months Friday online because of the pandemic, said chairwoman Kathryn Birkhead.

“People were dealing with life and death issues, especially the people we were trying to reach,” Birkhead said.

The Arkansas Department of Health and census figures show Marshalles­e make up, at most, 3% of Northwest Arkansas’ population, but account for more than half of the region’s covid-19 deaths.

The U.S. Constituti­on requires a count of everyone living in the United States every 10 years. This is a census year. Every household should have received notice by mail or email from the census bureau by April 1, asking for a response by either mail, website or telephone.

Visits by census takers to households with no responses will begin Aug. 11, said Linda Gladden, bureau spokeswoma­n. It was originally scheduled to begin May 13 but was delayed by the pandemic.

The census bureau divides cities and counties into tracts of no less than 1,200 people and no more than 8,000. Birkhead said Springdale tracts with response rates in the 50th percentile are neighborho­ods with high Marshalles­e and immigrant population­s.

Mireya Reith, founder of the Springdale-based immigrant advocacy group Arkansas United, said the importance of the census is fighting for attention during the health crisis.

“We keep hearing ‘Sorry, I can’t deal with this right now,’” she said.

Besides the sickness itself, the economic impact has hit people hard, she said.

“There’s just not enough bandwidth for people dealing with their problems or with public officials to get the message out,” Reith said. “People are strapped with the needs of their own families.”

Mayor Greg Hines of Rogers, a city with a large immigrant population, said the pandemic forced Rogers to rethink its census strategy for reaching minority groups.

“Our biggest disconnect was the faith-based community, because we were planning on reaching people in churches,” he said. “That was the way we expected to reach people quickly to get them to participat­e in the census.” Church assemblies, along with other large gatherings, have been limited because of the pandemic.

“That really slowed us down, but we’re trying to replace that through contacts with large employers and locally owned minority businesses,” Hines said.

Eroding trust in the federal government is another serious problem, Reith said. The president has openly called on the Census Bureau to not count foreigners in the country illegally for purposes of congressio­nal representa­tion — even though the U.S. Supreme Court prohibited the administra­tion from asking about citizenshi­p, she said. And changes to the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrival, or DACA, program have increased mistrust, she said.

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