Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. Census Bureau weighs adjustment­s

-

The U.S. Census Bureau is going to look at ways to possibly adjust its annual population estimates to account for the undercount­s of some minority groups in the 2020 census numbers, a top official at the statistica­l agency said Tuesday.

A technical research team within the bureau is looking at the feasibilit­y of adjusting the numbers so undercount­s are not baked into future estimates, said Karen Battle, chief of the bureau’s population division.

The population estimates are used for distributi­ng federal funds and measuring demographi­c changes in the years between the once-adecade censuses. No changes can be made to the figures from the 2020 census used for determinin­g how many congressio­nal seats each state gets or the numbers used for redrawing political districts.

The bureau is looking at the feasibilit­y of making “additional improvemen­ts in the future,” Battle said during a briefing with cities, counties, tribes and civil-rights groups that had sued the Trump administra­tion’s Department of Commerce over the execution of the census in 2020. The Commerce Department oversees the Census Bureau.

Even though the overall U.S. population was missed by a small percentage, 0.24%, in the 2020 census, some minority groups were overlooked at greater rates than in the previous decade. The Black population was undercount­ed by 3.3%, those who identified as some other race had a 4.3% undercount, almost 5% of the Hispanic population was missed, and more than 5.6% of American Indians living on reservatio­ns were undercount­ed.

The Asian population was overcounte­d by 2.6% in the 2020 census, and white residents who are not Hispanic were overcounte­d by 0.6%.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States