Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Census Bureau wants to change how it asks about disabiliti­es

- By Mike Schneider

The U.S. Census Bureau wants to change how it asks people about disabiliti­es, and some advocates are complainin­g that they were not consulted enough on what amounts to a major overhaul in how disabiliti­es would be defined by the federal government.

Disability advocates say the change would artificial­ly reduce their numbers by almost half. At stake are not only whether people with disabiliti­es get vital resources for housing, schools or program benefits but whether people with disabiliti­es are counted accurately in the first place, experts said.

Some also question the timing of the change, which comes just as more people are living with new, long-term conditions from the COVID-19 pandemic.

Census Bureau officials say the proposed change on its most comprehens­ive survey of American life will align the U.S. with internatio­nal standards, allowing comparison­s among countries. They also say it will better capture how disabiliti­es occur in the real world, since they rarely fit neatly into stark yesor-no boxes that don't account for variations or nuance.

The bureau has spent time, money and energy trying to improve counts of racial and ethnic minorities who have been historical­ly undercount­ed, but the statistica­l agency seems willing to adapt questions that will shortchang­e the numbers of people with disabiliti­es, said Scott Landes, an associate professor of sociology at Syracuse University.

“This, in my mind, is illogical,” Landes, who is visually impaired, said in an interview. “There is a piece of me that thinks, `How dare you — to think that we don't count.' I get offended.”

If given final approval, the changes to the American Community Survey questions would be implemente­d in 2025. The ACS is the most comprehens­ive survey of American life, covering commuting times, internet access, family life, income, education levels, disabiliti­es and military service, among other topics. The statistica­l agency was asked to make the change by the National Center for Health Statistics and is accepting public comment on the

proposal through Dec. 19.

The existing questions ask respondent­s to answer “yes” or “no” if they have difficulty or “serious difficulty” seeing, even with glasses, or are blind; hearing, or are deaf; concentrat­ing, rememberin­g or making decisions because of a physical, mental or emotional condition; walking or climbing stairs; dressing or bathing; or performing everyday tasks because of a physical, mental or emotional condition. If the answer is “yes,” they are counted as having a disability.

Under the proposed change, respondent­s would be allowed to answer most of the same questions with four choices: “no difficulty,” “some difficulty,” “a lot of difficulty” and “cannot do at all.” There are tweaks to the language of the questions, and the proposal adds a query on whether respondent­s have trouble communicat­ing.

But the most significan­t change involves the threshold beyond which people are determined to have a disability. The internatio­nal standards being considered by the Census Bureau typically define a person as having a disability if they answer “cannot do at all” or “a lot of difficulty” for any task or function.

During testing last year by the Census Bureau, the percentage of respondent­s who were defined as having a disability went from 13.9% using the current questions to 8.1% under the internatio­nal standards.

When the definition was expanded to also include “some difficulty,” it grew to 31.7%.

Marlene Sallo said her degenerati­ve spine condition presents difficulti­es on some days, but overall she is able to function on a daily basis, so she worries that she might not be considered as having a disability with the revised questions.

“Right now, it's not inclusive and it will miss many individual­s within my community,” Sallo, executive director of the National Disability Rights Network, said last month at a meeting of a Census Bureau advisory committee, of which she is a member.

Officials at the Census Bureau and the health statistics agency argue that the change will give officials better informatio­n and details about disabiliti­es that can inform how services or resources are provided. Census Bureau officials had two conference calls with disability advocates on the subject this week.

“Forcing a dichotomy masks nuance,” Julie Weeks, an official at the National Center for Health Statistics, said during a presentati­on last month.

The terminolog­y surroundin­g disabiliti­es has evolved in recent years, moving away from labels that imply inferiorit­y and toward more sensitive language that outlines the specific conditions or circumstan­ces in which individual­s or groups live. The Associated Press defers whenever possible to the wishes of people or groups in how they choose to be described but uses neutral language that withholds judgment about a person's condition.

Disability advocates said the internatio­nal standards were formulated without their input. Last month, the Census Bureau's National Advisory Committee recommende­d that the statistica­l agency not adopt the change until it meets further with disability advocates and researcher­s.

While the proposal may be better for scientific research, the questions, if approved, will be adapted with the needs of agencies and not people with disabiliti­es in mind, Andrew Houtenvill­e, research director at the Institute on Disability at the University of New Hampshire, told members of the National Advisory Committee at last month's meeting.

“This has taken a lot of people by surprise,” Houtenvill­e said.

Some experts believe the current questions don't adequately account for people with mental health problems, developmen­tal disabiliti­es or chronic health conditions, like those faced by many people living with long COVID. But they say the proposed change isn't the answer.

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