East Bay Times

Workers fall short of target goals in areas of U.S.

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From tribal lands in Arizona and New Mexico to storm-battered Louisiana, census workers who go door to door were unable to reach all the households they needed for a complete tally of the U.S. population, a count that ended abruptly last week after a Supreme Court ruling.

Community activists, statistici­ans and civil rights groups say racial and ethnic minorities are historical­ly undercount­ed, and shortcomin­gs in the 2020 census could set the course of life in their communitie­s for years to come.

The count determines the number of congressio­nal seats each state gets, where roads and bridges are built, how schools and health care facilities are funded, and how $1.5 trillion in federal resources are allocated annually.

“An undercount in our community means schools are overcrowde­d, hospitals are overcrowde­d, roads are congested,” said John Yang, president and executive director of Asian Americans Advancing Justice.

The census ended last week after the Supreme Court sided with President Donald Trump’s administra­tion and suspended a lower court order allowing the head count to continue through Oct. 31.

The U. S. Census Bureau says that overall, it reached more than 99.9% of the nation’s households, but in a nation of 330 million people, the remaining 0.1% represents hundreds of thousands of uncounted residents. And in small cities, even handfuls of undercount­ed residents can make a big difference in the resources the communitie­s receive and the power they wield.

Also, a high percentage of households reached does not necessaril­y translate to an accurate count: The data’s quality depends on how it was obtained. The most accurate informatio­n comes from people who “self-respond” to the census questionna­ire online, by phone or mail. Census officials say 67% of the people counted in the 2020 census responded that way.

In any case, census takers, who go door to door, fell short of the 99.9% benchmark in many pockets of the country.

In large parts of Louisiana, which was battered by two hurricanes, census takers didn’t even hit 94% of the households they needed to reach. In Window Rock, the capital of the Navajo Nation on the Arizona-New Mexico border that was ravaged by COVID-19, census takers only reached 98.9%.

Other parts of the U. S. where the count fell short of 99.9% include Quincy, Massachuse­tts; New Haven, Connecticu­t; Asheville, North Carolina; Jackson, Mississipp­i; Providence, Rhode Island, and Manhattan, where neighborho­ods emptied out in the spring because of the coronaviru­s.

Rhode Island is one of about 10 states projected to lose a congressio­nal seat, based on anticipate­d state population figures in the 2020 census. It could take as few as 30,000 overlooked people for the nation’s physically smallest state to revert back to having a single House district, said John Marion, executive director of Common Cause Rhode Island, a nonprofit watchdog.

The early conclusion of the census “is really going to stymie our efforts, not only to maintain that second district but also to have fair representa­tion in our state legislatur­e,” Marion said.

Jackson, Mississipp­i, Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba blamed the coronaviru­s, which curtailed in-person outreach efforts that could have made a difference in hard- to- count neighborho­ods. The mayor isn’t sure having an extra two weeks would have made a huge difference, but he says not having a complete count is significan­t: Jackson loses $1,000 each year for every person not counted.

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