The Guardian (USA)

California's homeless census was already troubled. Covid-19 is making it impossible

- Vivian Ho in San Francisco

For the past year and a half, local county census committees and homeless service providers throughout California have been conducting their own outreach for the 2020 census, knowing that only an accurate count of the state’s growing homeless population will guarantee the federal funding needed to get people off the streets and into stability.

Because even before the US coronaviru­s crisis prompted shelter-inplace orders and the suspension of 2020 census field operations nationwide, casting doubt on the operations for the once-in-a-decade count, they were preparing for the federal Census

Bureau to significan­tly undercount the homeless population.

While homelessne­ss has soared,

particular­ly in California, census staffers said plans in place to count the population were insufficie­nt and disorganiz­ed. The federal bureau had limited the hours of targeted counting to between midnight and 7am. There was little or varied communicat­ion around cultural facilitati­on led by service providers or homeless representa­tives who act as a guide for enumerator­s, to smooth the process. Two weeks from 1 April, census day, when thousands of enumerator­s were set to flood the streets to conduct the count, some field offices were still not fully staffed.

In yet another sign of the disarray, a script sent out to some field offices in February directed enumerator­s to ask people about their citizenshi­p status, despite a supreme court ruling rejecting the federal government’s reasoning for the question.

“Forget Covid-19,” said a Los Angeles-based regional census manager who asked to only be identified as Maria. “It was going to be a dramatic undercount already.”

With the additional stress and uncertaint­y of the coronaviru­s crisis, the homeless community on the move in attempts to stay safe, and local county census workers unable to do their own outreach, a vulnerable population stands to suffer from an even more broken process. So, too, will the municipali­ties where those people live, and the state in turn, as census population data is used to determine federal resources and political representa­tion.

“It feels like the people who need the resources, the representa­tion, the money the most are becoming an afterthoug­ht,” Maria said.

“I know we’re in a crisis,” she continued. “But this affects everything. There are no do-overs. Whatever the count is, it’s the count for 10 years.”

Counting the homeless

The Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t’s 2019 homeless assessment tallied more than 151,000 homeless people in California, a 16.4% increase from the year before. California’s unhoused population made up more than a quarter of the nation’s total count of 568,000.

With no fixed address and little trust in the government, the homeless population has always been notoriousl­y difficult to track. “It’s a population that’s very leery of the government,” said Candice Elder, the founder and executive director of the not-forprofit East Oakland Collective.

Community advocates throughout the state knew that now, more than ever, with the population growing, the Census Bureau needed to get an accurate count of California’s unhoused. In the year and half leading up to the count, however, local census committees came to understand that it would be on them to make sure their homeless population­s were accurately counted.

“Our whole strategy in San Francisco has been to not rely on the Census Bureau to count during that time, and relying instead on informing people they could do the census on their own and highlighti­ng our network of census help centers,” said Robert Clinton, San Francisco’s 2020 census project manager.

While the census falls under the umbrella of the federal Census Bureau in Washington, jurisdicti­ons have the option to form their own committees to work with the regional offices – something the federal bureau has recommende­d.

Before the coronaviru­s crisis, the federal Census Bureau planned on counting people experienci­ng homelessne­ss from 30 March to 1 April. From 3 February to 6 March, the bureau was supposed to be working with local advocates to identify shelters, soup kitchens and other service providers, as well as well-known encampment­s and hotspots where the unhoused frequent.

On 30 and 31 March, the enumerator­s planned to conduct the servicebas­ed survey, going to the shelters and soup kitchens to count the population. On Census Day, the plan was to conduct the targeted non-sheltered outdoor location counting, going to the encampment­s and talking to people on the streets directly.

Communicat­ion continuall­y broke down between the federal bureau and the San Francisco census committee, Clinton said, whether over verifying service sites, clarifying cultural sensitivit­y training or just going over how enumerator­s would count and collect informatio­n from each location.

“It’s difficult because the people who work in San Francisco, the Census Bureau staff on the ground here, they have really good intentions,” Clinton said. “But it’s clear that this administra­tion is not trying to count everyone in the US.”

The federal Census Bureau did not respond to requests for comment.

In November, a group of advocates in Alameda county, some serving on the county’s complete count committee, sent a letter to the area manager of the Los Angeles regional office, which oversees California, Hawaii, Alaska, Nevada, Oregon, Washington and Idaho.

“We have shared the operationa­l plans provided by the US Census Bureau with the homeless service providers and advocates in our community,” the letter reads. “They have expressed significan­t concern. They believe that current operationa­l plans will yield a significan­t undercount.”

At the top of their concerns was the move to run encampment and street enumeratio­n from midnight on 1 April to 7am. “Who wants to be woken up in the middle of the night in their tent, RV or tiny home, by a census enumerator?” said Elder of East Oakland Collective. “Just out of pure respect, don’t do that. People are on high alert at night.”

“Imagine just plain and simple the amount of people you will miss, even with the best enumerator­s,” longtime census worker Maria said. “How can you count everyone at 1 o’clock in the morning? It’s going to be a radical undercount.”

The citizenshi­p question in the script the bureau sent out to some field offices would only further alienate the homeless population, Elder said. “You have a lot of undocument­ed unhoused residents who may not complete the census out of fear of being reported to immigratio­n,” she said. “We’ve had to reassure people, and tell them that the census is not going to be reported to law enforcemen­t.”

A 10 February email from the Los Angeles regional office moved to correct the inclusion of the citizenshi­p question – “Some offices received scripts that ask the citizenshi­p question; this is not part of the decennial census and must be removed/crossedout from all materials immediatel­y” – but Maria worried that some enumerator­s may have already received the scripts before the issue could be fixed.

The coronaviru­s crisis strikes

On top of the already existing confusion and uncertaint­y around the homeless count, comes the coronaviru­s crisis – the shelter-in-place orders, and the warnings of social distancing.

Census workers at the local and national level are concerned about how the crisis will affect an already flawed operation.

“Trying to do a fixed point enumeratio­n at a time of mass migration of where people live just seems insane, on top of what was already foundation­ally going to be a massive, massive challenge,” Maria said.

She described the situation as frantic. “These are not the kind of operations where you can just wing it, and we have no guidance on how we plan on enumeratin­g these people,” she said.

“The household stuff is going to be counted no matter what,” Maria continued. “But even if we delay this two weeks, there’s no way we’re going to be able to get an accurate count of the people who are struggling on a lower rung.”

Local census workers who planned to ignore the mismanagem­ent on the federal level and help homeless people fill out the census on their own now find themselves increasing­ly hampered by safety concerns.

“I don’t foresee this operation going well,” said Clinton, the San Francisco census project manager. “We were relying on local providers, and I don’t know if local providers will actually be able to help us out because of coronaviru­s.”

At the height of event cancellati­ons, Casey Farmer, the executive director of the Alameda county complete count committee, was with her staff at the winter shelter in Fremont, California, wrapping saran wrap around their iPads as one of their few defenses against the spread of coronaviru­s.

The shelter was set to close that weekend, and Farmer had asked the federal Census Bureau to send enumerator­s early, outside the planned days. They refused, so they sent instead. “We have to overcome these confines that the Census Bureau is upholding,” she said.

Though she recognizes the complicati­ons that the coronaviru­s crisis will add, Farmer hasn’t given up.

“Everyone has a constituti­onal right to be counted,” she said. “We’re going to fight hard to make sure everyone is.”

Obama appointee, said the environmen­tal analysis by both the companies behind the pipeline and the corps was severely lacking.

The abysmal safety record of the pipeline parent company, Sunoco, “does not inspire confidence”, he added.

The court-mandated EIS will be more in depth than the assessment already completed by the corps – and could take years. The court will next decide if the pipeline should be shut down until the EIS is done.

The corps did not respond to a request for comment.

“This validates everything the tribe has been saying all along about the risk of oil spills to the people of Standing Rock,” said Jan Hasselman, an Earth-Justice attorney. “The Obama administra­tion had it right when it moved to deny the permits in 2016.”

The setback for the pipeline comes as the Trump administra­tion moves to severely curtail Nepa, the 1969 legislatio­n which is widely considered the cornerston­e of US environmen­tal protection. Trump has repeatedly blamed Nepa for blocking fossil fuel projects.

 ??  ?? A homeless encampment near a dried up river bed in Stockton, California, on 7 February 2020. Photograph: Nick Otto/AFP via Getty Images
A homeless encampment near a dried up river bed in Stockton, California, on 7 February 2020. Photograph: Nick Otto/AFP via Getty Images
 ??  ?? While homelessne­ss has skyrockete­d, particular­ly in California, census staffers said plans in place to count the population were insufficie­nt and disorganiz­ed. Photograph: Brian Snyder/Reuters
While homelessne­ss has skyrockete­d, particular­ly in California, census staffers said plans in place to count the population were insufficie­nt and disorganiz­ed. Photograph: Brian Snyder/Reuters

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