The Mercury News

Wealthy are skipping town — and the census

Escape to vacation homes will lead to an undercount

- By Nigel Duara

Census officials have noticed an unexpected trend amid the pandemic: Residents in California’s wealthiest enclaves aren’t filling out their surveys, because they appear to be sheltering in vacation homes and secondary residences.

Malibu’s response rate is down more than 20% from the 2010 census. Beverly Hills is off by 10%. And in the beachside enclave of Carmel-by-the-Sea, it’s down 21%.

With data collection set to close at the end of this month, state officials and academics are calling attention to California’s Manhattan effect. Just as New York City is suffering from depressed

response rates as affluent New Yorkers flee to second homes, the same is happening in pockets across California.

The problem is exacerbati­ng a challengin­g year for California’s census count amid fears of low turnout and widespread undercount­ing of immigrant and Black residents.

“There’s odd patterns this year,” said Natalie Masuoka, associate professor of political science at UCLA who teaches an undergradu­ate course on the census. “In dense, majority-white areas, they either chose to relocate from those hotbeds of COVID spread, or we also saw a lot of folks from some wealthy areas get stuck abroad.”

An undercount of California­ns has real-world consequenc­es because it could cost the state a seat in the U.S. House of Representa­tives and less federal funding for affordable housing and anti-poverty programs, not to mention money for roads and infrastruc­ture to school lunches.

But the irony is that Malibu’s low census participat­ion rate won’t hurt Malibu — or most other wealthy areas in Los Angeles. The impact will be felt instead by poorer communitie­s that rely on taxpayer-funded social safety nets. That means hard-to-reach census tracts like Boyle Heights with below-average rates of English-language proficienc­y, college degrees and broadband access will receive even less.

It could be an especially big problem for areas that have seen major demographi­c shifts in recent years, like the housingric­h Inland Empire, Central Valley and the Sacramento Delta, where Latino, Black and Pacific Islander population­s have skyrockete­d in recent years.

One in three Black California­ns lives in what the Census Bureau calls a “hard to count” area, where factors like unstable housing, high incarcerat­ion rates and mistrust of the government all contribute to undercount­ing, according to an analysis by Black Voice News.

“The wealthy will feel the impact (of a census undercount) at a much lower rate,” Masuoka said. “They’ll feel it less in public school funding because a higher percentage of their children go to private schools. They’re less reliant on social services.

“While wealthy areas do enjoy a lot of public services, like beaches and parks, you could speculate that if there is an undercount, they could personally fund them themselves. That’s not an option in a lot of other places.”

The resource mismatch is particular­ly acute in fastgrowin­g inland areas of the state, where hundreds of thousands of people have moved in search of affordable housing but resources have not always followed.

Candice Mays saw that firsthand growing up in Moreno Valley, where her parents moved from South Central L.A. in the mid1980s. Now, as the manager of the Mapping Black California project at Riverside’s

Voice Media Ventures, groups like hers and the California Black Census & Redistrict­ing Hub are working overtime to make sure the consequenc­es of a long history of undercount­s aren’t repeated with a new generation.

“We know there are trends because we lived them in our community, but when we go to the data, we’re unable to find anything,” Mays said. “It creates invisibili­ty. If nobody’s keeping track of this, then we can’t fully prove that it’s happening.”

The Legislativ­e Analyst’s Office found that the 1990 census missed 2.7% of California, costing a House seat and losing out on at least $2 billion in federal funds that decade. Researcher­s don’t expect complete compliance — the idea is that, as long as the undercount in California is proportion­ate to the undercount­s in other states, the state won’t lose out.

But significan­t undercount­s in usually reliable areas makes that a more risky propositio­n, especially if people in wealthy areas in states like Texas and Florida have stayed in their primary residences. As of last week, the national response rate is 65.1%. California is tracking at 67.4%.

To get a better count, California allocated $187 million on the 2020 census outreach efforts, especially in hard-to-reach areas. Still, state officials are worried about losing momentum given the federal government’s decision to cut short the counting period by four weeks.

A coalition of cities, counties and civil rights groups is challengin­g the

shortened schedule in San Jose federal court, alleging the bureau shortened its schedule to ensure that the process of counting people used to redraw congressio­nal districts happens under the Trump administra­tion’s watch.

President Donald Trump also has called for the exclusion of undocument­ed migrants from apportionm­ent, a directive that would dramatical­ly affect California, particular­ly Los Angeles County and most counties in the San Joaquin Valley, which have higher percentage­s of undocument­ed migrants among their population.

Los Angeles Regional Census Center spokesman Donald Bendz said the census is still on track to finish its count on time. When asked about Trump’s comments on excluding undocument­ed migrants, Bendz said the Census Bureau’s mission is to count every living person in the U.S.

The Census Bureau isn’t out of options if people don’t mail back their forms or answer the census taker’s knock on the door. They can ask neighbors, or even the postal carrier.

Bendz said that in a few cases — fewer than 1% of all households — the census will turn to informatio­n people already have provided to the federal government: submission­s to the IRS, informatio­n on file with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and any other federal department that might have informatio­n on the number of people living in a household.

“When a small community has to make a request for federal dollars, the first

place (the federal government) is going to look is at their census numbers,” Bendz said. “That’s why we have been urging people to do their part for their own communitie­s.”

Lauren Hepler contribute­d to this report. It is part of The California Divide, a collaborat­ion among newsrooms examining income inequity and economic survival.

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