Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Here’s a chance for us to make California count

- By Bill Dodd State Sen. Bill Dodd/3rd Senate District, including all or portions of Napa, Yolo, Sonoma, Solano, Sacramento and Contra Costa counties.

Be counted, California! Nothing less than your money and power are at stake.

The 2020 Census, which kicks off April 1, determines where billions in federal dollars are spent for over 70 federal programs that pay for things like roads and schools. At the same time, the census decides the number of seats states get in the House of Representa­tives and the allotment of electoral votes toward picking the president.

Suffice it to say, counting every California­n is extremely important.

Yet there are no guarantees, especially in California, a state with historical­ly undercount­ed communitie­s including renters, young men, kids, African Americans and Latinos. By one estimate, our state was shorted by nearly 3 percent — or 835,000 people — in the 1990 census, and large segments are at risk of being under-counted again this year.

Some say California could be poised to lose a congressio­nal seat.

That’s why California leaders have launched a statewide effort to ensure an accurate and successful count this time around, investing in outreach and communicat­ion. The California Complete Count Census 2020 campaign will deploy an army of newly hired census workers, the media and community groups to go to hardto-reach neighborho­ods throughout California and urge participat­ion.

Not surprising­ly, many hardto-count communitie­s are right here in Northern California. From Napa to Vallejo, east along the Interstate 80 corridor and up to Woodland, officials have identified numerous areas where people of diverse demographi­c and socioecono­mic background­s are at risk of being excluded. One census estimate says nearly 45 percent of Senate District 3 — which at last count totaled nearly 970,000 people — have some hard-to-count characteri­stics.

What are those traits? Renters and people living in apartments present the biggest challenges followed by low-income and foreignbor­n people. The fear is some families will not participat­e in the census because of their immigratio­n status. The concern was raised when the Trump administra­tion tried unsuccessf­ully to add a citizenshi­p question to the census.

Others might not respond because they have privacy concerns or worry about having more than the allowable number of people in their home. Roughly 40 percent of district housing is renter occupied and 8 percent moved from outside their county in the past year.

Still others face language barriers. About 10 percent of district residents have limited English skills, according to census estimates. About two-thirds speak Spanish, 11 percent speak Tagalog and 7 percent speak Mandarin or Cantonese.

Some people simply don’t understand what the census is or why it’s so important. About 14 percent do not have access to the internet and 12 percent of adults over 25 didn’t graduate from high school.

All of that could skew the results.

Of course, all personal informatio­n submitted to the census is kept confidenti­al. Nothing is shared with law enforcemen­t, landlords or anyone else. No one should avoid doing it, regardless of immigratio­n status, age or criminal history. No matter who you are or where you live, everyone counts.

Starting in late March, census forms will be available in paper form, in English and Spanish, as well as online in 12 different languages. Heads of households may begin responding immediatel­y, counting every person living in their household.

Those who do not respond by May can expect a census worker to knock on your door.

And they will be knocking with good reason. Each uncounted person costs California­ns about $2,000 per year for the next decade. The loss of informatio­n about where people live, how many people there are and what they need can also affect federal for schools, housing and health care.

Money you paid through taxes would instead go to another state.

What’s more, the informatio­n is used to draw state legislativ­e and congressio­nal district lines, affecting the entire state’s political influence along with the power of certain communitie­s. Even if a state’s total is high enough to maintain its congressio­nal seats, an undercount in an ethnically diverse region could dilute power for that community.

Not responding is not an option.

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