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About 56,000 census workers yesterday began hand delivering 2010 Census questionnaires to roughly 12 million addresses across the nation, mostly in rural areas where people do not receive mail at the same location as their residence. Most of nation’s 120 million households, about 90 percent of the U.S. population, should look for their 10-question forms to arrive by mail mid-March.
It is important that households fill in the form and promptly mail it back. Census information affects the numbers of seats each state occupies in the U.S. House of Representatives. And people from many walks of life use census data to advocate for causes, rescue disaster victims, prevent diseases, research markets, locate pools of skilled workers and more.
The information the census collects helps to determine how more than $400 billion dollars of federal funding each year is spent on infrastructure and services.
“Many people do not want to disclose personal information for fear of being ‘turned in,'” said Diane Carlyle, a Partnership Assistant for the 2010 Census in Contra Costa County, in an e-mail. “Part of my job was to make the public aware that the census can not release any identifiable personal information.”
“What our communities needed 10 years ago are very different from what we will need in the next 10 years,” she added. “The only way to project future needs accurately, and have funding for growth and needed change, is from census data. If we are not counted accurately, my grandkids and great grandchildren will pay the price, and other communities (with good mail-in response rates) will enjoy the benefits from federal funding, and have the louder voice in government due to proper representation.”
While the majority of areas covered by the Census operation in the entire country are rural, the Census Bureau also is delivering forms to Gulf Coast areas affected by Hurricane Katrina to ensure everyone is included in the once-a-decade count. Census takers will deliver 2010 Census questionnaires directly to each residence in these areas, leaving a form packaged in a plastic bag at the home’s main door. Residents are encouraged to fill out and mail back their census forms — using the enclosed pre-paid envelope — as soon as possible.
“Regardless of whether your census form gets dropped off at your front door or you receive it within a few weeks in your mailbox, it’s important that you fill it out and mail it back as soon as possible,” said Census Bureau Director Robert M. Groves. “With only 10 questions, the 2010 Census should only take about 10 minutes to complete.”
In 2000, about 72 percent of the population mailed back their census forms — halting a three-decade decline in the national mail participation rate. Mailing back the forms save taxpayers money, as it reduces the number of census takers that must go door-to-door to follow up with households that failed to do so. The Census Bureau saves about $85 million in operational costs for every percentage point increase in the national mail response rate.
“It costs us just 42 cents in a postage paid envelope when households mail back their 2010 Census forms,” Groves said. “The Census Bureau will spend about $25 per person if we have to go out and knock on the doors of households that don’t mail them back.”
The Census Bureau is urging everyone to take 10 minutes to fill out their census forms and mail them back. Starting March 22, visitors to the 2010 Census Web site will be able to track how well their communities are participating in the census on a daily basis. Communities will even be able to embed a Web-based tool on their own Web sites that automatically updates the daily rates. An interactive Google-based map is now online that allows visitors to find out how well their communities did in the 2000 Census. The Census Bureau is challenging all communities to improve their 2000 mail participation rates in 2010.
All census responses are confidential. Answers are protected by law and cannot be shared with anyone. The Census Bureau takes extreme measures to protect the identity of individuals and businesses. By law, the Census Bureau cannot share respondents’ individually identifiable answers with anyone, including tribal housing authorities, other federal agencies and law enforcement entities.
About the 2010 census
The 2010 Census is a count of everyone living in the United States and is mandated by the U.S. Constitution. Census data are used to apportion congressional seats to states, to distribute more than $400 billion in federal funds to tribal, state and local governments each year and to make decisions about what community services to provide. The 2010 Census form will be one of the shortest in U.S. history, consisting of 10 questions, taking about 10 minutes to complete. Strict confidentiality laws protect the respondents and the information they provide.





There was no mention of the “American Community Survey” which one in every six households will receive. This is the one that asks more invasive questions including a new one, # 15 – “Is this person currently covered by any of the following types of health insurance or health coverage plans?” This is the first time this question has ever been asked and will be the first time the government knows how many people have, or more importantly do not have, health insurance. So all of the blather out of Washington about the millions who don’t have health insurance is, so far, just so much political rhetoric!
Great Job, thank you so very much.