An Accurate Count?
Last week, Sen. David Vitter (R-LA) introduced an amendment to the Commerce, Justice and Science FY10 Appropriations bill that would ask all persons their citizenship and immigration status in the 2010 Census.
Vitter, who is co-sponsoring the measure with Sen. Bob Bennett (R-Utah), claims that counting undocumented communities would allow certain states to increase the size of their congressional delegations.
Earlier this week several former Census directors issued a joint statement asking Senators not to support Vitter's proposed amendment. "Adding an untested question at this late point in the decennial [Census] process would put the accuracy of the enumeration in all communities at risk and would likely delay the start of the census," the letter reads. "Less than six months before Census Day, and only several months before the count starts, is not the time to place a decade of careful and demanding preparations at risk."
The Census Bureau is also against Vitter's amendment. According to Census officials, about 425 million forms have already been printed. With the count less than six months away, any changes would hold up preparations. Plus it's simply too costly, according to the bureau. Not only would it cost billions to to rewrite, reprint and redeliver questionnaires, as the Times-Picayune notes, even adding an addenda sheet with the Vitter question would require rewriting software code, reprogramming scanners and retraining census workers to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars.
Several critics say that Vitter's plan is unconstitutional and discriminatory. The decennial census is supposed to be based on total population -- "counting the whole number of persons in each State" -- not citizenship, observers say.
As FairVote reports, Vitter's amendment is a challenge to fair election and voting rights, as well as the equal protection clause in the 14th Amendment:
Senator Vitter's amendment -- to only count citizens of the United States in the census instead of counting "the whole number of persons" -- goes against the meaning of the 14th Amendment and is diametrically opposed to the progress the United States has made since the dark days of slavery. His amendment would be a serious step back for voting rights in the United States because it would mean that for the first time since the 14th Amendment was ratified, the U.S. Census Bureau would be required by law to count certain categories of people differently than others.
Salon agrees that Vitter's amendment calls back to a dark time in U.S. history:
There is also a broader philosophical issue at stake. The United States has wrestled in the past with how to recognize the presence of people whose legal status as citizens the government didn't acknowledge. There is an obvious, but imperfect, parallel here with the infamous Three-fifths Compromise included in the Constitution.
The origins of the compromise were in the ratification process of the Constitution; the southern delegates wanted the slaves held in their states to be counted in full by the census, multiplying the power of the slave-owners' votes. (The slaves themselves, of course, didn't get to cast the votes.) The northern delegates, unhappy about the idea of extending the power of the plantation owners, bargained them down to counting the slaves as three-fifths of a person each.
Obviously, the idea of counting someone as only a fraction of a person is repugnant. But at the heart of the three-fifths debate compromise is the question of who should get to speak on behalf of people deemed unqualified to participate in politics directly. And that's where the 18th century has something to say to the 21st.
Less Outreach Funding
A new survey [pdf] by Pew Charitable Trusts examines the 2010 Census preparations in 11 major U.S. cities. According to the report, six of the cities studied - Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Detroit, Philadelphia and Pittsburgh - have less money and fewer staffers for census outreach and marketing than they did in 2000.
The report found that cities are grappling with the recession and tight budgets, and as a result they are spending much less than they have in the past to encourage residents to fill out the forms. This is important because studies show that state-sponsored community-based outreach, education and awareness campaigns have been important to achieving better counts.
According to the report, without strong outreach and technical preparation these cities would also face greater undercounts of certain groups.
As Facing South reported, stakes are high in cash-strapped Southern states, many of which have been undercounted in the past. Southern states and cities have high populations of historically undercounted groups: African-Americans, new immigrants and low-income residents. Undercounts in these communities have prevented states from receiving their fair share of public funding, an increasingly important issue in the midst of the country's deepening economic troubles.
With less funds devoted to outreach, towns and cities may have to rely on more volunteers and nonprofit community and grassroots organizations to fill in the gaps when outreaching to hard-to-count communities. Although with the removal of grassroots powerhouse ACORN, the strain may be heightened at the community outreach level.
Other Census Challenges
Other challenges remain to an accurate 2010 count. Facing South reported on the struggle to ensure accurate counts in Latino and immigrant communities. The Census Bureau and Latino advocacy groups recently launched a campaign aimed at heightening Latino participation.
Civil rights groups and community activists on the Gulf Coast are also urging Census officials to step up efforts to count displaced residents. Groups are also calling for a special census in 2011 or 2012 to count storm victims who return to the Gulf Coast after the April 2010 count. But officials have said a special count is unlikely because of deadlines for congressional redistricting and the extra cost.
The foreclosure crisis has also brought its own slew of problems that could complicate next year's count. As the Associated Press reports, foreclosures will make it tougher and more expensive to get an accurate census count next year as families move in with relatives or are left homeless. Since several million people have lost their houses to foreclosure during the economic recession, some Census mailings will go to these empty homes, especially in hard-hit foreclosure-prone states like Georgia, California, Arizona, Nevada and Florida.
In particular, foreclosures have had a disproportionate impact on communities of color. In houses and rentals where families are doubling up to account for the growing homeless, many people may be reluctant to confess the exact number of persons they have living in a single unit.
These combination of challenges could have a lasting impact on already struggling communities, community groups say. The decline in outreach spending hits just as more hard-to-count and historically undercounted populations -- immigrant, minority, low-income, and Gulf Coast communities -- continue to face challenges due to displacement.




This is the amount of incredulous influence the--OPEN BORDER--lobbyists (business power brokers and ethnic zealots)) have on certain Democratic devious rabble? Once again the senate top echelon have huddled secretly (BEHIND CLOSED DOORS), recklessly placing E-Verify worker identification system in jeopardy. The obnoxious R-O-P-E Senate group as its being called on the Internet and nationwide, who are marked as Reid, Obama, Pelosi Emmanuel have indifferently pushed American Workers in the background, allowing the millions of illegal aliens to take their jobs. They have driven into the ground amendments from appearing in the final Homeland Security "conference committee" bill. They eradicated--ANY CHANCE--of a Senate's permanent authorization of the E-Verify program. These sleazy politicians are banqueting on the bones of unemployed US labor, without a second thought.
They have religiously under-funded, undermined the Senate's mandate to beef up and complete the final 300 mile Mexican border fence. Then again it was never the original border wall as designed by Rep. Duncan Hunter. Illegal Aliens would have first had to scale the--FIRST--fence, run across the two lane highway for the Border Patrol vehicles, then scale an identical--SECOND FENCE. Under funded and weakened just like E-Verify, the police 287(g) arrest and detainment and ceasing the massive ICE raids. Finally the ROPE group strangled the Senate (already) passed ability of countrywide businesses to run their previous hires employees through E-Verify. So you can guess this is a harbinger to drop on the AMERICAN WORKER YET ANOTHER ULTIMATELY EXPENSIVE BLANKET AMNESTY. THOSE TAXPAYERS WILL BE FORCED TO PICK UP A TRILLION DOLLAR TAB. Be advised that Reid D-NV , Pelosi D-CA have one of the largest population of illegal immigrants in the country, who they are subservient too. Remember to expend your frustration and anger at 202-224-3121on your lawmakers. They are juggling with millions of American Workers job lifeline, by pandering to people who shouldn't even be here?
MY SUGGESTION IS DON"T BUY ANY SERVICES FROM BUSINESS THAT DOESN'T DISPLAY THE E-VERIFY PLACARD. Remember the real conniving happens in rooms hidden from the public awareness in conference committees. In addition, Remember Harry Reid as an incumbent Senator who carries the ugly stain of being anti-American Worker, Anti-Sovereignty must not be re-elected. Speaker Pelosi must go? So must Emmanuel? They have proved they cannot be trusted As NUMBERSUSA president says," With no chance now of E-Verify dying in any minute, because they couldn't annul the 3 year extension? The pro-amnesty forces no longer can try to use it as a bargaining chip. States, counties, cities and businesses can now be quite confident that they can set policy based on the E-Verify program being around." IT'S NOT PERMANENT YET NO THANKS TO ROPE. This group has given preference to illegal workers instead of the 15 million authorized AMERICAN WORKERS. COMPREHEND MORE OF THE CORRUPTION THAT CANNOT BE DENIED BY POLITICIANS AT JUDICIAL WATCH. NUMBERSUSA will explain in detail the consequences, that includes the 2010 Census, Health Care, ACORN, Local police alien enforcement, hidden welfare programs, Anchor babies-Birthright citizenship, criminals amongst the illegal immigration occupiers. CAPSWEB for OVERPOPULATION information. Read the immigration enforcement--GRADING--of each and every one of them at NUMBERSUSA. Currently undercover of darkness the Democratic administration is arranging a--SOCIAL SECURITY--totalization agreement between US and Mexico.
October 16, 2009 3:46 PM | Reply