U.S. Census Bureau
U.S. Department of Commerce News
                     FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
                   WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 2002

LaVerne V. Collins                                          CB02-CN.61
Public Information Office
(301) 457-3691/457-3620 (fax)
(301) 457-1037 (TDD)                                              Photo    
e-mail: pio@census.gov                             Quotes & Sound Bites

           Kincannon Confirmed as Census Bureau Director

  The U.S. Senate today confirmed Charles Louis Kincannon as director of
the U.S. Census Bureau. Kincannon served as the Census Bureau's deputy
director from 1982 to 1992.

  "He is one of the country's most respected statisticians, bringing a
background of almost 40 years of experience in a wide range of demographic
and economic research to the nation's flagship statistical agency," said
Commerce Secretary Donald Evans. "Having spent years working at the Census
Bureau in an executive capacity, he already is intimately familiar with
the organization's work and mission."

  The Census Bureau is perhaps best known for conducting a census of the
nation's population every 10 years. It also is the federal government's
preeminent economic statistical agency, providing regular measurements of
international trade and retail sales, among others. The Census Bureau
conducts 120 surveys of people and businesses a year in addition to an
economic census every five years. Data collected by the Census Bureau
paint a detailed picture of the nation's people and economy and are used
extensively by policy-makers and businesses.

  "I'm very honored to have been selected to lead the Census Bureau,"
Kincannon said. "This is a critical time for the agency we are in the
midst of releasing Census 2000 results; we will start to collect data for
the 2002 Economic Census later this year; and we are already planning for
a re-engineered decennial census in 2010."

  A native of Waco, Texas, Kincannon began his career as a statistician in
the Census Bureau in 1963. He held positions of increasing responsibility
at the bureau before becoming chief of the program review staff in the
Commerce Department's Social and Economic Statistics Administration in
1974. Kincannon joined the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) the
following year.

  At OMB, Kincannon served initially as statistical liaison to Vice
President Nelson Rockefeller's office. Later, he was a member of the
original staff in OMB's Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs. He
also helped oversee the successful implementation of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1980.

  Kincannon returned to the Census Bureau in 1981 and was appointed deputy
director and chief operating officer in 1982, continuing in that post for
a decade. He served as acting director from July 1983 to March 1984 and
again from January to December 1989. During the latter period, he directed
final preparations for the 1990 Census of Population and Housing. During
his career at the Census Bureau, Kincannon won a variety of awards,
including the Presidential Rank Award of Meritorious Executive, the
Special Award for Excellence of the Interagency Committee on Information
Resources Management and the Commerce Department's highest civil service
honor, the Gold Medal.

  In 1992, Kincannon was appointed to the new position of chief
statistician for the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development in Paris, France, an economic research organization for the
world's major industrial democracies. In this role, he worked to
strengthen and reform the organization's statistical work to better
respond to post-Cold War needs in Europe and rapid economic integration.
He retired from this post in June 2000.

  Kincannon is a graduate of the University of Texas at Austin and did
postgraduate study in statistics and economics at George Washington
University, Georgetown University and the University of Maryland. He and
his wife of 33 years, the former Lois Claire Green of Dayton, Ohio, live
in Virginia. Their married daughters live in Washington, D.C., and
Knoxville, Tenn.

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Source: U.S. Census Bureau
Public Information Office
(301) 763-3030

Last Revised: March 15, 2002 at 03:53:18 PM

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