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Used with permission from: the How Stuff Works web
site
http://howstuffworks.com/census
In a country as large as the United States, how is it possible to count
each person residing within its borders? Every 10 years, this is the impossible
task that the Commerce Department's Census Bureau takes on. Census 2000
was billed by the bureau as "the largest peacetime effort in the history
of the United States." You may recall some of the hoopla surrounding this
effort in late 1999 and early 2000 as the nation prepared for National
Census Day-April 1.
Counting seems to be the central theme of the United States in 2000, whether
it be dimpled and pregnant chads or each citizen living from the tip of
Maine to the Aleutian Islands off the most western part of Alaska. If
you live in the United States, there's a good chance that you received
one of the 98 million census forms that were mailed out by the Census
Bureau, and on April 1 an adult in each American household was supposed
to fill out this form and send it in. More than eight months later, the
official tally is in. Census 2000 shows that the resident population of
the United States as of April 1, 2000 is 281,421,906. That is a 13.2 percent
increase over 1990, when 248,709,873 were counted. See the Census Bureau
for details.
The census is required by the U.S. Constitution under Article 1 Section
2, and performed once a decade to do more than just satisfy our curiosity
about the number of people that live in the country. In this edition of
How Stuff Works, you'll learn how the census is actually taken, how its
results are used to distribute federal funds and what impact the census
has on the U.S. House of Representatives.
What Exactly Is the Census and How Long
Has It Been Around?
The concept of a census, or counting of residents, is an ancient one dating
to Biblical times. The first census ever taken in North America, historians
say, was in 1576, 200 years before America gained its independence from
the British. Spanish King Philip II, who then ruled the large region,
sent American Indians through what is now Mexico with a list of 100 questions.
The Indians spoke no Spanish, so they recorded the answers in hieroglyphs
(pictures) and made maps the same way. (They even showed one-way streets
with footprints!)
Since 1790, national census information has been taken every 10 years
(in years ending in zero) because it is mandated by the U.S. Constitution
and necessary to determining each area's representation in the U.S. House
of Representatives. In 1790, George Washington signed the act into law.
(Interestingly, several states had been taking their own census earlier
and continued to do so in non-zero-ending years.) While the Constitution
describes the census simply as an "enumeration of inhabitants," the census
has evolved over time into a more comprehensive-and more useful-process.
Now, we can learn much more about our population than just the number
of people living in the United States.
According to Judy Hanna Green's book Finding Treasures in the U.S. Federal
Census in 1790, the population of the United States was just under 4 million-not
counting slaves or the untaxed Indians. (A primary goal of the first census
was to provide information on men eligible for the military. On the heels
of the Revolutionary War, the new American citizens were especially conscious
of the importance of a strong military. Later, during the War of 1812,
much of the 1790 census was destroyed by fire.)
In the first national census, 17 U.S. marshals appointed 200 assistants.
They rode on horseback all over the nation to count people, writing with
quill pens (Read more about pen history as How a Ballpoint Pen Works!)
on any scraps of paper they could find. The cost of that census project
was $45,000!
Technology began to become part of census taking in 1890. The Census Bureau
developed a new electrical machine that could add up responses to questions
after census workers punched holes in the right places for each answer.
Cards were then fed into a machine that totaled the result. It was bulky
but a great advance at that time-anything that sped up the process was
a help since some of the results must be ready nine months after Census
Day (more about that later).
The first modern computer, called ENIAC, was invented in 1946 at the University
of Pennsylvania. This computer, which was really many machines working
together, took up a whole room. The system was ready in time for use in
parts of the 1950 census, and the Census Bureau ordered its own computer,
called UNIVAC. That technology has improved over the years and now high-speed,
supercomputers are available to assist the census.
Today, this technology plays a major role in the processing and census
data. The major automation features for Census 2000 include data capture
systems designed to handle the use of "respondent-friendly" questionnaires.
The Census Bureau uses the National Processing Center and works with contractors
who operate three processing centers responsible for a variety of data
capture functions:
· A full data capture and processing system records an image of every
questionnaire.
· Questionnaires returned by mail will be sorted automatically to ensure
timely capture of critical information needed before the non-response
follow-up.
· Optical mark recognition will be used for all check-box data items.
· Intelligent character recognition (ICR) will be used to capture write-in
character-based data items.
· A clerical keying operation will capture and resolve difficult ICR cases.
· A quality assurance review will be conducted on data keying and scanning
activities.
Census Bureau officials say the use of electronic imaging and captures
data in 2000 reduced the logistical and staffing requirements that accompany
handling large volumes of paper questionnaires.
Most of the U.S. Census was taken door-to-door until 1960, when census
officials recognized the inefficiency of this method in dealing with such
a fast-growing, increasingly diverse and mobile population. That's when
they decided to use the mail to distribute forms. In the 1970 census,
about 60 percent was taken by mail and in 1980, about 90 percent. However,
in 1990, when the Census Bureau tried to take about 94 percent of the
census by mail, one in three households failed to return the forms. That's
why the most recent decennial census was the focus of a major, nationwide
awareness campaign, officials say.
But neither technology nor mail has replaced the all-important census
team members. Among the thousands of workers today are:
· Administrators-They determine how each division of the Census Bureau
will do its part in the census.
· Enumerators-They go door-to-door to gather information from residents
who have not returned their census forms.
· Statisticians-They make sure the Census Bureau's math is right.
· Demographers-These people understand the statistics and have studied
what statistics tell about American life.
They analyze the census numbers, comparing them with numbers from earlier
censuses, and tell us important things about the future. Why Is the Census
Important? Participating in the census is in everyone's best interest,
because the information on the forms is used by decision-makers to determine
which communities, schools, hospitals and roads need federal funding.
Filling out your census form is also the best way to make sure people
like you are represented in the census.
Here are just a few examples of important uses for census numbers:
· The federal government uses census numbers to allocate over $100 billion
in federal funds annually for community programs and services, such as
education programs, housing and community development, health-care services
for the elderly, job training and many more.
· State, local and tribal governments use census information for planning
and allocating funds for new school construction, libraries and other
public buildings, highway safety and public transportation systems, new
roads and bridges, location of police and fire departments and many other
projects.
· Community organizations use census information to develop social service
programs, community action projects, senior lunch programs and child-care
centers.
· Businesses use the numbers to decide where to locate factories, shopping
centers, movie theaters, banks and offices-activities that often lead
to new jobs.
· The U.S. Congress uses the census totals to determine how many seats
your state will have in the U.S. House of Representatives. In addition,
states use the numbers to allocate seats in their law-making bodies. President
Clinton will deliver the apportionment counts to the 107th Congress during
the first week of its regular session in January 2000. The reapportioned
Congress, which will be the 108th, will convene in January 2003. This
reapportionment of the 435 seats in the House of Representatives could
have important political implications.
All that we learn about ourselves through the census will help the United
States succeed over the next millennium. It's also a great way to tell
our leaders who we are and what we need. If you need a closer-to-home
reason for completing your census form, the Census Bureau suggests that
you consider the following:
· You can help your community thrive. Does your neighborhood have a lot
of traffic congestion, elderly people living alone or over-crowded schools?
Census numbers can help your community work out public improvement strategies.
Non-profit organizations use census numbers to estimate the number of
potential volunteers in communities across the nation.
· You can make your government work for you. The hundreds of billions
of dollars in federal and state funds allocated each year mean important
things to you-things such as school lunch programs, hospitals and highways!
(Using census numbers to support their request for a new community center,
senior citizens in one New England community successfully argued their
case before county commissioners.)
· You can get help when you need it. Many 911 emergency systems are based
on maps developed for the last census. Census information helps health
providers predict the spread of diseases through communities with children
or elderly people. And when floods, tornadoes or earthquakes hit, the
census tells rescuers how many people will need their help.
· You can help American businesses. Census numbers help industry reduce
financial risk and locate potential markets. This means that businesses
are able to determine the marketability of potential products and come
up products you want.
· You can get information you and your family need. Although individual
records are held confidential for 72 years (more about that coming up!),
you can request a certificate from past censuses that can be used to establish
your age, residence or relationship-information that could help you qualify
for a pension, establish citizenship or obtain an inheritance. (In 2072,
your great-grandchildren may want to use census information to research
family history. Right now, your children may be using census information
to do their homework.)
Will I Sacrifice My Privacy If I Complete
the Form?
By law, the Census Bureau cannot share your answers with others, including
welfare agencies, the Immigration and Naturalization Service, the Internal
Revenue Service, courts, police and the military. Under the provisions
of Title 13 of the U.S. Code, census bureau workers who break this law
face up to five years in prison and $5,000 in fines. The law works-millions
of questionnaires were processed during the 1990s without any breach of
trust.
This should also be reassuring: Did you know that the law required each
batch of census forms to remain private for 72 years? This is to encourage
honesty and accurate information. The rationale behind this law is that
little negative impact could happen after 72 years, since most of the
people listed would be gone. So, this means that the latest census available
to the public is the one taken in 1920.
The process of microfilming and printing the census also takes a long
time to accomplish because of the 72-year wait and also by the sheer volume
of documents. (This process usually takes another two years or so to complete
and make ready for the public, according to bureau officials.)
First results of Census 2000 will be the state population totals used
to reapportion the U.S. House of Representatives, which must be delivered
to the President in exactly nine months-by Dec. 31, 2000. More detailed
data used to redraw U.S. and state majority and minority leaders by April
1, 2001.
How Does the Census Process Actually
Work?
In early March 2000, 98 million census forms-both long and short forms-went
out in the mail to about 83 percent of the nation's residences. In addition,
census enumerators personally delivered about 22 million additional forms
to homes that lack street-name and house-number addresses, mostly in rural
and remote areas. These represent about 17 percent of the nation's housing
units. Hundreds of thousands of census takers and support personnel have
been hired to account for the anticipated 118 million housing units and
275 million people across the United States.
The questionnaires were preceded by an advance letter sent a week or so
earlier. This letter gave residents the option of asking for questionnaires
in five languages besides English: Spanish, Tagalog, Korean, Chinese and
Vietnamese. Later this month (March), the Census Bureau then sent a reminder
card asking residents to mail back the form as soon as possible.
During March of a census year, the Census Bureau conducts special operations
to count people with no fixed address or who live in dormitories, nursing
homes, prisons, shelters, trailer parks, transient housing and other groups
or non-standard housing.
After April 1, census workers spend a couple of months trying to locate
and get information from households or families that failed to respond
by mail. If your questionnaire is incomplete, a census employee must contact
you to obtain the missing information. Then these answers are combined
with those on your questionnaire. It is these combined numbers-not your
individual answers-that are published.
As census methodology has become more sophisticated, researchers have
begun to learn more about who responds and who doesn't. For example, the
overall non-response rate in 1990 was 25.3 percent. Researchers say response-or
lack of response-to the mailed 1990 Census questionnaires was highly correlated
with race and length of time at a residence. Researchers also said that
mail response to the 1990 Census was strongly related to family composition
(the number of parents in the home, the age of the single parent, etc.).
How Can Homeless and Transient People
Be Counted?
According to the Census Bureau, it enlists the help of local experts in
finding places where people without housing receive services, such as
emergency and transitional shelters, soup kitchens, regularly-scheduled
mobile food vans and targeted outdoor locations. Census workers go to
these locations to conduct the census.
Partnerships with community-based organizations are essential to including
migrant and seasonal farm workers in the census. The Census Bureau seeks
the advice of local experts to find areas where migrant and seasonal workers
live and work, including unregistered labor camps, vehicles parked near
work sites and living areas along unnamed roads.
Census takers interview people staying at campgrounds, fairs and carnivals
and marinas. Every person interviewed has the opportunity to report his
or her permanent address.
Other Special Groups
There are a number of other special groups that require special planning.
There are special procedures for ensuring that census information for
people living in remote areas is accurate. For example, in remote Alaska,
the census must be completed before the spring thaw. After the thaw, many
residents are away from their homes hunting or conducting other spring
activities. By then it is too late for counters to contact them.
And the Census Bureau works with the Department of Defense and the U.S.
Coast Guard to identify living quarters on military installations and
ships. All ocean going, coastal and Great Lake ships take part in what
is known as the Census Maritime Enumeration. In addition, the Census Bureau's
plan accounts for military personnel and federal civilian government employees,
as well as their dependents, who are stationed overseas.
When necessary, census takers assist residents who need help in completing
the forms. In some facilities, such as jails, the staff distributes census
questionnaires. These staff workers, like all census workers, are sworn
to protect the confidentiality of the individual.
A complete set of residence rules telling where students, nursing home
residents, military personnel and others are counted can be found on the
Census Bureau's Web site.
What About Children? Are They Counted?
While considerable attention has been devoted to the undercount for the
U.S. population overall and to specific sub-groups such as young black
men in inner cities, less attention has been given to the undercount of
children.
In an attempt to help remedy that problem, the Census Bureau has provided
more than 300,000 Census in Schools kits throughout the country. The purpose
of the kits is to increase participation in the census among children
and parents. "In 1990, many parents did not record children on their census
questionnaire," Bureau Director Kenneth Prewitt said. "This program is
one way we hope to ensure that every child is counted. We hope parents
will urge their schools and that teachers will urge their principals to
take part in the Census in Schools program."
The program provides students with a take-home letter explaining to parents
the importance of an accurate census. The letter is available in English,
Spanish, Chinese, Vietnamese, Tagalog and Korean. Additional take-home
materials provide recreational census activities for students to complete
with their parents. Sent to the schools in February, each program teaching
guide contains lesson plans that address map literacy, community involvement
and information management. Kits are available for grades K-4, 5-8, 9-12.
Custom designed teaching kits were sent to schools in Puerto Rico, the
U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa and the Commonwealth of the
Northern Mariana Islands. (Scholastic Inc. helped to develop the program's
teaching materials most of which can be downloaded from the bureau's website.)
What Is the Form Like?
In 2000, the Census Bureau sent out about 83 million short forms (with
seven questions) and 15 million long forms (with 52 questions). Prewitt
says the short form asks for less information than is found on your driver's
license and takes about 10 minutes to complete. The long form takes about
38 minutes, he estimates. Although the rate varies according to population
density, in most areas about 5 out of 6 homes will receive the short form,
while the remaining 1 out of 6 will receive the long form. (In some rural
areas, as many as every other home may receive this long form, because
a larger sample is needed to ensure that these towns and counties get
the same detailed information as more densely populated areas.)
The questionnaires have room for information on six household members.
If you have more than six living in your home, you should fill in the
additional names, and a Census Bureau representative will contact you
for more information.
The short form-the shortest in 180 years-contains six population questions
and one housing question. The long form has 31 population questions (including
the six short-form population questions) and 21 housing questions (including
the short-form housing questions). Questions are included on the census
questionnaire only if they serve a legal or programmatic need, according
to census officials. (For information on these reasons, see the Census
Bureau's Web site.)
For the first time, the 2000 census allowed you to identify yourself as
being more than one race. Participants in the census had the choice of
checking off as many race categories as they wished. Hispanics may be
of any race; therefore, there is one question on Hispanic origin and another
race.
The only additional documents you need to help you complete the form are
income tax forms and property tax and homeowners' payment records. (Only
a few figures are needed.)
What If I Have Questions About My Form?
The Census Bureau will help you. Start by looking at these Help and Information
sites. In addition to the Census Bureau's very comprehensive Web site,
there are also questionnaire assistance centers in your community, and
a toll-free telephone number to call for assistance is written on the
form you received in the mail. If you've lost your form or didn't receive
one, you can call your local or regional center to find out where to get
one.
When you think about it, participating in Census 2000 is being a part
of history in the making. As the Census 2000 slogan goes: "It's your future-don't
leave it blank."
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