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Minnesota




    Minnesota Nonprofits and the
           2010 Census

    www.mnparticipationproject.org
Agenda

  The Stakes, Logistics, and Challenges of
   Census 2010
  Why Nonprofits?
  Eight (simple) Things You Can Do
  How Minnesota Nonprofits Count! can
   help your nonprofit
 Q&A
The U.S. Census

  A constitutionally mandated count, taken
   every 10 years, of every person living in
   the United States; since its inception all
   are required to be counted regardless of
   citizenship or age
  A basic task, a very complex operation!
What are census data used for?


  Allocating funds
  Apportionment of representatives
  Drawing district lines
  Civil rights law enforcement
Community power
Allocating funds

    Allocation of $6.2 billion annually in federal
     program funds to Minnesota, based in whole
     or in part on Census Bureau data
    Some are distributed purely on populations
     (Social Services Block Grant)
    Others based on population plus one or more
     variable (Medicaid is population plus income)
    2001 Census audit indicated Ramsey and
     Hennepin County together lost $40 million in
     funding due to an undercount
Allocating funds

    Minnesota receives approx. $1,204 per
     person annually through census-data
     driven federal formula grants
        That’s $12,000 over the decade for each
         person counted in the census! (and $12,000
         lost for everyone missed)
    Used for planning and policy
     development on state and local levels
Apportionment of representatives

  Each decennial Census triggers re-
   apportionment of House seats
  Estimates for Minnesota show that the
   difference between losing and keeping a
   seat could be as small as 2,000 people
  We’ve had 8 seats since 1960
  Midwest power is in decline
Beware of this beast…

                        Political power
                        will be mine!
Civil rights law enforcement

    Congressional and state legislative districts
     will be redrawn using the results of the Census
    Accurate Census data are necessary to
     enforce Voting Rights Acts of 1965, which
     protects minorities from having their vote
     diluted
    Other outcomes: MNDOT wants to build a
     road through low-income Latino mobile home
     park; 30% Latino according to Census, 90%
     Latino according to organizer’s knowledge of
     community!
How did Minnesota do in 2000?

  Very high response rate 75% (national
   average 67%)
  Least accurate of any state
  High overcount
  14,000 undercounted: we need to do
   better, and we can!
Barriers and challenges to an
accurate count
Who is at risk of being missed in
the census?
    Young children                Low income populations/
    Unemployed people              renters
    Snowbirds                     Highly mobile people
    Students                      Immigrants and people
                                    with limited English
    Homeless
                                    proficiency
    People with disabilities
                                   People living in complex
    Families from recently         households
     foreclosed houses
                                   Adults without a high
    People of color                school diploma
    LGBT
Concept of usual residence

  Residents are to be counted at their
   usual residence
  Usual residence is where you live 51%
   of the year
  If there is no one place you live 51% of
   the year, you are to be counted where
   you are on April 1st, 2009
Where should I be counted?

  A family moves from a foreclosed house
   into a relative’s house in January 2010
  When the Census form arrives in March,
   the family most likely views their stay as
   temporary, and probably does not
   consider themselves as part of the
   household
  Will the householder remember to
   include their relatives?
Challenges to Achieving an
Accurate Count in 2010
    Increasing diversity of population and growth
     in immigrant populations
        1st Post-9/11 Census
        Lack of comprehensive immigration reform
    Census Bureau in disarray
        Frequent warning reports from GAO
        Changes to 2010 census plan late in the process
        Lack of complete testing of key systems and
         operations
        Key operational information is not available to local
         partners
Challenges to Achieving an
Accurate Count in 2010
    Anxiety about data confidentiality
        All Census data are protected by Title 13
    High-profile boycott from Rep. Bachmann
        Introduced legislation to make answering American
         Community Survey optional
    Latino clergy boycott
    Confusing Census 2010 with ACS
        In previous Census years, a portion of the population received
         a ‘long-form’
        Since 2000 this has been replaced by annual American
         Community Survey (ACS)
        This will be shortest Census form ever: just 10 questions
2010 Census Operational
Milestones
    Spring 2009: Address canvassing
    Summer 2009: Validate ‘group quarters’ list
    Fall 2009: Open remaining Local Census
     Offices (LCOs)
    Fall 2009: Start recruiting census takers
    Late Fall 2009: Begin educational phase of
     Communications Campaign
    January 2010: Launch paid media campaign
Operational Milestones (con’t.)

  Late January 2010: Start census in
   remote and rural locations (continues
   through March)
  March 2010: Pre-census letter, followed
   by mailed census forms and “thank-
   you/reminder postcard”
  April 1, 2010: CENSUS DAY
  Early April 2010: Targeted replacement
   questionnaire
Operational Milestones (con’t.)
    Late April - June 2010:      December 31, 2010:
     Door-to-door visits to        Deadline for reporting
     unresponsive housing          state population totals to
     units                         President
    Late summer - Fall           April 1, 2011: Deadline
     2010: Follow-up and           for reporting detailed
     coverage improvement          population counts to
     operations                    state governments for
                                   redistricting
                                  2010 - 2011: Census
                                   ‘accuracy check’ follow-
                                   up survey
3 Special Enumerations

    Group quarters
        Dorms, nursing homes, juvenile institutions
        April – May
    Transitory
        March 22nd –April 16th
        Hotels, campgrounds, RV parks
    Service-based enumeration
        Late March
             Shelters
             Outdoor camps
             Soup kitchens, mobile food units
Why nonprofits?
Why Nonprofits?

  ACCESS: To hard to count communities
  TRUST: Nonprofits are trusted
   messengers
  CULTURAL COMPETENCY: Highest
   response when people approached by
   people of similar cultural backgrounds in
   a culturally appropriate way
  If we don’t do this work, no one will
How does census engagement
benefit your nonprofit?
How does this benefit your
organization?
    Preserve federal dollars at a crucial moment in
     state budget crisis
    Nonprofit communities being fully represented,
     means more power for nonprofits
    Be a part of reinventing our nation and our
     communities
    A great opportunity to organize your members
     in the cycle of advocacy
Census deepens civic participation

    The 2010 Census campaign is a component of
     a larger effort to inform, encourage, and
     support people in being active citizens
        This includes participating fully in democratic
         processes, including election activities, the census
         and redistricting debates, and public policy
         advocacy
    People should understand that census
     participation is one more element of building
     power for their communities
1. Partner with the Census


  It’s simple: sign up with your Local
   Census Office and receive the most up-
   to-date information on how to engage
   your community in the 2010 Census
  www.NonprofitsCount.org
2. Add to Your Communications


  Where: Website, E-Updates,
   Newsletters
  What: Key deadlines, websites to go to,
   Drop In articles
  When: Basic info now; More urgency in
   late fall and 2010
Example…
3. Have Information in Your
Office
  Train your staff to answer basic
   questions
  Sample Census forms
  Signage promoting Census participation
  Contact information for local Census
   offices
  Information on job opportunities
4. Distribute Promotional
Materials
    Promotional items are synonymous with
     the decennial census. Request these
     items from your Local Census Office and
     begin distributing them to your
     communities.
        Items currently available: Chip clips, bags,
         stickers, balloons, pens, pencils, window
         decals, etc.
5. Host Community Events

    Hosting community events and forums
     can be a great tool for educating people
     about the 2010 Census. Your Census
     Bureau Partnership Specialist and the
     Local Census Office can be great
     partners in these.
6. Be a Questionnaire Assistance
Center (or “Be Counted Center”)
    30,000 Questionnaire Assistance           40,000 Be Counted Sites
     Centers
                                               Be Counted forms are census
    One of your staff members paid             questionnaires available at
     by Census to assist people in              community locations, for people
     filling out and returning their form       who did not receive a census
     at your community-based                    form in the mail or who believe
     nonprofit                                  they were not otherwise included
                                                on any other census
                                                questionnaire.
                                                Be counted forms will be
                                                available in English, Spanish,
                                                Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese,
                                                and Russian. The form should be
                                                picked up and mailed back in the
                                                attached postage-paid envelope.
7. Promote Jobs

  The Census wants and needs to hire
   people from hard-to-count communities
  You can help your communities find out
   about jobs with the Census
  Big hiring effort in Fall 2009
8. Join or Form a Complete Count
Committee

  A Complete Count Committee is a team
   of community members working together
   to ensure that all those in their
   community (however they define
   ‘community’) are counted in the 2010
   Census.
  Continue working with the Nonprofit
   CCC!
Start having conversations now!

    The most effective way to increase
     Census participation is to have
     conversations about it between people in
     a relationship of trust
How Can Minnesota Nonprofits
Count! Help?
    Information sharing –
     www.mnparticipationproject.org
Census Resource Downloads

    Downloads of:
      Nonprofits Count Fact Sheets, Timelines,
       Toolkits and more tailored to nonprofits
      Links to resources from partners like LCCR,
       NALEO, Housing and Homeless
       organizations and more
Census SWAG

  TShirts
  Buttons
  Stickers
Targeted maps of hard-to-count
areas
Access to Translated Materials

    Downloads of census materials
     translated both into common languages
     (Chinese, Vietnamese etc.) and into less
     spoken languages (Thai, Hmong, Urdu) -
     as available
A Campaign for America

  In the coming months we will hold up a
   mirror and get a new picture of America.
  A Kodak moment
  Impacting 10 years of money, power,
   services, policy and community
   infrastructure
Stay informed!

    Minnesota Participation Project e-newsletter
    Nonprofit Voter Engagement Network
     www.nonprofitscount.org
    Census News Briefs from the Census Project
     (e-mail TerriAnn2K@aol.com)
    Midwest Democracy Network
     www.midwestdemocracynetwork.org
    Leadership Conference on Civil Rights
     www.civilrights.org
For more information:

   Jeff Narabrook, Public Policy Assistant
   www.mnparticipationproject.org
   651-757-3062
   jeff@mncn.org

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10 minutes, 10 questions, 10 years of impact

  • 1. Minnesota Minnesota Nonprofits and the 2010 Census www.mnparticipationproject.org
  • 2. Agenda  The Stakes, Logistics, and Challenges of Census 2010  Why Nonprofits?  Eight (simple) Things You Can Do  How Minnesota Nonprofits Count! can help your nonprofit Q&A
  • 3. The U.S. Census  A constitutionally mandated count, taken every 10 years, of every person living in the United States; since its inception all are required to be counted regardless of citizenship or age  A basic task, a very complex operation!
  • 4. What are census data used for?  Allocating funds  Apportionment of representatives  Drawing district lines  Civil rights law enforcement
  • 6. Allocating funds  Allocation of $6.2 billion annually in federal program funds to Minnesota, based in whole or in part on Census Bureau data  Some are distributed purely on populations (Social Services Block Grant)  Others based on population plus one or more variable (Medicaid is population plus income)  2001 Census audit indicated Ramsey and Hennepin County together lost $40 million in funding due to an undercount
  • 7. Allocating funds  Minnesota receives approx. $1,204 per person annually through census-data driven federal formula grants  That’s $12,000 over the decade for each person counted in the census! (and $12,000 lost for everyone missed)  Used for planning and policy development on state and local levels
  • 8. Apportionment of representatives  Each decennial Census triggers re- apportionment of House seats  Estimates for Minnesota show that the difference between losing and keeping a seat could be as small as 2,000 people  We’ve had 8 seats since 1960  Midwest power is in decline
  • 9.
  • 10. Beware of this beast… Political power will be mine!
  • 11. Civil rights law enforcement  Congressional and state legislative districts will be redrawn using the results of the Census  Accurate Census data are necessary to enforce Voting Rights Acts of 1965, which protects minorities from having their vote diluted  Other outcomes: MNDOT wants to build a road through low-income Latino mobile home park; 30% Latino according to Census, 90% Latino according to organizer’s knowledge of community!
  • 12. How did Minnesota do in 2000?  Very high response rate 75% (national average 67%)  Least accurate of any state  High overcount  14,000 undercounted: we need to do better, and we can!
  • 13. Barriers and challenges to an accurate count
  • 14. Who is at risk of being missed in the census?  Young children  Low income populations/  Unemployed people renters  Snowbirds  Highly mobile people  Students  Immigrants and people with limited English  Homeless proficiency  People with disabilities  People living in complex  Families from recently households foreclosed houses  Adults without a high  People of color school diploma  LGBT
  • 15. Concept of usual residence  Residents are to be counted at their usual residence  Usual residence is where you live 51% of the year  If there is no one place you live 51% of the year, you are to be counted where you are on April 1st, 2009
  • 16. Where should I be counted?  A family moves from a foreclosed house into a relative’s house in January 2010  When the Census form arrives in March, the family most likely views their stay as temporary, and probably does not consider themselves as part of the household  Will the householder remember to include their relatives?
  • 17. Challenges to Achieving an Accurate Count in 2010  Increasing diversity of population and growth in immigrant populations  1st Post-9/11 Census  Lack of comprehensive immigration reform  Census Bureau in disarray  Frequent warning reports from GAO  Changes to 2010 census plan late in the process  Lack of complete testing of key systems and operations  Key operational information is not available to local partners
  • 18. Challenges to Achieving an Accurate Count in 2010  Anxiety about data confidentiality  All Census data are protected by Title 13  High-profile boycott from Rep. Bachmann  Introduced legislation to make answering American Community Survey optional  Latino clergy boycott  Confusing Census 2010 with ACS  In previous Census years, a portion of the population received a ‘long-form’  Since 2000 this has been replaced by annual American Community Survey (ACS)  This will be shortest Census form ever: just 10 questions
  • 19. 2010 Census Operational Milestones  Spring 2009: Address canvassing  Summer 2009: Validate ‘group quarters’ list  Fall 2009: Open remaining Local Census Offices (LCOs)  Fall 2009: Start recruiting census takers  Late Fall 2009: Begin educational phase of Communications Campaign  January 2010: Launch paid media campaign
  • 20. Operational Milestones (con’t.)  Late January 2010: Start census in remote and rural locations (continues through March)  March 2010: Pre-census letter, followed by mailed census forms and “thank- you/reminder postcard”  April 1, 2010: CENSUS DAY  Early April 2010: Targeted replacement questionnaire
  • 21. Operational Milestones (con’t.)  Late April - June 2010:  December 31, 2010: Door-to-door visits to Deadline for reporting unresponsive housing state population totals to units President  Late summer - Fall  April 1, 2011: Deadline 2010: Follow-up and for reporting detailed coverage improvement population counts to operations state governments for redistricting  2010 - 2011: Census ‘accuracy check’ follow- up survey
  • 22. 3 Special Enumerations  Group quarters  Dorms, nursing homes, juvenile institutions  April – May  Transitory  March 22nd –April 16th  Hotels, campgrounds, RV parks  Service-based enumeration  Late March  Shelters  Outdoor camps  Soup kitchens, mobile food units
  • 24. Why Nonprofits?  ACCESS: To hard to count communities  TRUST: Nonprofits are trusted messengers  CULTURAL COMPETENCY: Highest response when people approached by people of similar cultural backgrounds in a culturally appropriate way  If we don’t do this work, no one will
  • 25.
  • 26. How does census engagement benefit your nonprofit?
  • 27. How does this benefit your organization?  Preserve federal dollars at a crucial moment in state budget crisis  Nonprofit communities being fully represented, means more power for nonprofits  Be a part of reinventing our nation and our communities  A great opportunity to organize your members in the cycle of advocacy
  • 28. Census deepens civic participation  The 2010 Census campaign is a component of a larger effort to inform, encourage, and support people in being active citizens  This includes participating fully in democratic processes, including election activities, the census and redistricting debates, and public policy advocacy  People should understand that census participation is one more element of building power for their communities
  • 29. 1. Partner with the Census  It’s simple: sign up with your Local Census Office and receive the most up- to-date information on how to engage your community in the 2010 Census  www.NonprofitsCount.org
  • 30. 2. Add to Your Communications  Where: Website, E-Updates, Newsletters  What: Key deadlines, websites to go to, Drop In articles  When: Basic info now; More urgency in late fall and 2010
  • 32. 3. Have Information in Your Office  Train your staff to answer basic questions  Sample Census forms  Signage promoting Census participation  Contact information for local Census offices  Information on job opportunities
  • 33. 4. Distribute Promotional Materials  Promotional items are synonymous with the decennial census. Request these items from your Local Census Office and begin distributing them to your communities.  Items currently available: Chip clips, bags, stickers, balloons, pens, pencils, window decals, etc.
  • 34. 5. Host Community Events  Hosting community events and forums can be a great tool for educating people about the 2010 Census. Your Census Bureau Partnership Specialist and the Local Census Office can be great partners in these.
  • 35. 6. Be a Questionnaire Assistance Center (or “Be Counted Center”)  30,000 Questionnaire Assistance  40,000 Be Counted Sites Centers  Be Counted forms are census  One of your staff members paid questionnaires available at by Census to assist people in community locations, for people filling out and returning their form who did not receive a census at your community-based form in the mail or who believe nonprofit they were not otherwise included on any other census questionnaire. Be counted forms will be available in English, Spanish, Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese, and Russian. The form should be picked up and mailed back in the attached postage-paid envelope.
  • 36. 7. Promote Jobs  The Census wants and needs to hire people from hard-to-count communities  You can help your communities find out about jobs with the Census  Big hiring effort in Fall 2009
  • 37. 8. Join or Form a Complete Count Committee  A Complete Count Committee is a team of community members working together to ensure that all those in their community (however they define ‘community’) are counted in the 2010 Census.  Continue working with the Nonprofit CCC!
  • 38. Start having conversations now!  The most effective way to increase Census participation is to have conversations about it between people in a relationship of trust
  • 39. How Can Minnesota Nonprofits Count! Help?  Information sharing – www.mnparticipationproject.org
  • 40. Census Resource Downloads  Downloads of:  Nonprofits Count Fact Sheets, Timelines, Toolkits and more tailored to nonprofits  Links to resources from partners like LCCR, NALEO, Housing and Homeless organizations and more
  • 41. Census SWAG  TShirts  Buttons  Stickers
  • 42. Targeted maps of hard-to-count areas
  • 43. Access to Translated Materials  Downloads of census materials translated both into common languages (Chinese, Vietnamese etc.) and into less spoken languages (Thai, Hmong, Urdu) - as available
  • 44. A Campaign for America  In the coming months we will hold up a mirror and get a new picture of America.  A Kodak moment  Impacting 10 years of money, power, services, policy and community infrastructure
  • 45. Stay informed!  Minnesota Participation Project e-newsletter  Nonprofit Voter Engagement Network www.nonprofitscount.org  Census News Briefs from the Census Project (e-mail TerriAnn2K@aol.com)  Midwest Democracy Network www.midwestdemocracynetwork.org  Leadership Conference on Civil Rights www.civilrights.org
  • 46. For more information: Jeff Narabrook, Public Policy Assistant www.mnparticipationproject.org 651-757-3062 jeff@mncn.org