Gaps emerging in US census outreach to immigrants - Many are fearful data will be used against them.
By Hope Yen
February 1, 2010
Gaps emerging in US census outreach to immigrants
- Many are fearful data will be used against them.
WASHINGTON - The government is fumbling some efforts to assure immigrants that U.S. census data won't be used against them, including gaps in outreach and foreign language guides that refer to the decennial count as an investigation.
With the launch of the head count weeks away, the Census Bureau's outreach has been falling short in at least a dozen major cities, such as Chicago, Dallas, New York, San Jose, Calif., and Seattle, according to a report being released today by the Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund.
Many of their states are on the cusp of gaining or losing U.S. House seats and face a redrawing of legislative boundaries that may tilt the balance of political power.
The legal group is partly critical of the Obama administration, citing its refusal to give fuller assurances that census data would be kept confidential and to suspend large-scale immigration raids during the count - as was done in the 2000 census . AALDEF said it wasn't ruling out legal action to get stronger guarantees.
The census officially began last month in parts of rural Alaska. Most of the nation will receive their forms by mail the week of March 15. "We have heard a lot of speeches by Commerce Secretary Gary Locke and the census director saying the census is confidential. But speeches and Web postings do not have the force of law," said Glenn Magpantay, an AALDEF program director, in a telephone interview.
The Census Bureau is printing instruction guides and sample forms in dozens of different languages for use in community help centers, since one in five residents speak a language other than English at home. But there have been errors due to poor translations, including material for Vietnamese speakers that describe the census as a "government investigation."
The agency was able to correct its Web material two weeks ago after groups pointed out the problem, but it's too late to fix the paper forms. There are more than 1.1 million Vietnamese in the U.S., mostly clustered in California and Texas.
Other gaps included a lack of specialists for the Bangladeshi community in Detroit; the nation's third largest Korean-American population in Chicago; and the south Asian and Cambodian groups in Philadelphia and Rhode Island.
Responding, the Census Bureau has emphasized it is devoting a large amount of its $133 million ad campaign to racial and ethnic audiences. It also partnered with more than 150,000 business and community groups, hoping to build trust in its message that filling out the 10-question census form is safe and easy to complete. The Commerce Department, which oversees the Census Bureau, has made clear they will not ask the Homeland Security Department to hold off on largescale raids as they did in 2000. That has drawn consternation from immigrant groups, particularly as it has become unlikely that Congress will take up immigration reform this year.
Section: Commentary
Page: A08
Record Number: A08_art_0
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