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City & State 082320

Page 33

STANDS UP August 24, 2020

cating on the ‘why’ and what it is.” New York City officials have tried to replicate this strategy citywide by funneling $19 million into local nonprofits targeting hard-to-count communities, which includes immigrants, renters and low-income people. They may be difficult to reach for myriad reasons, such as linguistic barriers or mistrust in government. By us-

City & State New York

ing community organizations, city officials hoped that residents may be more amenable to calls to fill out their census forms. Juan Tapia-Mendoza, a pediatrician with the Somos Community Care network of physicians, said that because community providers like Somos promote social connection with patients, it can be easier to encourage them to fill out the census. A

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conversation about how the pandemic has affected them and their families can help doctors explain why the census will determine how much federal funding goes to their community. But much of the city’s efforts to do outreach at block parties and other in-person locations have been stymied since March. Washington Heights and Inwood have also seen overall declines in their response rates compared with 2010 likely for similar reasons. But the region was still well-positioned to keep up a comparatively higher response rate because of their history in census outreach and strong partnerships among nonprofits. “A lot of the community organizations have consistently worked together,” said Maria Guzman-Colon, who has led census initiatives for the Northern Manhattan Improvement Corp., a nonprofit that offers legal and social services. “So throwing the census into things, it wasn’t like reinventing the wheel.” But Aldrin Rafael Bonilla, Manhattan deputy borough president, cautioned that the response rate in Upper Manhattan may give a misleading impression of how successful the count has been there. He said in highly populated communities like Washington Heights and Inwood, approximately 40% of people still haven’t been counted, which represents a larger swath of New York’s population than certain other neighborhoods that may have lower response rates, such as the Financial District. “We cannot celebrate,” he said. “We cannot think this is great because that percentage number is misleading.” Boosting participation in the census count has only been further complicated by the Trump administration. The U.S. Census Bureau’s outreach phase, in which workers knock on people’s doors to follow-up with nonrespondents, will end a month earlier than initially planned, which has inflamed fears of an undercount. And what legal experts believe to be an unconstitutional effort to exclude undocumented immigrants from the population count has reignited concerns that undocumented immigrants may be fearful of filling out their census forms.


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