The recent decision by the Obama Administation to place the Census under the control of the White House represents a danger – not only to the integrity of the process but to the underlying assumptions that drive policy in a representative democracy. It is something that smacks of the worst anti-scientific views of the far right, or the casual political manipulation of the facts one expects in places like Russia or Iran.
Let me be clear: I love the Bureau of the Census. I have been an avid consumer of its data since the second grade. I used to wait with anticipation for the decennial results – the 10 year population counts for states, counties and cities. Anyone who has spent any time on the Demographia websites knows the respect with which I treat Census data.
The United States established one of the first regular censuses and it has been conducted every 10 years since 1790. The United Kingdom followed in 1801 and France in 1807, though both nations suspended their counts during World War II.
Over the past couple of decades, the Bureau of the Census has made annual estimates widely available, so it was no longer necessary to wait for the 10 year results. This was an important step in the right direction for people interested in demographics. But, there was a more basic purpose than amusing people who make their living with numbers. As federal programs that allocate money to local jurisdictions based upon their population have become more widespread, interim annual census estimates became a necessity.
Before the interim estimates, all sorts of “cheerleading” estimates were published, like the more than 1,000,000 population estimate I discovered for Washington, DC in the 1950s (the city never exceeded 800,000 by much). The great thing about the Bureau of the Census was that you could trust the numbers.
Trust and accuracy were precisely what the framers had in mind when they wrote the regular decennial Census enumeration (count) into the US Constitution. The principal purpose, of course, was to apportion seats in the House of Representatives. A genuine democracy depends on ensuring all are represented equally and thus depends upon the integrity of its census.
Recently, however, the process has become ever more politicized. The Bureau of the Census has allowed counties, cities and other local jurisdictions to challenge their annual census estimates. The incentive, of course, is that if the challenge results in a higher population estimate (and it can be expected that no jurisdiction challenges an estimate it feels is too high), more federal money is the reward.
I became aware of the problem in watching the recently developing annual challenge ritual by the nearby city of St. Louis, which has lost more of its population than any city since the Romans sacked Carthage. No large local jurisdiction in the world, not even New Orleans, has lost as much of its population as St. Louis, which has experienced a 60 percent decline since 1950.
So not surprisingly, the city of St. Louis has become a frequent challenger. St. Louis has successfully challenged the Bureau of the Census estimate of its population five of the seven years from 2001 to 2007 (the most recent estimate). The total of additions from census challenges adds up to 43,000 people. This is a not insubstantial 12.4 percent relative to the approximately 348,000 2000 Census count for the city.
I began to wonder what the success rate was in census challenges. I asked the appropriate Bureau of the Census officials for a list of rejected challenges. The quick and polite response was “We do not have a list of the rejected challenges.” This seemed a strange answer, since the Bureau of the Census website lists all of the successful challenges. Moreover, my internet search for news stories about rejections of census challenge rejections yielded nothing.
I performed an analysis of the successful challenges posted on the internet. Approximately 200 general purpose local jurisdictions have filed challenges. Nearly 40,000 have not.
Many of the upheld challenges are in large urban cores, such as 236,000 in the city of New York and more than 100,000 in Atlanta’s core Fulton County. Among the larger jurisdictions, Fulton County added the largest to its 2000 population by challenges, at 13.5 percent.
However, the challenges are by no means limited to urban cores. Salt Lake City suburbs West Valley City, West Jordan and Sandy challenged their counts, but not core city Salt Lake City. Nearby Provo, no urban jungle, had the largest addition to its population of any jurisdiction over 100,000 population, at 15.2 percent. The Bureau of the Census missed about 2,000 residents between Skokie and Hoffman Estates, headquarters of Sears Roebuck, but not a one in nearby Chicago, which has 25 times as many people as the two suburban jurisdictions combined.
Overall, 47 jurisdictions with more than 100,000 population in 2000 have successfully challenged census estimates, many in more than one year. The total population addition from these challenges is 1.24 million, though there may be some duplication in city and county numbers. Overall, the census challenges have added a total of nearly 1,600,000 people, which is likely, with duplications, to exceed the population of two Congressional districts. All of the challenging jurisdictions combined had a population of less than 35 million in 2000, or less than 15 percent of the population.
All of this raises questions. Beyond the questions about rejected challenges, if there have been any, are fundamental questions about Bureau of the Census methods. How can it be that the Census misses by so many people? Why did it presumably miss 15 percent of the population in Provo, 3 percent in New York City and 30 percent in Bazine City, Kansas, while apparently being so accurate in the remaining 85 percent of the nation that no one was missed?
Why was the Bureau of the Census estimate so erroneous in New York, Boston and San Francisco, yet so accurate in Los Angeles, Philadelphia and Phoenix, where there were no errors?
Then there is the more fundamental question – have there been any rejections?
It is possible that everything is on the “up and up” with respect to the Bureau of the Census challenge program. On the other hand, there appears to be plenty of potential for mischief, as some jurisdictions have become experts at challenging and the Bureau may find rejections difficult, given the pressure that could be received from members of Congress.
But politicization of the Census is a terrible risk. That’s why the Obama administration’s decision to move authority for the Census to the White House from the Department of Commerce is so concerning. It is hard to imagine a function of government so crucial to the genuine working of democracy becoming subject to the whims of people like White House chief of staff, Rahm Emmanuel – or down the road to a similarly partisan figure in the other party, like a Karl Rove.
The good news is that a bill introduced by New York Democratic Congresswoman Carolyn B. Maloney would assure the census’s integrity. Last year, she introduced the “Restoring the Integrity of American Statistics Act of 2008,” with co-sponsors Henry Gonzales of Texas, Henry Waxman of California and William Clay of Missouri. Congresswoman Maloney’s bill would remove the Bureau of the Census from the Department of Commerce and establish it as an independent federal agency, insulated from the political process. According to the Congresswoman:
This action will be a clear signal to Americans that the agency they depend upon for unbiased monthly economic data as well as the important decennial portrait of our nation is independent, fair, and protected from interference
The bill has been endorsed by all seven living former directors of the Bureau of the Census, appointed by Presidents Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan, Clinton and both Bushes.
This is the direction we need to go. The Administration has made much of its commitment to science and open inquiry. Preserving the sanctity of the census process would seem to confirm that commitment. In contrast, putting it under the control of White House political operatives represents a brazen act of political gamesmanship and a shameful turn in the wrong direction. It is to be hoped that the rising political firestorm and the recent withdrawal of Senator Judd Gregg from consideration for the post of Commerce Secretary might lead to a policy reversal.
Successful Census Estimate Challenges: 2001 to 2007 | ||||
State | Jurisdiction |
2000 Census Popuation
|
Total Population Added in Census Challenges
|
Percentage
|
OVER 100,000 | ||||
NY | New York City | 8,008,278 | 236,120 | 2.9% |
TX | Houston | 1,954,848 | 84,364 | 4.3% |
NY | Suffolk County | 1,419,369 | 58,503 | 4.1% |
NY | Nassau County | 1,334,544 | 46,528 | 3.5% |
TX | Dallas | 1,188,580 | 25,873 | 2.2% |
MI | Detroit | 951,270 | 47,728 | 5.0% |
NY | Westchester County | 923,459 | 6,912 | 0.7% |
MD | Montgomery County | 873,341 | 10,678 | 1.2% |
AZ | Pima County | 843,746 | 29,504 | 3.5% |
GA | Fulton County | 816,006 | 109,983 | 13.5% |
CA | San Francisco County | 776,733 | 34,209 | 4.4% |
MD | Baltimore | 651,154 | 75,410 | 11.6% |
NJ | Monmouth County | 615,301 | 5,891 | 1.0% |
WI | Milwaukee | 596,974 | 29,424 | 4.9% |
MA | Boston | 589,141 | 51,540 | 8.7% |
DC | District of Columbia | 572,059 | 31,528 | 5.5% |
TN | Davidson County | 545,524 | 32,152 | 5.9% |
LA | Orleans Parish | 484,674 | 48,989 | 10.1% |
LA | Jefferson Parish | 455,466 | 16,819 | 3.7% |
GA | Atlanta | 416,474 | 12,440 | 3.0% |
UT | Utah County | 368,536 | 25,814 | 7.0% |
FL | Miami | 362,470 | 14,943 | 4.1% |
MO | St. Louis | 348,189 | 43,012 | 12.4% |
OH | Cincinnati | 331,285 | 22,582 | 6.8% |
OH | Toledo | 313,619 | 21,822 | 7.0% |
NY | Rockland County | 286,753 | 3,208 | 1.1% |
TX | Lubbock County | 242,628 | 1,678 | 0.7% |
VA | Norfolk | 234,403 | 9,720 | 4.1% |
VA | Arlington County | 189,453 | 15,634 | 8.3% |
NC | Winston-Salem | 185,775 | 8,184 | 4.4% |
TN | Knoxville | 173,890 | 4,317 | 2.5% |
MA | Worcester | 172,648 | 1,555 | 0.9% |
AL | Huntsville | 158,216 | 424 | 0.3% |
TN | Chattanooga | 155,554 | 13,103 | 8.4% |
MA | Springfield | 152,082 | 1,404 | 0.9% |
VA | Alexandria | 128,283 | 11,687 | 9.1% |
SD | Sioux Falls | 123,975 | 5,848 | 4.7% |
NY | Jefferson County | 111,738 | 11,631 | 10.4% |
IL | Springfield | 111,454 | 1,020 | 0.9% |
WA | Bellevue | 109,569 | 4,442 | 4.1% |
UT | West Valley | 108,896 | 6,011 | 5.5% |
UT | Provo | 105,166 | 16,003 | 15.2% |
PA | Erie | 103,717 | 2,608 | 2.5% |
Subtotal | 28,595,240 | 1,241,245 | 4.3% | |
Smaller Jurisdictions | 345,025 | |||
All Jurisdictions | 1,586,270 |
Wendell Cox is a Visiting Professor, Conservatoire National des Arts et Metiers, Paris. He was born in Los Angeles and was appointed to three terms on the Los Angeles County Transportation Commission by Mayor Tom Bradley. He is the author of “War on the Dream: How Anti-Sprawl Policy Threatens the Quality of Life.”
politicians should not play games with the Census
Politicians should not play games with the Census.
I recommend people read
"The Constitution, the Congress and the Census: Representation and Reapportionment"
http://www.census.gov/dmd/www/dropin7.htm
Because the Census impacts representation in the House, I would like the Senate to pick the board members and NOT the House.
Article 1, Section 2 of the Constitution deals with the Census and says every ten years mentions Congress. Congress "shall consist of a Senate and House of Representatives" (Article 1, Section 1 of Constitution) Before Amendment Seventeen was passed, State Legislatures chose United States Senators which gave State Legislatures the ability to check the power of the federal government some. I discuss Amendments to increase the power of State Legislatures on http://www.newgeography.com/users/kenstremsky
It would be nice if members of Congress did their jobs discussed in Article 1, Section 8 of the United States Constitution instead of abdicating responsibilities to the President of the United States of America on military matters, trade matters, and other matters. If members of Congress are not willing to do the jobs they are being paid well to do, they should resign.
I do NOT like either political party. I agree with what George Washington said about political parties in his Farewell Address. Political parties are often an enemy of our Republic.
If Democrats play games with the Census now, Republicans may play games with the Census in the future.
If Democrats are not careful, they might lose the House of Representatives in 2010.
Someday, we might want there to be 870 Representatives to the United States House of Representatives. I do not think this is going to take place within the next 10 years.
I hope an Amendment to the United States Constitution will be adopted that allows each state to have at least 3 United States Senators and have each State Legislature choose at least 1 United States Senator.
Republican members of Congress and Democrat members of Congress have caused our country significant harm since January 20, 1981 when our national debt was less than 1 trillion dollars. Our national debt is now more than 10 trillion dollars. Republican Presidents starting with Reagan contributed to the debt soaring.
I discuss dealing with the financial crisis on http://www.newgeography.com/users/kenstremsky. I discuss some sales taxes that some Democrats have supported in the past.
Sincerely,
Ken Stremsky
I wonder how feasible (cost
I wonder how feasible (cost effective) a 5 year cycle would be? Probably a lot less expensive now that technology has advanced greatly and is getting better to track data. A decade is just too long, and I really do not think the "average citizen" realizes just how important this data actually is.
I can't wait for the 2010 census!