Side Streets ~ Neighborhood people and issues

Archive for the 'U.S. Census Bureau' Tag

STAND, BE COUNTED, CASH THE CHECK

September 15th, 2010, 4:22 pm by

The U.S. Census Bureau says most of the head-counting is done.

Now, Pikes Peak-area goverments hope to start counting the tax dollars that will flow our way thanks to the above-average response of folks in El Paso County and Colorado Springs.

About 74 percent of all households in the county responded to 2010 Census forms, exceeding the national average of 72 percent. Officials say that will translate into more federal tax dollars finding their way back to the region.

El Paso County Commissioner Sallie Clark said each person counted is worth $900, roughly, in tax revenue.

The Census — conducted every 10 years since 1790 – helps federal lawmakers determine how to distribute $400 billion in federal funding each year. (Whether or not is SHOULD spend all that money is another matter.)

 I’ll simply note the funding pays for things like:

  • Hospitals
  • Schools
  • Senior centers
  • Roads, bridges and other public-works projects
  • Emergency services

Then there’s the issue of representation in Congress. Seats in the U.S. House follow population. That’s another big reason it’s important to get a full and accurate count. Ditto the Colorado General Assembly. You don’t get your fair share of state representatives if you don’t stand up and be counted.

Some of the preliminary numbers are fascinating. You can slice and dice them by logging on to the Census Bureau’s American FactFinder  and searching by a variety of ways.

Here’s  a column I wrote in April 2009 and a previous blog I wrote about it.

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NEIGHBORHOOD DECAY — a radical solution

July 14th, 2009, 6:06 pm by

         Poor Flint, Michigan.

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          It is a classic company town — synonymous with General Motors and the auto industry.

         For decades, the city enjoyed a love affair with GM, then the world’s leading automobile manufacturer. According to the U.S. Census, Flint’s population peaked at nearly 200,000 in 1960 and as late as 1978, it counted 80,000 auto-industry jobs.

       Here’s the famous arch over Saginaw Street in Flint:

flintvehiclecity

 

 

 

 

       Unfortunately, it has suffered right along with GM, starting with the 1970s oil crisis, labor unrest, years of recession, failure and ultimately the company’s slow-motion collapse into bankruptcy. 

      Now, Flint is known as a classic Rust Belt city, poster child for the demise of the Big Three Automakers, synonymous with layoffs, plant closings, off-shore outsourcing and brownfield.  

      Unemployment. Foreclosures. Poverty. All are sky-high in Flint, which has shrunk to a town of about 125,000 people.

      As a result, homes sit abandoned in decaying neighborhoods.

      Officials have taken a radical approach to fight the decay, improve the overall appearance of Flint and rid the town of its rot by erasing entire neighborhoods from the city. Open space is replacing boarded-up houses.

      It’s not much different than GM shedding dealers, factories and employees.

       Read about it, or listen to a fascinating report at NPR.

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THEY’RE COMING! Listers going door-to-door

April 8th, 2009, 5:46 pm by

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Next year, 2010, is a big one for the U.S. Census Bureau as the agency sets out to count 310 million Americans and 145 million households.

Work, in fact, is well underway to lay the foundation for the big count. On April 9,  250 “listers” were launched across the Pikes Peak region to begin the process of locating every house in the area on a digital map, using Global Positioning System satellite navigation technology.

You may see them in your neighborhood any day. Recognize them by their Census I.D. badges, their handheld computer/GPS devices and tote bags emblazoned with U.S. Census Bureau logos. Here is a photo of a lister supplied by the Census Bureau.

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The computer/GPS device will allow the federal government to pinpoint the location of every house in the nation. Here’s a closer look in a Census Bureau photo.

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The address canvassing will take a couple months, wrapping up in June. Then the Census bureau will begin hiring enumerators to collect more detailed information once the official 2010 Census questionnaires are mailed next spring.

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Here is a link if you are interested in applying for a job.

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