Republicans try to exclude
Undocumented Immigrants from 2010
Census
WASHINGTON (
By
Haya El Nasser, USA Today)
October 14, 2009
― A controversial amendment
that would require the Census Bureau to
ask for the first time whether people
are in the USA undocumented is headed
for a Senate vote Wednesday.
Proposed last week by Republican Sens.
David Vitter of Louisiana and Bob
Bennett of Utah, the amendment would
exclude undocumented immigrants from the
population count used to allocate
congressional seats after the 2010
Census. It also would require the Census
to ask people whether they are citizens.
"undocumented aliens should not be
included for the purposes of determining
representation in Congress, and that's
the bottom line here," Vitter says. If
enacted, the amendment to an
appropriations bill would stop funding
of the 2010 Census unless the changes
are made.
The amendment comes less than six months
before 2010 Census questionnaires are
mailed to 135 million households. About
425 million forms have already been
printed, according to the bureau. Some
are in different languages; others are
duplicates that will go to houses that
do not respond to the first mailing.
The Census Bureau is launching an
outreach campaign to persuade Americans
that next year's national head count
will be a simple, painless process.
The "Take 10" campaign promotes the idea
that the Census form has only 10
questions and should take just 10
minutes to answer. Adding questions
would require designing new forms. "It's
operationally impossible," says Steve
Jost, Census associate communications
director. "The forms are printed,
folded. We have bilingual forms. ...
We're printing 1.5 million forms a day."
By law, the Census is taken April 1.
State population counts must be
submitted to the president the following
Dec. 31 so seats in the House of
Representatives can be apportioned.
Since the first Census in 1790, the
bureau has routinely asked in various
surveys whether people are native-born
or foreign-born, but it has never asked
about legal status.
Immigrants often are the hardest to
count because many mistrust government,
especially if they are in the USA
undocumented. Crackdowns on undocumented
immigration at the border and at work
sites have made outreach for next year's
Census even more challenging.
Some Hispanic groups such as the
National Coalition of Hispanic Clergy
and Christian Leaders are calling for
immigrants to boycott the Census unless
laws are changed to give those here
undocumented a chance to gain legal
status.
"Already the public fears the Census is
too intrusive," says Arturo Vargas,
executive director of the National
Association of Hispanic Elected and
Appointed Officials, which opposes both
the amendment and the boycott.
"Asking about citizenship status "would
raise more questions in the public mind
about how confidential the Census is,"
Vargas says.