Here's the latest news on Ditas 2020 Census Activity:
"Just recently, Ditas Katague (California Census Chief) visited Los Angeles county, the hardest-to-count 
area in the United States and also a region in the state with census 
tracts where the most African Americans live. She was on a stop that was
 part of a statewide push to encourage all Californians to respond to 
next year’s census forms.
She sat with California Black Media writer Charlene Muhammad to talk 
more about the state’s  $187.3 million investment to get an accurate 
count of all Californians. Katague also shared details about what her 
office has been doing so far to achieve it, and she give some insights 
on why it has been so hard for census workers to get the 
African-American count right in the past. Here's an excerpt from the interview.
CALIFORNIA BLACK MEDIA (CBM):  What has your office done to reach 
out to Blacks in California – particularly to the the Black population 
here in Los Angeles?
DITAS KATAGUE (DK):  As you know, statewide, the money and the
 investment that both the governor and the legislature have made across 
the state have been unprecedented.  That’s because California is the hardest-to-count state in the 
country. In fact, the City of L.A. is the hardest-to-count city and Los 
Angeles County is the hardest-to-count county in the hardest-to-count 
state.
So, even though our efforts are unprecedented, these are the reasons 
that we need to do that level of outreach.
The U.S. Census is actually a
 federal operation, and so here at the state level, we don’t control any
 of the actual counting.  We don’t design the form, but what we can 
control is reaching out, educating our Californians to make sure that 
they know how important it is to respond.
And to that end, we’ve divided the state. We’ve used data to really 
inform our partners on the ground about where they should be reaching 
out and to whom.  I’m up in Sacramento. Nobody wants to listen to me 
about why they should be filling out the form.  It’s really about 
getting the word out through trusted community partners on the ground, 
and really connecting with folks to say why is it so important and what 
an accurate count means for them on the ground.
CBM: L.A. - the hardest to count in the country!  I didn’t know that. What makes L.A. and the state the hardest-to-count places?
DK: Well, for Los Angeles County, one of the things is that 
it’s so very diverse.  In L.A. Unified School District, they speak over 
200 languages. That is what makes our state so beautiful and so diverse,
 but it also makes it very hard to count.
Now, when we talk about hard to count from the state level, we looked
 at the state and we took these 14 variables and we came up with a 
hard-to-count index based on them.
(Those variables are: Percent of households without broadband 
subscriptions; percent of households that are non-family; percent of 
households that are renter occupied; percent of housing units that are 
vacant; percent of households that are crowded with more than 1.5 
persons per room; percent of population that is foreign-born; percent of
 adults (25 or older) who are not high school graduates; percent of 
population with income below 150 percent of the poverty level; percent 
of households receiving public assistance; percent of persons (ages 16 
or older) unemployed; percent of limited-English households; percent of 
persons who moved from outside a county in the past year; percent of 
population under 5; and percent of total housing units with three or 
more units in a multi-unit structure.)
What does that mean?  Well, that is really because the enumeration is
 address-based, so it’s where you are.  In order to be invited, you have
 to have an address, right? Think about the difficulty of counting 
people that are living in multi-unit apartments, or if they’re living 
with non-family members. So, say there is an apartment, and there are 
four of us living there, and we’re not related. Sometimes, one person 
will get the mail and the invitation to respond, and they’ll respond for
 themselves but forget the other three roommates.  So, it sort of 
compounds itself in terms of the difficulty to be counted.  And, of 
course, we have a lot of people who rent.  We have a lot of people here 
in Los Angeles that have limited English, or that are new to the 
country. We have a lot of folks who are scared, or just kind of don’t 
care, and so it’s not just one thing that makes folks hard to count. 
It’s a number of things if you kind of layer them on top of each other.
CBM: Why is the Census important for the Black community?
DK: It’s important for all our communities, of course, but 
particularly for the Black community.  I mean they have to know we exist
 for us to resist, right?  And if they don’t know we’re here, then we’ll
 be ignored. I say that both for the Black community and also for the 
Native American community.  My Native American folks up in Northern 
California, the way they look at it is to save their water, and that’s 
what really resonates with them, because if they don’t know you’re 
there, they’ll take the water.  That’s how they feel, so you have to 
think about that within your community. If people don’t understand how 
strong and how powerful our communities are, they don’t understand what 
kind of voice we could have and will have. So, it’s really about being 
seen. It’s about standing up. It’s about no longer being invisible for 
all of our communities ".
https://www.sacculturalhub.com/item/13950-california-census-chief-don-t-be-invisible-counting-everyone-comes-down-to-money-and-power?fbclid=IwAR393gJPpjJHjcqXBzOn6LefDY6jhqv9mqFlY4g4ajJBY_exw87SfylQczI

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