Ohio has counted 99.8% of known households, which is about 30% more than in the last census. This includes both self-response and people who responded to a census taker at their door. In the last census, about 69% of Ohioans were counted. About 32.5% people nationwide have been counted by census takers and 66.6% of households have responded online, by phone or by mail.
“The momentum is certainly strong,” said Susan Licate, a spokeswoman at the census Bureau’s Philadelphia regional center.
Census results shape the future of communities, as the data informs how billions of dollars in federal funds are distributed for health clinics, school lunch programs, disaster recovery initiatives, and other critical programs and services for the next 10 years.
This higher count has happened despite challenges from the coronavirus and confusion over the 2020 census deadline.
The administration of President Donald Trump ruled Sept. 30 would be the last day to be counted. However, on Sept. 1 the National Urban League, several other organizations, states and cities, filed a lawsuit for more time for the count. The lawsuit says census officials said they can’t meet the Sept. 30 deadline.
The bureau’s director, Steven Dillingham, said in a statement in August that the census Bureau would hire more employees to accelerate the completion of data collection by the deadline of Dec. 31, 2020, which is required by law and directed by the U.S. Secretary of Commerce. The Census Bureau had previously planned on an April 2021 deadline because of delays caused by the coronavirus pandemic, but the Trump administration denied the extension.
Late on Oct. 1, a federal district judge ruled that the count must continue through Oct. 31. Miami Valley residents can still fill out the census online or call (844) 330-2020 and fill out the census via telephone.
Nikol Miller, the chair of the Dayton-Montgomery County Complete Count Committee, said the “moving-target deadlines” could impact the credibility of census takers with minority communities, which are typically undercounted.
“There are only so many times you can go to people who already have trust issues,” Miller said.
In Dayton, about 53% of people have self-responded to the 2020 census as of Oct. 3. According to 2010 final results, 58% of households in Dayton responded.
Dayton is still lagging behind nearby cities like Bellbrook and Springboro with response rates of about 85%. Oakwood has a response rate of 84%, Centerville has a response rate of 83.9% and Beavercreek has a response rate of 82.6%, census data says.
Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley said any time extended for the 2020 census is helpful.
“I know there’s some neighborhood leaders who knew their communities were behind so they’re taking extra action, so this time is helpful,” Whaley said. “We’re going to continue to do our best.”
With a response rate of 69%, Montgomery County so far has beat it’s 2010 response rate by one percentage point. Montgomery ranks No. 50 out of 88 counties, according to the most recent census data.
Greene County ranks 11 out of Ohio’s 88 counties, with a response rate of 76.6%. In 2010, about 73% of households in the county responded.
Miller said suburban communities are responding at a higher rate this year than in 2010, which could be a contributing factor in the higher response rates. People who live in densely populated urban areas have not responded at as high of rates as their suburban counterparts.
Licate said enabling people to fill out the census online in 12 different languages has made it more accessible to some.
The 2020 census has had some barriers because of the coronavirus pandemic.
In-person outreach was significantly delayed, starting in Ohio in August instead of April as originally planned. census takers will continue to visit households that have not yet responded until Oct. 31.
Licate said that census takers will not ask to come into homes and will be carrying bags clearly marked with the 2020 census logo.
Local communities, which typically would do census outreach in-person, were forced to do activities in other ways.
Devon Shoemaker, Greene County Regional Planning director and part of the Greene County Complete Count Committee, said the coronavirus “put a damper” on in-person activities. The Greene County Complete Count Committee used word of mouth, road signs throughout the county and radio ads to spread the message, Shoemaker said.
“We would have been at community events and farmers markets, but we weren’t able to do that this year,” Shoemaker said.
The U.S. government uses the census to determine how to allocate $675 billion per year in funding to state and local governments. census data will also determine the number of representatives states will send to the U.S. House of Representatives and sets the district boundaries for congressional, state legislative and other local elections. Ohio lost two congressional seats as a result of the 2010 census.
“Every person we count helps us in the ability to get federal funding, so it’s really, really important. It’s a big deal. We really need everyone to get to it,” Whaley said. “We’ve still got 26 days, so please while you’re heading to go vote early, make sure you’ve got your census in.”
Licate urged Ohioans to respond to the census now.
“If you’ve already responded, make sure a friend, family member, a neighbor, a coworker, they’ve responded,” Licate said.
How area counties rank in Ohio census response:
Warren: 4th at 79%
Miami: 10th 76.8%
Greene: 11th at 76%
Darke: 24th at 74.1%
Champaign and Butler: 29th at 73.3%
Preble: 40th at 71.4%
Montgomery: 51st at 69.1%
About the Author