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US Census Bureau News Release
    EMBARGOED UNTIL 12:01 A.M. EST, MARCH 13, 2000 (MONDAY)

Decennial Media Relations                                    CB00-CN.24
301-457-3691/301-457-3620 (fax)
301-457-1037 (TDD)
e-mail: 2000usa@census.gov

   Nearly 100 Million Census 2000 Questionnaires in the Mail,
               Census Workers Delivering the Rest

   They're in the mail!

   U.S. Postal Service workers today began to deliver 98 million Census
2000 questionnaires to about 83 percent of the nation's residences in the
first national census of the new century.

   The questionnaire packages consist of about 83 million short forms
(seven questions) and 15 million long forms (52 questions).

   Census enumerators, meanwhile, are personally delivering about 22
million additional forms to homes that do not have street-name and
house-number addresses, mostly in rural and remote areas. These represent
about 17 percent of the nation's housing units.

   "Filling out a census questionnaire and mailing it back is easy," said
Census Bureau Director Kenneth Prewitt. "The short form asks for less
information than is found on your driver's license. It takes about 10
minutes to fill out the short-form questionnaire and about 38 minutes to
fill out the long-form questionnaire.

   "About 99 percent of Americans will be able to mail back their
questionnaire. The rest will simply give their answers to an enumerator,
who will record them on the form."

   Although the rate varies according to population density, in most areas
about 5 out of 6 homes will receive the short form, while the remaining 1
out of 6 will receive the long form.

   The questionnaires were preceded by an advance letter sent last week
giving residents the option of asking for questionnaires in five languages
besides English: Spanish, Tagalog, Korean, Chinese and Vietnamese. Later
this month, the Census Bureau will send a reminder card asking residents
to mail back the form.

   People are asked to mail the forms back as soon as possible.

   In January, Prewitt challenged state, local and tribal governments to
surpass their 1990 mail response rate by at least 5 percentage points. A
higher response rate would mean that the Census Bureau would not have to
hire as many enumerators to visit households that do not mail back the
form. It also could reduce the expected cost of the census, now set at
$6.5 billion.

   In 1990, the response rate was 65 percent nationally, but varied widely
from place to place. Census Bureau officials, concerned that census forms
may get lost in the rising deluge of junk mail, have forecast a response
rate of 61 percent for 2000.

   The Census Bureau has taken several steps to make responding easier.
The questionnaires are shorter and easier to complete than in 1990.
Respondents may call a toll-free number listed on the questionnaire for
assistance in filling out the form. Help also is available in other
languages.

   Respondents may visit any of thousands of questionnaire assistance
centers, open evenings and weekends, to get help. At all the centers,
non-English-speaking respondents may acquire a language guide in any of 37
languages that will allow them to see the questions in their own language.
Certain centers will have guides in an additional 12 languages. The guides
also are on the Internet at http://www.2000.census.gov/iqa/guides.html.

   People may view the questionnaires on the Census Bureau's Internet site
and even fill out the short form online. (NOTE:  No longer available!)

   During March, the Census Bureau also conducts special operations to
count people with no fixed address or who live in dormitories, nursing
homes, prisons, shelters, trailer parks, transient housing and other group
or nonstandard housing.

   Census data are confidential and by law may not be shared with other
agencies, law-enforcement organizations, the courts or any other
organization. Under the provisions of Title 13 of the U.S. Code, Census
Bureau employees are sworn to keep the data confidential and face a fine
of up to $5,000 and five years in prison if they disclose personal
information about respondents.

   For the first time, respondents may identify themselves as being more
than one race. People may check off as many race categories as they wish.

   Hispanics may be of any race; therefore, there is one question on
Hispanic origin and another on race on the questionnaire.

   The questionnaire has room for information on six household members.
Where there are more than six members, respondents fill in the additional
names, and a Census Bureau representative will contact them for more
information.

   The short form contains six population questions and one housing
question. The long form has 31 population questions (including the six
short-form population questions) and 21 housing questions (including the
short-form housing question). Questions are included on the census
questionnaire only if they serve a legal or programmatic need. For
information on the legal or programmatic bases of the questions, see the
Census Bureau's Internet site.  (NOTE:  No longer available!)

   A complete set of residency rules telling where students, nursing home
residents, military personnel, "snowbirds" and others are counted can be
found on the Census Bureau's Internet site at 
http://www.census.gov/population/www/censusdata/resid_rules.html.

   First results of Census 2000 will be the state population totals used
to reapportion the U.S. House of Representatives, which must be delivered
to the President by Dec. 31, 2000. More detailed data used to redraw U.S.
and state legislative districts must be delivered to governors and state
majority and minority leaders by April 1, 2001.

   The Census Bureau is still hiring workers for census jobs. Check the
Census Bureau's Internet site http://www.census.gov/jobs2000 
or call 1-888-325-7733 for job information.
 
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Source: U.S. Census Bureau | Public Information Office |  Last Revised: August 09, 2007