US Census Bureau
Skip top of page navigation

PeopleBusinessGeographyNewsroomSubjects A to Z Search@Census

Newsroom
Skip this top of page navigation
US Census Bureau Newsroom masthead
 
US Census Bureau News Release

                             FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
                               THURSDAY, JUNE 29, 2000


Decennial Media Relations                                             CB00-CN.47
301-457-3691/301-457-3620 (fax)
301-457-1037 (TDD)
e-mail: 2000usa@census.gov

                                
      Census 2000 Completes Initial Work on All Known Housing Units;
               Field Operations Shift to 'Quality Counts' Phase


  Commerce Secretary William M. Daley today joined Census Bureau Director
Kenneth Prewitt at Census Bureau headquarters in Suitland, Md., to announce
the official completion of the non-response follow-up phase of Census 2000.
All 120 million housing units on the Census Bureau's national address list
now have been accounted for.

  "The great success the Census Bureau has enjoyed in the follow-up operation
is due to the dedication, enthusiasm and resourcefulness of census workers,"
Daley said before addressing Census Bureau employees. "They have taken their
jobs seriously and worked tirelessly to help their communities have the best
count possible, often in difficult and sometimes dangerous circumstances."

  Two-thirds of U.S. households returned their census forms by April, and this
left about 42 million housing units to be visited during the non-response
follow-up phase. An army of more than 400,000 temporary workers began field
work on April 27. All 12 census regions completed their work in this phase by
June 27, ahead of the bureau's target date.

  "This accomplishment does not mean the census is over," Prewitt noted. 
"Through September, we will conduct a 'Quality Counts' program that will
ultimately contact some 12 million households -- about a tenth of the national
total. The American people have been extraordinarily cooperative with
Census 2000, and we hope they will understand that this additional work is
necessary to ensure that Census 2000 can provide the best possible data to
guide important decisions that will impact their lives through the decade."

  Census workers already have begun contacting households which sent back
incomplete questionnaires, or questionnaires containing discrepancies.

  Beginning next week, additional operations will see experienced field
staff double-check addresses classified earlier as vacant or nonexistent,
or for which a blank questionnaire was received. Also to be visited are
new housing units constructed in the months immediately before Census Day
on April 1, and possibly not included on the national address list.

  At the same time, work is continuing on the Accuracy and Coverage Evaluation,
an independent quality-check survey of 314,000 housing units across the nation.
Its results will be matched against those of the census to develop the most
accurate numbers possible for all nonapportionment purposes, such as 
redistricting and distributing federal program funds. Initial field work for
this survey is scheduled to be completed in September.

The Census Bureau guarantees that the answers given on census forms are kept
strictly confidential.  Information collected in Census 2000 will provide local
area data needed for communities to receive federal program funds and for
private sector and community planning.
 
[PDF] or PDF denotes a file in Adobe’s Portable Document Format. To view the file, you will need the Adobe® Acrobat® Reader This link to a non-federal Web site does not imply endorsement of any particular product, company, or content. available free from Adobe.
Source: U.S. Census Bureau | Public Information Office |  Last Revised: August 09, 2007