U.S. Census Bureau

U.S. Department of Commerce News

       EMBARGOED UNTIL: 12:01 A.M. EST, JANUARY 11, 2000 (TUESDAY)

Decennial Media Relations                                      CB00-CN.04
301-457-3691/301-457-3620 (fax)
301-457-1037 (TDD)
e-mail: 2000usa@census.gov

    Commerce Secretary and Census Bureau Director Challenge
          Communities to Increase Census Participation

   Commerce Secretary William M. Daley and Census Bureau Director Kenneth
Prewitt today announced an initiative to encourage grassroots
participation in Census 2000 in every town, city, county, state and tribal
area in the nation.

   Called How America Knows What America Needs, the two-pronged
program provides governors, tribal leaders, county commissioners, mayors
and other highest-elected officials with a toolkit of materials to better
promote the census in their communities. These include an information kit,
access to a dedicated Web site and a toll-free telephone number for
questions on the program.

   "Because the census is so important to every resident, we must do
everything we can to ensure that everyone is included in the count," Daley
said. "This program will provide elected officials across America with the
tools necessary to increase awareness and response within their
communities."

   "Census 2000 can be a civic event that reverses the troubling decline
in the level of civic engagement across our country," Census Bureau
Director Kenneth Prewitt said. "How America Knows What America
Needs challenges every member of every community in America to
participate in the census. It converts the census into a civic activity of
the highest order."

   The first component of the program - '90 Plus Five - challenges
communities in areas where the census is conducted by mail to increase
their mail response rate in Census 2000 by at least 5 percentage points
over the 1990 level. To gauge progress, Census 2000 response rates for
each jurisdiction will be posted on the Internet and updated daily from
March 27 to April 11.

   The second component - Because You Count - encourages public
cooperation with enumerators. This program targets two types of
households. One type comprises households that do not return their census
forms by mail. The other - a much smaller group - consists of those in
mostly rural areas where forms are not mailed and census workers deliver
the questionnaires to each household personally.

   The program is voluntary, and the highest elected officials in almost
39,000 jurisdictions were invited to participate. Officials may sign up
for the program online at http://www.hakwan.com or via the toll-free 
number 1-877-6-HAKWAN.

-X-
Source: U.S. Census Bureau
Public Information Office
301-763-3030

Last Revised: March 15, 2001 at 08:35:39 AM