'We Need Numbers to Tell Our Story'
Reversing Census Undercount in Indian Country
보스톤코리아  2019-05-23, 19:47:55 
James Ramos (D-San Bernardino), the first Native American elected to the California State Assembly, addressed a gathering of Native American media and state workers ahead of the upcoming 2020 Census at a meeting in the governor’s conference room on April
James Ramos (D-San Bernardino), the first Native American elected to the California State Assembly, addressed a gathering of Native American media and state workers ahead of the upcoming 2020 Census at a meeting in the governor’s conference room on April
(Sacramento = Ethnic Media Services ) Mark Hedin = Fear, distrust and even anger at the federal government are among the obstacles the 2020 Census must overcome to reach an accurate count, especially of immigrants and communities of color, most experts agree.   
 For Native Americans, the ethnic group with the highest undercount of any defined by the Census Bureau, these obstacles are compounded by diversity and isolation.
So concluded a group of Native American media representatives who met recently in Sacramento with state officials, a Native American legislator and members of the governor’s staff to brainstorm how to reverse the undercount in 2020.
Those media in attendance were: Hoopa Radio, Indian Country Today, Indian Voices, News from Native California, the Two Rivers Tribune, the Quechan Indian Tribe’s KUAV-FM, KPRI-FM from the Pala Indian Reservation and FNX-TV. Also on hand were state government and Ethnic Media Services staff. 
There’s no one-size-fits-all message on the census for Indian Country, Ditas Katague, director of CA Complete Count Census 2020, the state’s complete count committee, acknowledged. She pointed out how in 2010, the Two Rivers Tribune had to reject two consecutive ads as culturally inappropriate - one showed Plains Indians walking through fields towards teepees, the other depicted an Indian man in front of a Los Angeles skyscraper.
Two Rivers Tribune’s readership of Hoopa Indians have lived in the redwood forests of Northern California for 20,000 years. Native media embedded in their communities are key to customizing the message for each tribe, Katague pointed out. 
The stakes couldn’t be higher. The 2010 Census, considered the most accurate of any decennial census taken since 1790, still missed almost 5% of Native Americans living on reservations and almost 12% of those off the rez. As a result, the native community has lost out on at least 4.9% of its share of hundreds of billions in government allocations based on census data.  
The undercount has a national effect. George Washington University’s “Counting for Dollars 2020” study estimates that for the 16 large federal programs that together spend $589 billion annually based on census data, the loss comes to $1,838 per person. For California, the same study pegs that amount at $1,958 per person. Mark Trahant, editor of Indian Country Today, says for the Native American population, the number is closer to $3,000 each. 
“Indian Country is so diverse in general, but in California - the state with the largest population of Native Americans in the country - that diversity increases exponentially,” said Jourdan Bennett-Begaye, a reporter with Indian Country Today. “California has 109 recognized tribes, and there are so many more. Each tribe, each community, is different, with our own identities, our own ways.”
Daniel Golding runs KUAV, the radio station serving the Quechan Indian Tribe in the southeastern corner of the state - “California’s second-largest tribe you’ve never heard of,” he joked. To underscore the diversity, he recalled seeing a coyote on the road while touring a different reservation. “For one tribe, crossing paths with a coyote brings bad luck. For my tribe, it’s a sign of good fortune.”
The sheer isolation of tribal lands makes tallying people a challenge. Eric Ortega, of the Pala Indian Reservation in San Diego County, notes that just having a street address, instead of a post-office box, is a recent innovation.
In 2010, the Census Bureau began community outreach efforts two or three years before census-taking  started. That was very helpful, according to Brian Golding, Daniel Golding’s brother, head of economic development for the Quechan tribe. Local residents helped enumerators find where people lived, he said, and more importantly, worked alongside enumerators to mitigate a mistrust of strangers that might have led to fewer people being counted.
That sort of outreach hasn’t been seen in the run-up to 2020, Golding says. “This go-round, right out the gate, is significantly weaker in outreach to Indian Country.”
The Census Bureau has been underfunded throughout the 2010s, affecting its ability to do its typical preparations such as community outreach and thorough field-testing of proposed changes.
And, in a new cost-cutting effort, the Census Bureau plans to have people complete their questionnaires online after getting a notice in the mail. But not everybody in Indian Country has ready access to a computer.   
“The online opportunity may be helpful,” Brian Golding says. “The younger population tends to have smart phones and are generally tech-savvy.” But they also tend to be more mobile and less concerned about responding, he adds. “They’re more likely to use tech, but least likely to respond.”
Fully 73% of Native people in California live in cities and smaller towns, presumably making them relatively accessible. But Lorenda Sanchez, who heads the California Indian Manpower Consortium in Sacramento, says it’s actually harder to count Native people in urban communities because they’re dispersed, not clustered in a homogenous community.  This is particularly true in cities too small to have strong, sizable identity groups in their midst but large enough to be diverse. 
Sanchez, whose organization includes 104 of the state’s tribes and 68 community-based organizations, has worked on census matters for 41 years. She pegs the undercount for Native Americans in California at between 10% and 25% in urban communities, with the larger cities at the lower end of the range. The 2010 Census counted 723,000 Native Americans in California, almost evenly split between full-blooded and mixed-race. Los Angeles has about 140,000, the Bay Area about 75,000.
The April 4 meeting, held in the governor’s conference room in the state Capitol, provided a call to action for attendees. 
“One of my takeaways was that localized media in each of the communities that attended are ready to raise awareness and address concerns in each of their regions,” observed Frank Blanquet of FNX TV, who is producing a segment on the conversation.
“We all understand how the census affects us and our communities,” Bennett-Begaye remarked. “We’re figuring out how to communicate that to our diverse audiences.”
Allie Hostler, editor of the Two Rivers Tribune, says her major challenge is limited resources, a sentiment shared by virtually all attendees.
For Terria Smith of the Torres Martinez Desert Cahuilla Indians, editor of News from Native California, which covers tribal news statewide, trust is the underlying issue Native media must address. “There is no trust right now for the federal government at all, as far as a lot of people go. Then you’re going to have to combat people’s apathy: What is the benefit of doing all of this?”
“I understand people’s distress, but it also affects a lot of our federal programs,” Bennett-Begaye countered. “I’m also thinking about the younger kids. The number one population that’s undercounted are kids 0-5, and Native youth are our largest population in Indian Country.”
“If we can get that message back to our people, and we can share that with them, they just may be better involved,” noted Joe Orozco, longtime station manager of the Hoopa reservation’s radio station KIDE, 50 miles north of Eureka. “So I’m looking forward to doing what I can do to make that happen.  
“Let’s give them some more numbers that they can count on, and just keep adding to our story,” he concluded as the convening ended.
“That’s the only thing we have. We need the numbers to tell our story.”



ⓒ 보스톤코리아(http://www.bostonkorea.com), 무단전재 및 재배포 금지
의견목록    [의견수 : 0]
등록된 의견이 없습니다.
이메일
비밀번호
세상의 끝을 가다 2019.05.27
Cape Horn (55 58' 47" S)은 세상 끝에 놓여있는 바다위로 1394feet 올라온 작은 섬이고 칠레영토이다. "Below 40 degrees..
화랑도(花郞徒)와 성(性) 그리고 태권도(跆拳道) 276 2019.05.27
12세의 어린 나이로 신라의 제26대왕으로 오른 진평왕은 ‘여인천하’ 에 묻혀서 지냈다. 먼저 왕실의 가장 어른인 태상태후 사도(진흥왕의 정비)는 그의 조모였다...
매사추세츠 서부 한인회에 던진 불편한 질문 2019.05.23
매사추세츠 서부 한인회가 공식 출범했다는 보도가 나간 후 한인회 관계자들은 이런 소식을 언론 보도를 통해 접했다며 불편한 표정이었다. 특히, 2년간의 공백을 지나..
'We Need Numbers to Tell Our Story' 2019.05.23
(Sacramento = Ethnic Media Services ) Mark Hedin = Fear, distrust and even anger at the fe..
한인회장 비롯한 임원 1명 한인회관 재관위원으로 합류키로 2019.05.23
가칭 매사추세츠 한인회(회장 장우석) 임원단이 한인회관재산관리위원회(이하 재관위)와 첫 공식 만남을 5월 15일 갖고 서로간의 소개와 향후 협조방안을 논의했다...