Pen and paper

Just under half of local households had returned their census
forms by the recommended April 1 deadline, which is on par with the
state average.
Just under half of local households had returned their census forms by the recommended April 1 deadline, which is on par with the state average.

In both Hollister and San Juan Bautista, 49 percent of respondents had mailed in the forms that count the United States population every 10 years. People who don’t return their forms will be visited by census workers who will take the count in person.

The Census Bureau spends $57 to send a worker to a household, but only 42 cents if the household returns its form by mail. Every percentage point increase in the national return rate saves the government $85 million. In the previous census in 2000, approximately 72 percent of households returned their forms without follow-up visits.

The state’s return rate for census forms was 48 percent as of March 30. In other area cities, half of Gilroy residents had returned their forms, compared with 44 percent in Salinas and 53 percent in Morgan Hill.

More than half of the nation’s households had returned their forms as of Tuesday, according to the Census Bureau, which had mailed or hand-delivered approximately 134 million questionnaires. Central and upper Midwestern states had the highest return rates, while Southern states had the lowest.

“We’re off to a great start, but we still have a ways to go before getting a complete count of the nation,” Census Bureau Director Robert Groves said in a press release. “If everyone in the nation took the 10 minutes needed to fill out and mail back their 2010 census form, we could cut the cost of conducting the census by $1.5 billion.”

Groves said parts of Alabama, Florida, Mississippi and Louisiana lag behind the rest of the country in census participation. The participation rate in Miami, for example, was 38 percent as of Tuesday.

“There’s still time to fill out and mail back the census questionnaire,” Groves said. “Every household that fails to send back their census form by mail must be visited by a census taker starting in May – at a significant taxpayer cost. The easiest and best way to be counted in the census is to fill out and return your form by mail.”

The bureau is preparing to send duplicate questionnaires to residents of areas deemed “hard to count” because of factors such as language, poverty and low return rates in previous censuses.

MCT News contributed to this report, which will appear in the Pinnacle on Friday.

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A staff member wrote, edited or posted this article, which may include information provided by one or more third parties.

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