Monday, January 25, 2010

Noorvik's Distinction


I just heard about this on the radio and thought I'd post it as a matter of interest, and a break from grief related posts. Click here for the today's press release from the U.S. Census Bureau, and see first comments for an article on the topic.

4 Comments:

Blogger rabbi neil fleischmann said...

Census Begins in Remote Alaskan Village

Andrea Stone Senior Washington Correspondent

NOORVIK, Alaska (Jan. 25) –

Counting everyone in the country isn't cheap. The bureau will have spent $14.7 billion over a decade by the time the last person is tallied and the results are delivered to President Barack Obama on Dec. 31. "It is like a moon shot in its planning," said Groves, whose agency is already planning for 2020, when it hopes to start counting some people online.

Just one in 10 Alaskans will initially be visited by a census worker. The rest will get mail-in forms like the rest of the country. Alaska had the worst mail-in response rate in the nation in 2000, just 56 percent. The national response rate was 67 percent.

Lt. Gov. Craig Campbell, who accompanied Groves to the first house counted, said there is "a little bit of a rebel attitude in Alaska. We figure, there's Washington, D.C., 3,000 miles away and that's fine by us."

Republicans like Campbell outnumber Democrats in Alaska and that may also help explain the lower participation rates.

A survey released this week by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press found a partisan divide when it comes to the census. Democrats were more likely to say they would participate than Republicans.

January 26, 2010 at 2:09 AM  
Blogger rabbi neil fleischmann said...

Campbell said that may be because of philosophical differences: Republicans are just more suspicious of government. But, he added, in the case of the census, there should be bipartisan participation.

"It's important for all Americans to take part," he said, noting that Alaska, like other states, depends on an accurate count to get its fair share of federal dollars.

The Pew study also found that younger people, Hispanics and the less-well-educated are least familiar with the census and therefore less inclined to participate.

Groves said the key to boosting participation is education, especially among those younger than 30 whose parents likely filled out the form last time the census was conducted. The government is spending $133 million on an advertising and publicity blitz that includes partnerships with more than 160,000 community groups. The first TV spot ran Jan. 18 during the Golden Globe Awards, and ads are already running in rural Alaska.

The campaign includes a national road tour with 13 vehicles traveling to key events such as NASCAR races and the Super Bowl.

There are no roads leading to Noorvik. To get there, you must take a single-engine propeller plane from Kotzebue, 42 miles away.

In an interview with KOTZ radio in Kotzebue, Groves said he was following in the steps of the "first census director, Thomas Jefferson." He urged Native Alaskans to "get your fair share" of federal funds by getting counted.

"This is the basic building block of the democracy," he said.

He also addressed fears among some that information collected by the census could be used by police or immigration officials. "Anyone who's afraid of government or that the data will be shared with law enforcement, rest assured that when you give us your answers, they stay with us."

For the first time, the census form will come in more than one language. About 13 million households will receive bilingual forms in Spanish. Questionnaires also will come in Chinese, Korean, Russian and Vietnamese. Language assistance guides will be available in 59 languages, and there are census staffers fluent in a total of 124 tongues. Among them: Inupiaq, Jackson's language.

Noorvik had 634 residents in 2000 but is expected to be smaller when this week's counting is complete. Like other remote villages where food, fuel and almost everything else must be flown or barged in – a gallon of gas costs as much as $14, fresh milk $5 and diapers almost $1 each – the high cost of living has prompted many to leave for bigger, and cheaper, cities such as Anchorage and Fairbanks.

Despite that, Walter Sampson, president of the Northwest Arctic Borough, said village elders were eager to host the first count.

"This is very important," he said. "Hopefully, this will mean more funding for schools and projects."

As for Jackson, a World War II veteran who showed a visitor the military discharge papers he keeps in a drawer in the house where he lives alone, how did he feel about being first?

"I felt honored," he said through his niece. "It was fine by me."

January 26, 2010 at 2:09 AM  
Blogger kishke said...

Beautiful photo.

January 26, 2010 at 10:14 AM  
Blogger rabbi neil fleischmann said...

Yes. I think it's really a work of art.

January 26, 2010 at 10:18 AM  

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