I would presume this is all above and beyond the usual mis-responses and non-response to
specific questions that the Bureau imputes answers for. Just compare notes with the school
districts trying to track down their students that never make the Zoom calls-the hard to
reach population is getting that much harder to reach.
Sent from my iPhone
On Aug 3, 2021, at 12:36 PM, Ed Christopher
<edc(a)berwyned.com> wrote:
Thanks for the brief Chuck and the links.
This is a Wow. Especially when we know the Bureau reports a weighted response rate which
as I understand it does not include those households who got the ACS mailing and did not
respond by mail or online, and were not contacted with a personal visit. (
http://www.trb.org/Publications/Blurbs/156802.aspx page 22.). Tells me we are going to
have to look very carefully at our data and check for weirdness as we start to see it.
Overall, though I think we are pretty good with our data once we know where all the warts
are.
On 8/2/2021 5:16 PM, Charles Purvis wrote:
I’m still trying to understand what’s going on with the year 2020 American Community
Survey (ACS). I went through the Friday, 7/29/21, PDF of the Census Bureau’s powerpoint
presentation.
https://www.census.gov/newsroom/press-kits/2021/impact-pandemic-2020-acs-1-…
https://www.census.gov/content/dam/Census/newsroom/press-kits/2021/acs-1-ye…
Census had this to say about “non-response”
All surveys typically have some nonresponse bias because those who do not respond tend to
be different from those who do respond
Our standard methods for mitigating the nonresponse bias are insufficient for this data
year
The 2020 ACS data collection had the lowest response rate ever for the survey at 71%,
down from 86% in 2019
and 92% in 2018
This rate is an average across the entire data collection year
Response rates during the peak pandemic months [March-June 2020] were significantly lower
The big “wow” is the decline in the “non-response rate” from 86 percent in 2019 to 71
percent in 2020. Of course, my followup question is does this mean that 29 percent of
respondents provided “incomplete data” that required their information to be edited /
imputed / allocated? Or does it mean that 29 percent of respondents were “totally
nonrespondent.”
Unfortunately, the 29 percent is “totally nonrespondent”.
Here’s the Census Bureau page that shows overall response rates in the ACS from 2005 to
2019, that is, NO useful information (?) from the selected sample. I think.
https://www.census.gov/acs/www/methodology/sample-size-and-data-quality/res…
This table is also amazing to show that the “Best” year for the ACS, in terms of response
rates, was 2009, at 98.0 percent response rate.
These are nonresponse rates for the American Community Survey, not the decennial (the
“short form”) Census.
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Ed Christopher
Transportation Planning Consultant
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