Subject: Census News Brief #11
From: Terriann2K(a)aol.com
Senate Appropriators Cut Census 2010 Funding By A Quarter;
Bureau of Economic Analysis funding up in Senate,
American Community Survey plans continue to evolve.
On Thursday, the Senate Appropriations Committee approved a Fiscal Year
2004 (FY04) funding bill that cuts $111.1 million from the
Administrations $662 million budget request for the Census Bureau. The
House version of the Commerce, Justice, and State, The Judiciary and
Related Agencies Appropriations bill (H.R. 2799), approved in late July,
includes the full amount requested.
The Senate bill allocates $181.8 million for the Census Bureaus
Salaries and Expenses account, $39 million less than the House
allocation of $220.9 million. The Periodic Censuses and Programs
account, which includes the decennial census, received $369.1 million,
$72 million less than the President requested. The House bill
appropriates $441.1 million for periodic programs.
Details of the Senate committee action will be available within several
days. Preliminary information suggests that appropriators cut funds
mainly from 2010 census planning activities. The Presidents budget
requested $260.2 million for the three main components of the plan:
launching the American Community Survey to replace the census long form
($64.8 million); designing a short form-only census in 2010 ($112.1
million); and improving the accuracy of the TIGER geographic database
and the Master Address File ($83.3 million).
Bureau of Economic Analysis funding up in Senate: The Senate FY04
Commerce spending bill includes $84.8 million for the departments
Economic and Statistics Administration (ESA), the full amount requested
by the Bush Administration. Roughly 92 percent of ESAs funding pays
for activities of the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA). The Census
Bureau is also part of the ESA.
The Senate allocation would fund three proposed new BEA initiatives, to
improve the accuracy and timeliness of key economic indicators, retail
data incorporated into national accounts, and measures of international
trade. The House Commerce appropriations bill allocated $75 million for
the ESA.
American Community Survey plans continue to evolve: The Census Bureau
continues to refine its operational plan for the American Community
Survey in light of the delay in launching the survey nationwide. Budget
constraints prevented the bureau from fully implementing the survey in
2003 as originally planned. With adequate funding, the bureau will
start the ACS in July 2004 (the last quarter of Fiscal Year 2004) by
mailing questionnaires to a sample of 250,000 households each month.
Follow-up visits to unresponsive households, however, will not start
until after September 2004, when the next fiscal year begins. The ACS
will start to cover group quarters in 2005; college dorms, nursing
homes, and other group quarters are not part of current ACS testing.
The bureaus Associate Director for Demographic Programs, Nancy Gordon,
told members of the Decennial Census Advisory Committee last spring that
the delayed ACS start was a gift of time that would allow the agency
to train the large field workforce needed to carry out the survey. The
Census Bureau also plans to test questionnaires in languages other than
English, and is exploring whether a computer-assisted response option
for Spanish-speakers (called reverse CATI, or computer assisted
telephone interview) can be expanded to other languages. The Census
Bureau will soon issue results from tests of how making the ACS a
voluntary survey would affect cost and data quality.
Since the May advisory committee meetings, the Census Bureau has shifted
responsibility for the ACS to the Decennial Census directorate, which is
headed by Associate Director J. Preston Jay Waite.
Census News Briefs are prepared by Terri Ann Lowenthal, an independent
consultant in Washington, DC. Please direct questions about the
information in this News Brief to Ms. Lowenthal at 202/484-3067 or by
e-mail at terriann2k(a)aol.com. Thank you to the Communications Consortium
Media Center for posting the News Briefs on the Census 2000 Initiative
web site, at
www.census2000.org. Please feel free to circulate this
information to colleagues and other interested individuals.
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Ed Christopher
Planning Specialist
Resource Center
Federal Highway Administration
19900 Governors Drive
Olympia Fields, Illinois 60461
708-283-3534 (V)
708-574-8131 (cell)