The United States Census is a decennial census mandated by the United States Constitution, and is used (among other things) to determine how more than $400 billion dollars of federal funding each year is spent on infrastructure and services.
Participation is mandatory, and the US Government (including the President) are engaged in a campaign to raise awareness and drive participation. Indeed, they have a very modern looking website, a blog, and are even using Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, flickr, downloadable widgets to get the message out (see the What You Can Do) page. And I'm really impressed with this use of the Internet, social networking, and more to get the word out.
Or rather, I *WAS* impressed. Until I saw the message "We Can't Move Forward Until You Mail It Back". Mail it back? Really? We have a really nice web site in over 50 languages, social site integration, even a slick Flash powered interactive version of the form .... and then this:
Q: Can I fill out my form online?
A: No. Not at this time. We are experimenting with Internet response for the future.
The future? Really? As in the next US Census in 2020?
2000 was still early Internet days, so back then this would have been forgivable. But this is 2010, people live online, a couple of months ago online holiday shopping $s exceeded in store shopping $s, we bank online, utilities prefer to send you e-bills, and on and on and on .... But mail back your Census form, and we'll revisit in the future!
Ouch! What a failure!
IMO, You give far too much credit to the current administration, and far too little to the former. You have to remember that Congress is the true 'voice of change,' and they haven't done much more than bicker for far too long. Thankfully a very large percent are up for reelection this year. Maybe we should clean the slate and start new (that would be true 'change').
I think it has more to do with the fact that the USPS is still a government entity, and several million pieces of census mail justifies (in some way) the jobs of thousands of people who are in (rightful) fear of becoming obsolete.
I agree with you - also let's not forget that participation is NOT mandatory - at least the type of participation Obama wants you to have. What is mandatory is simply filling out the short form that states quantity of individuals in a residence and their ages - not questions like "How much do earn?" "Where did your earnings come from?" "How much did you pay for insurance?" "Who do you vote for?"...
(Those numbers are used to reapportion money taken from taxpayers, and so are hot politically... even <a href="http://www.google.com/search?q=%22address+verifica...; online verification methods have not always been used.)
As far as the charges of what one administration did vs. another, the reality is that successive administrations, and sittings of congress, both parties, have cut the budgets of administrative departments for many years.
The requirements we're talking about would, at very least, require considerable QA efforts and the resources/focus that comes with that. We're talking about a system that must process tens of millions of entries flawlessly, and securely.
We, the electorate (as a whole), have asked for this - indirectly, of course. We've asked for smaller government, lower taxes, etc - again, I'm not talking overnight, or since the last election cycle, I’m talking about decades of elections.
If we want, and feel there's a public good to investment in technology, and that ultimately it can serve our (America, sorry to my International friends) country better, then we have to stand up and demand it become a priority. We have to convince those that are not in our technology community that it's a good idea, EVEN if it means spending more in the short term.
Just MHO. (please feel free to insert partisan slogans below)
(disclaimer: I am not a federal employee, democrat, republican, senator, Iraqi minister of information, etc, etc, etc)
http://www.genealogybranches.com/censuscosts.html
It would certainly be nice to fill it out online and save us some money. Of course, do we really want to think about how much the government would spend on a one page web form that verifies a code and then saves to a database? I would rather not think about it.
Personally, I plan to only answer the questions that deal with who lives in my house. They don't need to know my phone number, whether I own or rent or what race I am. I understand why they want that information and they can fine me the $100 if they dare.
However, PLEASE send your form back. Refusing to return the form will cause the Census to send someone out to your residence, more than once if they don't get you at home. This costs all taxpayers money (well, really it will costs our kids and grandchildren since we are financing it over 100 years or something).
Chris, that is incorrect. Look at the form. It has 10 questions, and none ask about income or voting or insurance.
JC, I don't buy that argument, not for the census and not for online voting. There is always a % of fraud in every election and survey. If done properly there should be LESS fraud with doing it electronically, not more.
I find it pretty amazing how many of your posters want to blame parties or Obama for the census. That makes no sense. It's been around a long time, and in the planning stages for at least 4 years. It's not like Obama could take office last year and tell them to change everything.
To those that think everything is a plot to invade your privacy: feel free to not list your race, but such things really do help policy makers of both parties make decisions that affect you. If you don't want to be counted because of some crazy misinformed belief that the census tracks your income or other such nonsense, then don't be counted. A widespread, but targeted boycott will only affect services for your population group.
Ben, you have a legitimate complaint that the census wasn't handled via on online form. It does sound lame, but hopefully next time.
Anyhow, the 2007 census nominee (Bush's) stated explicitly that he wanted to have it, but that they couldn't do it this time:
http://fcw.com/articles/2007/12/19/census-nominee-...
In particular, "The bureau tested Internet surveys in 2001, 2003 and 2005 and concluded that the increased response rate and cost savings didn’t outweigh privacy risks, which Murdock reiterated during the hearing."
1. A lot of this stuff is controlled by deeply entrenched policy and law. The Census bureau has been doing this for hundreds of years, and it takes time to abandon something that has worked for centuries, and move to a new paradigm. Huff and puff all you want, but it takes time to change these things.
2. They have to try to get it right, and so are understandably hesitant to use anonymizing technologies like the web. There is some value in making people go to the trouble to fill out a card and mail it back. You are more likely to get honest answers. If you could just log onto some website and fill out answers, I promise it will be abused. Think Facebook group: "Everyone, let's skew the census to show more population in New Mexico!!! LOLZ!!!"
3. A little credit to the census bureau. They were early adopters of analog computers (I think as early as the 1910 or 20 census), and have literally driven computer innovation for around 100 years. Remember, before computers were merely social networking and flash games terminals, they were actually used to "compute" stuff. And the census bureau saw the value before any of us were born, and drove a lot of the very early innovation (and not so early innovation).