
The Senate Appropriations Committee voted last week to send the FY '97 Supplemental Spending bill to the full Senate with a provision that would prevent the Census Bureau from using sampling in the 2000 census. Chapter 10, Section 303 of the bill would prohibit the use of sampling in the census and would result in an undercount of Hispanics, other minorities and the poor as has happened in the past.
Following the 1990 census, Congress charged the Census Bureau with developing a census that is more accurate and less expensive. The language in the Supplemental Appropriations Bill would result in just the opposite-a census that is less accurate and more expensive. During the 1990 census, the Hispanic population was undercounted by an estimated 5%. If sampling is prohibited in the 2000 Census, millions of dollars will be misappropriated away from poor, urban, rural and minority areas and toward upper and middle income suburban areas. What's worse is that no one will know how severe the undercount would be because the language prohibits the census from even measuring the undercount for the first time in decades.
Please contact your Senators and urge them to vote for an amendment to strike the language dealing with the census in the Supplemental Appropriations Bill. The Senate will debate the bill on Monday, May 5 and vote on the bill Tuesday, May 6 so you will need to fax your letters or call your Senators' offices in order to influence their vote on this amendment. The Senate switchboard number is (202) 225-3121. Barring the use of sampling in the 2000 census is a bad idea because:
Please copy this alert and distribute it to LULAC members in your region.
For further information contact Selena Walsh, League of United Latin American Citizens, 1133 20th St., NW, Suite 750, Washington, DC 20036, (202) 833-6130,