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Census Workers have began visiting homes. Check the link below for more info !!! |
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2010 Complete Count Committee
Chairperson - Rae Lee Siporin
Committee Member - Darlene Brady
Staff Liason - Noelle Garcia, Deputy Clerk
Census forms are no longer availabe in the Village Office. If you did not receive one, please call 1-866-872-6868
Click HERE to view the Census Bureau's flyer regarding Census Workers!!
Click to view the 2010 Census: A Portrait of America Video
Now is the Time to Start Planning for the 2010 Census
The countdown to the 2010 Census has begun, and the U.S. Census Bureau is looking to national, tribal, state and local officials and community leaders to ensure an accurate count. With Census Day in less than a year — April 1, 2010 — the Census Bureau has already launched a critical national effort that affects the apportionment of congressional seats, and how the federal government annually allocates $300 billion in federal assistance to state, local and tribal governments.
The 2010 Census will have one of the shortest census questionnaires in the history of the United States, dating back to the nation’s first census in 1790. The 2010 Census will ask for name, gender, age, race, ethnicity, relationship and whether the householder owns or rents their home. The census form will take only about 10 minutes on average to complete, and answers are protected by law and strictly confidential.
“The participation of community leaders, organizations and local governments can help make the 2010 Census the most accurate census in our nation’s history,” said Tom Mesenbourg, acting director of the U.S. Census Bureau.
More than 11,000 state, local and tribal governments have registered for the Local Update of Census Addresses (LUCA) program to update the Census Bureau’s address information for their communities. Communities also can begin planning for Complete Count Committees, a team of local government, business and community leaders, who are appointed by a governor for a statewide committee or by a community’s highest-elected official for a local committee.
Members of the committees work to make sure their communities are counted. During Census 2000, more than 11,800 Complete Count Committees were formed to help develop and implement locally based outreach and recruitment campaigns.
“The 2010 Census is the consummate partnership between local, state, tribal and federal government,” said Keith Hite, president of the National Association of Towns and Townships and executive director of the Pennsylvania State Association of Township Supervisors.
Preparing early for the 2010 Census is a great way for local leaders to learn the makeup of their communities and what they need from local government. Reasons for residents to be aware of the upcoming census and the need to participate are: