Key Dates
The Campaign
Hard to Count
Census
100

The first census was conducted this year. 

1790

100

Total number of organizations part of the campaign

12

100

Three of the groups that is hard to count.

POC, immigrants, renters, children under 5 

100

The process of counting everyone in the United States.

The Census 

200

Also known as Census Day

April 1st, 2020

200

The total number of contacts for the campaign we want to reach

200,000

200

Percentage of those who identify as POC in Oregon

25%

200

A person employed by the Census Bureau to take the census of the population; also conducts non-response follow up

Enumerator

300

The year that Black, Chinese, and American Indian were distinguished in the census.

1870

300

This question is considered a contact 

Have you completed your census?

300

In Oregon, who were among the hardest to count communities based on 2010 response rates?

American Indian Tribal reservations

300

Legislation that keeps your individual responses private and secure.

Title 13 of the United States Code

400

Last day to complete the census.

October 31st, 2020

400

The last day of the field campaign 

July 30th, 2020

400

The official definition of a HTC as it relates to the census tract.

Any census tract that has less than 76% self-response return rate. 

400

The amount in 2016 that Oregon received in Federal funding 

$13 billion dollars

500

Date that enumerators will be doing the non-response follow up (changed due to COVID)

August 11th, 2020

500

One of the local questions asked that is specific to Oregon Futures Lab.

interest in childcare initiative, seeing more diverse representation of elected leaders 

500

The percentage of of Oregon's current population that lives in heard-to-count neighborhoods 

10% or 393,058 people

500

Oregon's population projection suggests that the census will identify this much more residents than in 2010

450,000