When the main worries are paying rent, keeping healthy and providing food for the family, participating in the 2020 census may not be a high priority for some Texas Catholics, but church officials say they are working hard to encourage their participation.
Chris Rubio, director of social services at St. Mary Magdalene Parish in Humble, and other volunteers who have helped organize weekly food distributions over the past several months during the pandemic, are now also helping with the U.S. Census Bureau to reach thousands who might have gone uncounted.
The census, which counts the U.S. population every 10 years, impacts $800 billion in funding, including Children’s Health Insurance Program, Medicaid and Medicare, school grants and many other programs.
Maria Lopez, a parishioner at Assumption Parish in Houston, received census training to reassure fellow parishioners that the census would not ask questions about citizenship.
The weekend that most churches were going to participate in the census coincided with a time when many of the churches did not have services at church because of the coronavirus, she said.
“So I’ve been trying to call other parishioners and help them by phone,” Lopez said.
But even a friendly voice over the phone that many parishioners may know by her work with the church bazaar and other ministries for 15 years doesn’t make it easy, she said.
“The people still have a lot of fear, especially those who are undocumented,” Lopez said. “The only way they will do the census is one-to-one with someone they trust.”
Because of the coronavirus pandemic, the deadline to respond to the census has been extended to Oct. 31.
When U.S. Census Bureau workers come knocking on doors in August to households that haven’t responded, “the residents just won’t open the door,” Lopez said.
Overall in Texas, responses continue to run behind the national average, ranked 41st among states for its response rate, according to the Texas Demographic Center. The state, at a 55.5% response rate, is now more than five percentage points behind the national average of 60.8%, the center reported.