California Complete Count Committee

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CENSUS2020California Complete CountCommitteePUBLIC MEETING1001 I STREET, SACRAMENTO JUNE 4, 2019- !7070s ----- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1

Establishment of QuorumAlex PadillaSecretary of StateChairCalifornia Complete CountCommittee2

Agenda Approval of December 3, 2019 Meeting Minutes Approval of March 12, 2019 Meeting Minutes New Name for Merged Working Group Review and Approval of Committee’s Report to theGovernor State Census 2020 Updates Director’s Report Outreach Update US Census Bureau Update Public Comment3

State Census 2020 UpdatesSarah Soto-TaylorDeputy Secretary for CensusGovernment OperationsAgency4

State Census 2020 Updates Executive Summary Budget—May Revise5

Director’s ReportDitas KatagueDirectorCalifornia Complete Count –Census 20206

Outreach and Public RelationsRequest for Proposal Received 7 Proposals Evaluated 5 2 were received after the deadline and were notevaluated as stated in the RFP Oral interviews were scheduled/held Date TBD Expected award date—early June Estimated contract start date—end of June Per RFP, these dates are subject to change7

Implementation PlanWorkshops What are the Implementation Plan Workshops(IPWs)? Purpose Outcomes Audience How Committee members can participate8

UpcomingImplementation Plan Workshops June 5 – Palm Desert, UC Riverside June 12 – Riverside, UC Riverside June 14 – San Bernardino, San Bernardino ValleyCollege June 17 – Sacramento, CSU Sacramento HarpersAlumni Center June 19 – Richmond, Memorial Auditorium &Convention Center9

Statewide Outreach andCommunications StrategyAdriana MartinezDeputy Director of Outreach&Tribal LiaisonCalifornia Complete Count –Census 202010

Statewide Outreach and Communications StrategyCCCC Feedback from March 12, 2019 MeetingOutreach (ground game) Improve and ensure access to broadband across HTC communities Hold counties and local partners accountable to ensure access and fundswell invested across outreach activities Ensure meaningful access for people with disabilitiesOutreach and Public Relations (air game) Local validation of media outreach plan through LCCCs Accountability measures and use of appropriate local media partnersEducation/Schools Make census relevant to K-12 students through classroom learning Engage higher education campus housing to encourage censusparticipationLanguage & Communication Access Plan Ensure meaningful access by going above existing federal and statestandards Develop quality assurance recommendations that contractors may follow11

Statewide Outreach andCommunication Strategy Develop a comprehensive community-engagementcampaign utilizing trusted community-basedmessengers in trusted places to reach hard-to-countcommunities throughout California. Require contractors to collaborate and coordinatewith stakeholders, and avoid duplication of effort. State of CA campaign will be additive to the U.S.Census Bureau’s operation.12

Statewide Outreach andCommunication StrategyFocuses outreach efforts on: Where the hard-to-count live (geographic-basedoutreach) Who the hard-to-count are (demographic-basedoutreach) How to reach the hard-to-count (sector-basedand media outreach)13

Statewide Outreach and CommunicationStrategy: Phased Approach for 2020Phase 1: Convene, Collaborate, Capacity Build FY2017-18Phase 2: Educate. Motivate. Activate! January2019-March 2020Phase 3: Deploy. Count. Assess. March-June 2020Non-Response Follow Up, Results, Report,Wrap Up! July-Dec 202014

Statewide Outreach andCommunication StrategyGround GameThe approach calls for maximizing resources on theground: Build a strong base of trusted community voices Allow for increased in-person impressions in hard-tocount communities Address language and communication access barriersfor non-English speaking individuals and people withdisabilities Get ahead of misinformation about the census Execute an effective program that allows for rapidresponses and deployment of resources through theuse of technology15

Statewide Outreach andCommunications StrategyGround Game: Statewide CBOsNALEO Educational FundLatino Community FoundationCalifornia CallsCalifornia Indian Manpower Consortium (CIMC)Community Partners/California Native Vote ProjectAsian Americans Advancing JusticeCoalition for Humane Immigrant Rights (CHIRLA)California Rural Legal Assistance, Inc. (CRLA)Mixteco/Indigena Community Organizing Project (MICOP)Equality California Institute (LGBTQ)United Ways of CaliforniaGreat Nonprofits/Community Connect Labs16

Statewide Outreach andCommunications StrategyAir Game: Sharing Census Outreach Efforts Targeted investments in local ethnic media and paid in-languagemedia in HTC communities designed to: Build a base of trusted messengers Break down language barriers Facilitate culturally appropriate engagement within communitiesOverall strategy: Deliver the right messages in culturally appropriate, native languages Delivered through trusted messengers within the HTC communities Coordinated outreach efforts among local, regional and statewideentities to avoid duplication17

Statewide Outreach anCommunications StrategyQuestions?18

Why Language andCommunication Access? Equal and meaningful access for limited English proficientindividuals and people with disabilities in:- Their primary language- Accessible formats The majority of HTC, not just LEP, will need assistance in nonEnglish primary language. Appropriate and correct language,and cultural sensitivity are fundamental to earning the trust ofour HTC. Goal is to ensure we reach a median of 91.3% LEPs in eachcounty with LACAP approach.19

How will contractors knowwhat language to focus on?Geographic Data Areas tLos Angeles CountyLEPpopulationbelow 54,000(median)LEPpopulationabove 54,000(median)Top 12 Languagesgroups (15 languages) 95.96% LEP1,500speakers of alanguage3% or3,000speakers of alanguageSpanish, Korean, Chinese,Armenian, Mandarin,Tagalog, Vietnamese,Cantonese, Farsi, Japanese,Russian, Arabic, Khmer, Thai,Filipino91.3%95.96%All geographic areas will be required to cover English and Spanish20

Outreach Regional Updates Quintilia Ávila, Regional Program Manager,Southern California Lead Emilio Vaca, Regional Program Manager, CentralCalifornia Lead Yumi Sera, Regional Program Manager, NorthernCalifornia Lead21

Southern CAPopulation and Hard-to-Count MAPRegions 7, 8, 9 and 10-CA-HTC Index(by census tract)1 -2020-4040 - 61-61 - 84-84-136CA-HTC IndexCountiesS-c. Cf'UC, US CM.;8ur. u201l-2017ArNIS0CorrtnunltySurY91S.y .-1N. Forll'IOl9.imn.1- lhilCA-HTCtndaandU nt&. . i,, v-ollf m-s,is., '-bl9.iN!pe, //ll:;Mtt,.4c.g,wlr--22

Southern CAPopulation and Hard-to-CountRegion 7Estimated Hard-to-Count population 1.2 millionRegion 8Estimated Hard-to-Count Population is 4.1 millionRegion 9Estimated Median Hard-to-Count Population is711,760Region 10Estimated Median Hard-to-Count Population is783,27723

Contracting PartnersREGION tyFoundationREGION 8Los AngelesCaliforniaCommunityFoundationREGION 9OrangeCharitableVenturesof OrangeCountyREGION 10San DiegoImperialUnited Wayof SanDiego24

Looking AheadImplementation Plan WorkshopsRegion 75-Jun Palm Desert (UC Riverside)12-Jun Riverside (UC Riverside)Region 8Riverside, San BernardinoRiverside, San Bernardino14-Jun San Bernardino (San Bernardino ValleyCollege30-Aug Long Beach (Blue Star Manor)Riverside, San Bernardino5-Sep Huntington Park (Community Center)Los Angeles/South East LALos Angeles/Long Beach11-Sep El Monte (El Monte Community CenterLos Angeles/San Gabriel Valley18-Sep South Los Angeles (Exposition Park-CaliforniaCenter)20-Sep Palmdale (Chimbole Cultural Center)Los AngelesRegion 923-Aug Anaheim (County Office Bldg)OrangeRegion 1014- Aug El Centro (Department of Social Services)Imperial16-Aug San Diego (Educational Cultural Complex)San DiegoLos Angeles/Antelope Valley,Santa Clarita25-Sep San Fernando (Alicia Broadous-Duncan Multi- Los Angeles/ San FernandoPurpose Senior Center)Valley30-Sep Los Angeles (California Endowment)Los Angeles25

Central CAPopulation and Hard-to-Count MAPc,.,InyoCA-HTC Index(by census tract)1 - 20San6, mar 110020 - 4040 - 615cu,. CPUC. US Cefl-&.N112013-2017A,r,.rw;anCA-HTC Index is 0Co ml.lnllySurf., -y atimJlftForlT'IClnlonb'milbon.t oullhe CA,. HTClflClu.:I lb I Q ptbNgo lop f l - . . , ; J 1 .CounllesM oflh rnapi.,11abte1t,IMtpt,J lut.C.pfrHOU!ces/26

Central CAPopulation and Hard-to-CountRegion 4Estimated Hard-to-Count population 541,447Region 5Estimated Hard-to-Count Population is 525,767Region 6Estimated Hard-to-Count Population is 1.1 million27

Contracting PartnersREGION 4Total lumneOpt-OutCountiesAlpineAmadorSan JoaquinMonoACBOFaith InActionNetworkREGION 5REGION 6San BenitoSan Luis ObispoSanta BarbaraSanta a CountyCommunityFoundationSierra HealthFoundation:Center for HealthProjectManagement28

Looking AheadImplementation Plan WorkshopsRegion 45-Aug Merced (UC Merced)Merced, Stanislaus, Mariposa,Madera, MonoAug StocktonSan Joaquin, Calaveras,Tuolumne, AmadorRegion 5July Monterey/San Benito/Santa CruzJuly San Luis Obispo (Ludwick Comm Ctr)Region 6Monterey/San Benito/SantaCruzSan Luis Obispo/Santa Barbara8-Aug Oxnard (Oxnard Performing ArtsVenture6-Aug Fresno (The Nielsen Conference CenterFresno EOC)Fresno, Kings, Tulare7-Aug Bakersfield (Beale Memorial LibraryKern, Inyo29

Northern CAPopulation and Hard-to-Count MAPRegions 1, 2, and 3I.-r-·CA-HTC lnde (by census tract)I1 -2020- 4030

Northern CAPopulation and Hard-to-CountRegion 1Estimated Hard-to-Count population 619,931Region 2Estimated Hard-to-Count Population is 131,336Region 3Estimated Hard-to-Count Population is 1.4 million31

Northern CaliforniaContracting PartnersREGION 1REGION cramentoYoloNevadaSonomaLakeNapaMendocinoDel NorteHumboldtOpt outcountiesEl CBOSacramento RegionCommunity FoundationUnited Way ofthe WineCountryREGION 3AlamedaContra CostaMarinSolanoSan MateoSanta ClaraSan Francisco0United Way ofthe Bay Area32

Looking AheadImplementation Plan WorkshopsRegion 1Region 2Region 317-Jun Sacramento (CSU SacramentoHarpers Alumni Center)El Dorado, Nevada,Placer, Sacramento, Yolo24-Jun Red Bluff (Community Center)Butte, Colusa, Glenn,Lassen, Modoc, Plumas,Shasta, Sierra, Siskiyou,Sutter, Tehama, Yuba31-Jul Arcata (CSU Humboldt)Humboldt, Del Norte,Trinity, Mendocino2-Aug Santa Rosa (Sonoma County Bldg)Sonoma, Lake, Napa,MendocinoAlameda, Marin, Solano,Contra Costa19-Jun Richmond (Memorial Auditorium &Convention Center)26-Jun Redwood City (Sobrato Center forNonprofits)10-Jul San FranciscoSan Mateo, Santa Clara,San Francisco33

How Can CCCC Help?1. Attend Implementation Plan Workshop2. Join our Speakers Bureau3. Advise on gaps in your area of expertise34

Statewide Outreach anCommunications StrategyQuestions?35

Sector OutreachMarcy KaplanSectors Outreach ManagerCalifornia Complete Count – Census202036

Sectors:HOW we reach the hard to count Health ServicesLabor (unions)Faith-basedBusiness/Corporate Technology & Innovation Entertainment Industry Rural Communities CCC priority sectors reach people where they comefor services and activities Trusted messengers/ trusted places -----CCC prioritysectors have ongoing points of contact with HTC CCC priority sectors have a unique ability to reachcommunities that may not be contacted throughother CA Complete Count outreach efforts37

Sectors Goal: leverage California statewide sectors, andleaders/influencers within, to support outreach efforts tohard to count populations Suggested recommendations from 2000 and 2010 Census Statewide entities, networks & associations Regional coordination with RPMs Stakeholders identified through: Participation in past Census outreach Serving HTC communities Large statewide infrastructure and reach Recommended by key partners38

Anchor Organizations:Health, Faith & LaborAnchor Organizations (1 for each sector) Serve large numbers of HTC Have existing statewide and regional infrastructure High impact with limited dollarsAnchor Organizations Can: Develop sector specific materials including toolkits Provide training opportunities Onsite activation events and questionnaire assistance39

Business/Tech & Innovation/Entertainment Sector:Statewide: Coordination with large companies andnetworks/association that reach HTC Coordination with SOS Democracy at Work program Coordination with US Census Bureau Additional examples: telecommunications providers, publicutilities, companies who hire in gig economyRegional Opportunities: Local Chambers, EDC offices40

Other Cross Sector Collaboration Rural sector Feedback for other sectors41

Outreach Next Steps: Review of Strategic Plans from contractors and kickoff Implementation Plan Workshops—June 2019Select Outreach & Public Relations contractors andinvolve in Implementation Plan Workshops—June2019Engage statewide and local partners to outreach todemographic populations: MENA, People withDisabilities, Seniors/Older Adults, Homeless, Children0-5, and VeteransQuestions and Feedback?42

2020 Census Overview and UpdatePresentation to the California Complete Count CommitteeJune 4, 2019Albert E. Fontenot, Jr., Associate DirectorDecennial Census ProgramsShapeyour future2020CENSUS.GOVSTART HERE

2020 CensusApproach to the 2020 CensusAt a Glance Complete and accurate count—The goal ofthe 2020 Census is to count everyone once,only once, and in the right place. Safe and secure—Incorporated industrybest practices and follow federal IT securitystandards for encrypting data intransmission and at rest. Easy—Respondents can respond anytime,from anywhere—online, by mail, or overthe phone.44Shapeyour future2020CENSUS.GOVSTART HERE

2020 CensusCybersecurity—Your Data Are Safe and SecureCybersecurity Focus From the beginning when a respondent answers to the endwhen the data products are released, data are encrypted,safe, and secure.The Census Bureau is partnering with the federal intelligencecommunity (DHS, FBI, NSA) and industry experts to protectthe data we collect and maintain.Follow industry best practices to protect our networks fromexternal threats and secure data inside the network.Advanced ability to continually identify, protect, detect,respond, and recover from possible cyber threats.Continuously improve our security posture.Shapeyour future452020CENSUS.GOVSTART HERE

2020 CensusData Are ConfidentialResponses are confidential, safe,and secure.101Your data areconfidential. Answers cannot be usedagainst you in any way. Responses to the 2020 Censusare protected by federal law. All Census Bureau staff take alifetime oath to protect yourpersonal information and anyviolation comes with a penaltyof up to 250,000 and/or up to5 years in prison.Federal law protects your censusresponses. Your answers can only beused to produce statistics.By law we cannot share yourinformation with immigrationenforcement agencies, law enforcementagencies, or allow it to be used todetermine your eligibility forgovernment benefits.census·1- - - Breauu The Census Bureau will notshare an individual’s responseswith immigration enforcementagencies, law enforcementagencies, or allow thatinformation to be used todetermine eligibility forgovernment benefits. Title 13 makes it very clear thatthe data we collect can only beused for statistical purposes—we cannot allow it to be usedfor anything else, including lawenforcement.There are no exceptions. The law requires the CensusBureau to keep everyone’sinformation confidential. Bylaw, your responses cannot beused against you by anygovernment agency or court inany way.We will never ask for: Your full social securitynumber. Money or donations. Anything on behalf of a politicalparty. Your full bank or credit cardaccount numbers.Shapeyour future462020CENSUS.GOVSTART HERE

2020 CensusA Complete and Accurate Count of the Population and -UPMOTIVATE PEOPLETO RESPONDESTABLISH WHERETO COUNTCount everyone once,only once, and in the right place.TABULATE DATA ANDRELEASE CENSUS RESULTSShapeyour future472020CENSUS.GOVSTART HERE

2020 CensusEstablish Where to Count—Address Frame DevelopmentDevelopment for the 2020 Census Master Address File (MAF)started with the 2010 Census Base.U.S. Postal Service (USPS) DeliverySequence File (DSF) Updates from USPS twice per year.Geographic Support System PartnershipPrograms Support and maintenance of thegeographic and cartographicinfrastructure.Boundary and Annexation Survey Annual survey to collect informationabout selected legally definedgeographic areas.Local Update of Census Addresses (LUCA) Opportunity for tribal, state, and localgovernments to review and commenton the residential address list.New Construction Program Opportunity for tribal, state, and localgovernments to update the CensusBureau’s residential address list withliving quarters for which construction isin progress during or after March 1,2018, and completion is expected byCensus Day, April 1, 2020.Shapeyour future482020CENSUS.GOVSTART HERE

2020 CensusCalifornia Frame Building Activities*CALIFORNIA REPUBLICUSPS DSF Spring 2019 DSF provided 8,769addresses that were new to theMAF. Of these addresses, 1,651(18.8 percent) are in Los AngelesCounty. An additional 1,769 addresseswere new to the DSF, butmatched to addresses already inthe MAF.Geographic Support SystemPartnership Programs Processed address and roadcenterline files for 40 countiesand 10 census places.Boundary and Annexation Survey 2019—494 responses from 539eligible governments. 129 with changes/365 with nochanges.LUCA (Fall 2018) 340 governments submitted areturn. 2,890,000 LUCA address updatesin California.New Construction Program 82 governments have registered,including Los Angeles, San Diego,San Luis Obispo, and YoloCounties.Shapeyour future492020CENSUS.GOVSTART HERE

2020 CensusAddress Canvassing OperationsWhat You Need to Know Temporary Census Bureau employees,known as Listers, walk the streets ofdesignated census blocks. Listers will knock on doors and, usinglaptops, verify addresses in the Census’MAF in preparation for the 2020 count. Listers will attempt to contact everystructure to ask about living quarters. In-field operation begins in August 2019and concludes in October 2019.Shapeyour future502020CENSUS.GOVSTART HERE

2020 CensusAdvertising and Media BuyingAdvertising Strategy The 2020 Census will usetraditional media (print, TV, radio),as well as digital and social media. Integrated approach allows fortailored messages to specificgeographic and demographicgroups using channels that aremost appropriate for reaching thetarget audience. Specific advertising will beleveraged to reach multiculturalgroups using non-Englishlanguages.Campaign data will be usedcontinuously to refine ourapproach—advertising strategyallows for rapid adjustments toareas with low response rates. Multicultural partners will provideinput to the media plan from boththe national and localperspectives, in addition toexecuting buys at both levels. Simplify complex data byidentifying key sharedcharacteristics.Local Media Local media is a key componentin reaching hard-to-countpopulations. More than 50 percent of mediabuys will be from local media. Currently negotiating mediabuys. Final Media Buys Planexpected in September 2019.MlNewspaperRadio MagazineTelevisionl IOut-of-homeInternetIIShapeyour futureSTART HERE Shapeyour future512020CENSUS.GOVSTART HERE

2020 CensusHow the 2020 Census Will Invite Everyone to RespondEvery household will have the option of responding online, by phone, by paper form, or in person.Nearly every household will receive an invitation to participate in the 2020 Census from either apostal worker or a census worker.e95% of households will receive theircensus invitation in the mail.0Almost 5% of households will receive0Less than 1% of households will be counted intheir census invitation when a census takerdrops it off. In these areas, the majority ofhouseholds may not receive mail at theirhome’s physical location (like households thatuse post office boxes or areas recently affectedby natural disasters).1't 1't 1't 1't 1't1't 1't 1't 1't 1't1't 1't 1't 1't 1't1't 1't 1't 1't 1'tperson by a census taker instead of being invited torespond on their own. We do this in very remote areaslike parts of northern Maine, remote Alaska, and inselect American Indian areas that ask to be counted inperson.Shapeyour future522020CENSUS.GOVSTART HERE

2020 CensusWhen We Start MailingWhat You Need to Know Initial invitations to respond to the 2020Census will start arriving by U.S. mail onMarch 12. These will be followed by up to four additionalmailings if a household has not selfresponded. Every household that has not responded bythe fourth mailing will receive a paperquestionnaire arriving by U.S. mail starting onApril 8. People who live in areas with low Internetconnectivity will receive a paper questionnairein their first mailing. Regardless of how households are invited torespond, respondents will be able to respondby any of the three modes—online, by phone,or by paper.Shapeyour future532020CENSUS.GOVSTART HERE

2020 CensusResponding Is Easier Than Ever—Online, by Mail, or Over the PhoneSelf Response Is Easier Than Ever. You will be able to respond anytime, fromanywhere. Regardless of how households receivetheir invitation to respond they will be able to doso online, by mail, or over the phone.The Internet Self-Response instrument has beenoptimized for responses from smartphones andmobile devices. Self-respond in English or one of 12 non-Englishlanguages. Print and video language guides are in 59 nonEnglish languages provided to field partnershipspecialists and available online. Video language guide will be available in AmericanSign Language, print guides will be available inbraille and large print. Partnership specialists will be hired from withinlocal communities, emphasizing the importance ofcommunicating in local amHindiRomanianKoreanHmongArabicHaitian CreoleSerbian.UkrainianBosnianBengali ThaiUrduKhmerCroatianGreekLaolgboSwahilillocano HungarianYorubaArmenianAmharicTwiAmerican Sign Languagea1 51 1"' ' "Ciln Shapeyour future542020CENSUS.GOVSTART HERE

2020 CensusHow the Census Bureau Determines Areas for Bilingual MailingsEnglish/Spanish bilingual mailings will be sent to all Census tracts that have 20 percent or more of householdsthat are recognized as needing “Spanish Assistance”—defined as at least one person aged 15 or older whospeaks Spanish and does not speak English “very well.” 1Census tracts with 20% or moreCensus tracts with less than 20%Bilingual English/Spanish mailings forentire census tract (bilingualquestionnaires up front or in the fourthmailing)English mailings that include a Spanishphrase inviting you to respond online orvia direct toll-free line in Spanish 1 BasedSpanish online questionnaireSpanish phone support and responseon 2013–2017 American Community Survey, 5-year estimates.Shapeyour future552020CENSUS.GOVSTART HERE

2020 CensusSpecial Populations—Service-Based Enumerations, Enumeration atTransitory Locations, Prison PopulationsService-Based Enumeration Provides an opportunity for people withoutconventional housing or people experiencinghomelessness to be included in the censusby enumerating them at places where theyreceive services or at preidentified outdoorlocations. Missions, hotels and motels used asshelters, and places for children who arerunaways, neglected, or experiencinghomelessness. Soup kitchens that offer meals to peopleexperiencing homelessness. Regularly scheduled mobile food vans. Emergency and transitional shelters forpeople experiencing homelessness. Targeted nonsheltered outdoor locations. Highly mobile populations that do not havea usual home elsewhere (i.e., campgrounds,recreational vehicle parks, marinas, hotelsand motels, racetracks, circuses, orcarnivals).People in Correctional Facilities for Adults Prisoners are counted at the correctionalfacility. The Census Bureau will make available abulk geocoding service in order to assiststates in their goals of reallocating their ownprisoner population counts. California has enacted legislation requiringthe Department of Corrections to report thehome addresses of incarcerated people tothe Citizens Redistricting Commission sothat the commission may countincarcerated people at home forredistricting purposes.Enumeration at Transitory LocationsShapeyour future562020CENSUS.GOVSTART HERE

2020 CensusAreas Recovering From Natural DisastersUpdate Leave Deliver questionnaires in geographic areas where the majorityof housing units do not have mail delivered to the physicallocation of the address. Areas that have experienced recent and significant changes tothe housing stock—for example, natural disasters such as ahurricane or forest fire. Leave a 2020 Census Internet Choice Questionnaire Package atevery housing unit. Able to respond online, by mail, or over thephone. Occurs simultaneously with Internet Self-Response. People temporarily displaced by natural disasters can becounted at their usual residence.Shapeyour future572020CENSUS.GOVSTART HERE

2020 CensusNonresponse Follow-upWhat You Need to Know Temporary Census Bureau employees, known as censustakers, determine the housing unit status for addressesthat do not self-respond to the 2020 Census. Census takers will personally visit housing units to countor enumerate the households. If no one is at home, the census taker will leave aNotice of Visit to encourage self-response. In most situations, census takers will make at least sixattempts to resolve a case. In-field operation begins in May 2020 and concludes inJuly 2020.Shapeyour future582020CENSUS.GOVSTART HERE

2020 CensusPartnershipWhat You Can Do To Help Join us as a partner and become part of apowerful network of government,nonprofit, corporate, and communityorganizations. Together, we can developsolutions to effectively reach everyoneand encourage them to respond to the2020 Census. Our partners are integral in building alocation list of missions, shelters, soupkitchens, emergency and transitionalshelters, and outdoor locations wherepeople experiencing homelessnesscongregate. Your support can help ensure that yourcommunity and constituents areaccurately counted and represented inthe 2020 Census.How can I learn more? Visit www.census.gov/partners . For the latest updates on the 2020Census, visit www.2020census.gov .Shapeyour future592020CENSUS.GOVSTART HERE

Thank YouAlbert E. Fontenot, Jr.Associate Director for Decennial Census ProgramsU.S. Department of CommerceU.S. Census Bureau4600 Silver Hill Rd.Suitland, Maryland 20746Office: 301-763-4668albert.e.fontenot@census.govShapeyour future602020CENSUS.GOVSTART HERE

30 Minute PublicComment, '- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -61 - 2020

CENSUS2020California Complete Count OfficeWebsite: census.ca.govEmail: info@census.ca.gov(916) 852-2020- !2020 , '- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 62

Jun 04, 2019 · 11-Sep El Monte (El Monte Community Center Los Angeles/San Gabriel Valley 18-Sep South Los Angeles (Exposition Park-California Center) Los Angeles 20-Sep Palmdale (Chimbole Cultural Center) Los Angeles/Antelope Valley, Santa Clarita 25-Sep San Fernando (Alicia Broadous-Duncan Multi-Purpose Senior Center) Los Angeles/ San Fernando Valley

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