July 31, 2009

Census 2010 to Launch in Alaskan Wild

Headcount to Come Early to State's Hinterlands, Before Population Departs for Hunting, Fishing Grounds

  • An ice fisherman on the Unalakleet River outside of Unalakleet, Alaska watches an Iditarod contestant race past, March 11, 2007. The tiny Bering Sea village will be the launching point for the 2010 Census next year.

    An ice fisherman on the Unalakleet River outside of Unalakleet, Alaska watches an Iditarod contestant race past, March 11, 2007. The tiny Bering Sea village will be the launching point for the 2010 Census next year.  (AP Photo/Al Grillo)

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(CBS)  The 2010 census is coming early to rural Alaska.

The Anchorage Daily News reports that the Census Bureau will get a jump on its counting of Alaska residents by beginning its survey of rural residents early, before their expected exodus to hunting and fishing grounds.

The population in outlying villages and wilderness areas of Alaska has dropped 3.6 percent between 2000 and 2008, according to an April report from the state's Division of Community and Regional Affairs.

The report says migration to cities (with rising energy costs partially to blame) and an aging population result in the rural student population declining at a faster rate than the overall population.

"What makes this census particularly timely and anticipated is that there's competing conventional wisdoms and a lot of discussion going on about what is really happening," Steve Colt, associate professor at the University of Alaska Anchorage, told the Daily News. "We don't really even know the extent and nature of migration in terms of who is moving (where), let alone why."

Because the dicennial Census is used to apportion representatives in state and federal legislatures, the shift in population from rural to urban will likely affect the makeup of the Alaska state house. [The state has one "Representative-at-Large" in the U.S. Congress, Republican Don Young.]

But the population shift will also cost rural areas' budgets: The state report on schools notes that because of declining enrollments, ten communities (with a total of 91 students) face the immediate loss of school funding, and an additional 26 communities are barely meeting the required 10-student threshold.

At a workshop in Anchorage on Thursday, the Daily News reports, the village of Unalakleet in Western Alaska (population in 2000: 747) was cited as the preliminary choice for launching next year's count.

To traverse the most hard-to-reach area of Alaska's 586,000 square miles, many of the 2,500 census takers hired for the state will go door-to-door using planes, snowmobiles and dog sleds.

But there is already dissention about the Census: there have been concerns raised in the state that a preliminary GPS-mapping of domicile addresses by census workers will intrude on people's property and privacy.

Not everyone is sounding so unwelcoming: Noorvik Acting City Administrator Bobby Wells said the Kobuk River village (2000 population: 634) will offer census takers a hearty meal of the town's traditional Native food, from caribou to beaver, bear and seal - not to mention the moose barbecue.


For more info:
U.S. Census Bureau

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Add a Comment
by chonder2 July 31, 2009 6:23 PM EDT
At work here in the South, NC. I remember a new guy joined the team a while back, "Tim" happened to be from Jersey.I sat down for lunch one day and the other guys were teasing him with the classic lines-- "Did you run out of gas on your way to Florida"?...etc Tim looked up and said, I just came down to see what WE won! Chirp...chirp...chirp...
Reply to this comment
by DaVicar5 July 31, 2009 12:19 PM EDT
Good!
If we start in Alaska, we count all those Russians in the back yard, too.
Reply to this comment
by xlib July 31, 2009 12:56 PM EDT
Wonder how the members of ACORN are going to like that freezing cold weather.
by Geoffrey_816715 July 31, 2009 1:44 PM EDT
That horse is dead. Stop beating it.
by dwilson59 July 31, 2009 9:53 PM EDT
now that is funny
by mjvwsr August 1, 2009 11:01 AM EDT
that horse won't be dead until the last ACORN voter fraud trial and that will be years.
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