ACORN to Play Role in 2010 Census
The U.S. Census Bureau is working with several national organizations to help
recruit 1.4 million workers to produce the country's 2010 census, including one
with a history of voter fraud charges: ACORN.
Cristina Corbin
FOXNews.com
Wednesday, March 18, 2009
The U.S. Census is supposed to be free of politics, but one group with a history
of voter fraud, ACORN, is participating in next year's count, raising concerns
about the politicization of the decennial survey.
The Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now signed on as a
national partner with the U.S. Census Bureau in February 2009 to assist with the
recruitment of the 1.4 million temporary workers needed to go door-to-door to
count every person in the United States -- currently believed to be more than
306 million people.
A U.S. Census "sell sheet," an advertisement used to recruit national partners,
says partnerships with groups like ACORN "play an important role in making the
2010 Census successful," including by "help[ing] recruit census workers."
The bureau is currently employing help from more than 250 national partners,
including TARGET and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People (NAACP), to assist in the hiring effort.
But ACORN's partnership with the 2010 Census is worrisome to lawmakers who say
past allegations of fraud should raise concerns about the organization.
"It's a concern, especially when you look at all the different charges of voter
fraud. And it's not just the lawmakers' concern. It should be the concern of
every citizen in the country," Rep. Lynn A. Westmoreland, R-Ga., vice ranking
member of the subcommittee for the U.S. Census, told FOXNews.com. "We want an
enumeration. We don't want to have any false numbers."
ACORN, which claims to be a non-partisan grassroots community organization of
low- and moderate-income people, came under fire in 2007 when Washington State
filed felony charges against several paid ACORN employees and supervisors for
more than 1,700 fraudulent voter registrations. In March 2008, an ACORN worker
in Pennsylvania was sentenced for making 29 phony voter registration forms. The
group's activities were frequently questioned in the 2008 presidential election.
ACORN spokesman Scott Levenson told FOXNews.com that "ACORN as an organization
has not been charged with any crime." He added that fears that the organization
will unfairly influence the census are unfounded.
"It will be the Census Bureau that determines the role and scope of its 300
national partners. ACORN is committed to a fair and accurate count," Levenson
said.
The census is an official count of the country's population mandated by the U.S.
Constitution. It is used to determine distribution of taxpayer money through
grants and appropriations and the apportionment of the 435 seats in the House of
Representatives. Every U.S. household unit, including those occupied by
non-citizens and illegal immigrants, must be counted.
Westmoreland and Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, a member of the House census
subcommittee, said the panel has held hearings to make sure the penalties for
census takers committing fraud are clearly defined.
"I feel fairly confident that the penalties for an individual manipulating the
count are pretty severe," Chaffetz said. The penalty for any fraudulent activity
can be up to five years in jail.
Westmoreland said he hopes the Census Bureau will maintain its measures to
ensure an accurate report.
"I feel comfortable right now with the people at the census department that
they're going to put forth their best effort to have a fair count," he said.
The U.S. Census Bureau has refuted any suggestions that ACORN or any other
groups will fraudulently and unduly influence the results of the census.
"The Census (Bureau) is a nonpartisan, non-political agency and we're very
dedicated to an accurate account," bureau spokesman Stephen Buckner told
FOXNews.com. "We have a lot of quality controls in place to keep any kind of
systemic error or fraudulent behavior to affect the counts."
Buckner said the bureau received an overwhelming number of qualified applicants
-- more than 1 million -- for the 140,000 census taker jobs filled to complete
the first phase of the effort. Each applicant, he said, must take a basic skills
exam, which includes reading a map and entering data into a handheld computer.
Applicants are also subject to an FBI background check, he said.
But Buckner acknowledged that it is difficult to track an applicant's political
background.
"I have no way of tracking any of that information," he said. "If somebody comes
in to a position with a political agenda and their work exhibits that, there are
rules against that," he said.
Buckner stressed the need for organizations like ACORN to assist in the effort,
saying that "any group that has a grassroots organization that can help get the
word out that we have jobs" is helpful.
In 2000, the U.S. Census Bureau had 140,000 partnerships from "national
organizations to local and community organizations to elected officials," he
said. "The list is as broad as the phone book."