Transylvania County Census 2010
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About Census 2010
The United States began conducting a decennial census of population and
housing in 1790. Once again in 2010, the US census will be undertaken
nationwide. Residents of Raleigh and surrounding communities will have much
to gain by participating and being counted. The US Constitution requires
that a census be taken every ten years. The 2010 Census is short, safe, and
an investment in every community's future.
What is
the Census?
The US Census is a count of all residents of the country. The count
will include people of all ages, races, ethnic groups, citizens and non
citizens. Census data results will guide critical decisions on federal,
state, and local levels which means that that achieving a complete and
accurate count is essential.
When is
the Census?
Census Day is April 1, 2010
How
will the Census count residents?
Census questionnaires will be mailed to every residence address in March of
2010. Questions should be answered based on persons living at the address
as of April 1, 2010. Residents will complete the questions and then mail
back responses to the US Census Bureau. Questionnaires and phone assistance
will be made available in several languages.
What
questions will be asked?
The 2010 Census will ask ten questions and take only a few minutes to
complete and mail back. Information will be gathered regarding name,
gender, age, race, ethnicity and relationship to householder and whether the
householder owns or rents their home.
Will
responses be confidential?
By law, the Census Bureau and its employees can not share any collected
information with anyone, including welfare, immigration, law enforcement
agencies or marketers.
Why is the
Census important to Transylvania County?
- In general a
complete census count of all residents where they live can help support a
community's improved quality of life.
- Private businesses
use census data to help locate sites for new grocery stores, pharmacies,
distribution centers, entertainment and recreational venues, etc.
- Census data is used
by local Chambers of Commerce to provide statistical profiles to potential
business recruits.
- Census data about
patterns of growth is used to help decision makers in local planning efforts
- including determining where new parks and recreational programs are
needed, forecasting future transportation, housing and school needs, making
sure adequate public safety staff are allocated
- Census data will
determine how many seats each state will have in the US House of
Representatives and the shape of new congressional districts. Local City
Council and County Commissioner districts may be redrawn based on decennial
census data.
- Every year the
federal government distributes more than $400 billion (over $1300 per
person) to state and local governments based on census data. Accurate data
can ensure local communities get their share of federal funds for schools,
housing assistance and rehabilitation loans, roads and bridges, public
transportation, public safety, hospitals, other community needs.
- Local population
data is also used by the State government as a basis for distributing shared
revenue streams such as sales taxes and gasoline taxes.
For more Information call
828-884-3100
For Locations of manned site for 2010 Census & sites where information is
located
click here.
Employment
Opportunities with U.S. Census Bureau
click here.