— A once-in-a-decade job opportunity is just around the corner for
jobless Americans who are struggling through the worst economic
recession since the Great Depression.
Across the country, the 2010 census is ramping up
efforts to hire 1.2 million temporary workers for the decennial head
count, which begins in March.
Most of the jobs, about 700,000, will require
knocking on doors for six to 10 weeks from May to July to find people
who didn’t mail in their census questionnaires.
The massive hiring effort will require more than 3 million job applicants, and the
At a news briefing last week,
offices as well as in the local media so that “everyone who needs a job
knows about the job opportunities.”
“We want to hire people in the neighborhoods where
they’ll work,” Groves said. “We’ve learned over the decades that hiring
people who know the neighborhoods, who know the streets, who know the
lifestyles and the goings and comings of neighborhoods works better.”
The recession is affecting the 2010 census in
several ways. With unemployment at 10 percent, officials are seeing
better-qualified applicants.
On the down side, however, record foreclosures and
job losses have forced millions of people to leave their homes and
change their addresses, which means they will be harder for census
workers to find.
Because of this and rising anti-government
sentiment, the bureau doesn’t expect to match the results of the 2000
census, in which 67 percent of households completed and returned their
questionnaires. The bureau has estimated that nearly 48 million
households will require follow-up contacts or visits this time.
The states with the largest populations will require the most workers to flush out these non-respondents.
The pay will vary widely by location, because of the difference in the cost of living. Workers in
The pay jumps to
Higher-paying areas include
IHS Global Insight, said the temporary jolt of jobs that the census
would provide would be a “fortuitously timed extra piece of government
stimulus.”
He said the jobs provided additional spending power
while boosting the nation’s employment and payroll count. They’ll also
put a small, temporary dent in the unemployment rate.
Fortunately, Gault predicts that the economy should
be adding jobs instead of shedding them by the time most of the new
census hires begin work in early May.
“So this is an extra temporary kick on top of that,” he said.
For the first time, all applicants will be
fingerprinted as part of a stepped-up criminal background check.
Applicants with serious and violent crime convictions won’t be hired.
“If there are less serious convictions of less
serious crimes, then you can be hired only if the applicant can
demonstrate the extenuating circumstances that prove beyond a doubt
that they don’t pose a risk to the American public,” Groves said.
To apply for a temporary job with the 2010 census, call 1-866-861-2010 or go to the
Via McClatchy-Tribune News Service.