What is your race? Your ethnicity? When you’re asked those questions on the Census form, are you satisfied with the choices available to you?
The U.S. Office of Management and Budget dictates that the collection of race and ethnicity information be done in a particular way, across the federal government. The most notable data collection of race and ethnicity information is the decennial Census, but the collection extends to data about patients, students, workers, and any other people the government is interested in.
What is this information used for? In the case of the Census, local, state, tribal, and federal programs use these data for policy making, particularly for civil rights. Race data are used in planning and funding government programs that provide funds or services for specific groups. States use these data to complete legislative redistricting.
OMB Directive 15 provides “minimum standards that ensure our ability to compare information and data across federal agencies, and also to understand how well federal programs serve a diverse America.”
Since 1997, the collection of race and ethnicity data has been based on self-identification; before that, race and ethnicity categories were often assigned by a third party, or were based on federal definitions.
OMB considers race and ethnicity to be separate categories, so the questions are asked separately.
Question 1: Are you Hispanic or Latino? Yes or No
Question 2: Which racial categories do you identify with? Check all that apply:
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
OMB permits the Census Bureau to use an additional race category: Some Other Race.
However, in the 2020 Census, one in seven people chose Some Other Race. This made it the second largest category, after White. The Other category was never intended to hold that many people.
In 2015, the Census Bureau proposed an alternative way of asking the question — combining the separate ethnicity and race questions into one. But to use that format required OMB approval, and the Trump Administration did not act on the Census Bureau’s request. (You may remember that Trump had other bad ideas about the Census as well.)
In preparation for the 2030 Census, the government is now holding three town hall meetings to hear directly from the American public about proposals to revise the collection of race and ethnicity data. Hosted by OMB and the newly created Federal Interagency Technical Working Group on Race and Ethnicity Standards, these town halls will ask for feedback on the initial proposals for revising the collection.
The initial proposals include:
The Working Group is also asking for public comment on how best to revise Directive 15’s:
The first town hall was held on March 14.
The second town hall will be held on March 17, at 2pm ET.
The Town Halls will be accessible via WebEx and audio through Verizon. To participate, please follow these instructions:
Access the following link:
https://uscensusevents.webex.com/uscensusevents/j.php?MTID=mab3df09031ec81fb7c3b3f593919b2ae
Enter this information if requested:
WebEx password: Spd15#2
WebEx number: 2763 566 6022
-OR-
Call the Verizon attendee line:
1-888-603-8944, passcode 6665661
Participants will have 2 minutes maximum to provide comments.
Note: The Town Hall is also being simulcast on the U.S. Census Bureau’s YouTube channel and on spd15revision.gov. A recording of the Town Hall will be made available on spd15revision.gov.
The initial proposals can be found on the January 27 Federal Register Notice Initial Proposals For Updating OMB's Race and Ethnicity Statistical Standards, which closes on April 12, 2023.
The third town hall will be held on March 18 at 2pm ET.
Whatever changes OMB ends up making, they will govern the collection and reporting of race and ethnicity data for decades to come. If you want to have a say, here’s your chance.
Jan Plotczyk spent 25 years as a survey and education statistician with the federal government, at the Census Bureau and the National Center for Education Statistics. She retired to Rock Hall.
Title image: Pond at Pickering Creek Audubon Center, Talbot Co. Photo: Jan Plotczyk