Today's Date: April 24, 2024
Swisscom Accelerates Sustainability and Innovation with Genesys Cloud   •   Woodside Energy Group Ltd Annual General Meeting Address by Chair Richard Goyder and CEO Meg O'Neill   •   Experience Senior Living Celebrates the Opening of the new Independent Living community at The Gallery at Cape Coral   •   FPT Cooperates with USAID to Promote Clean Energy Deployment, Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions, and Accelerate Net Zero Transitio   •   Loop Media Discloses Communication from NYSE American   •   An adventure every day after school: Boys and Girls Clubs of Central Arizona   •   Coeur Publishes 2023 ESG Report   •   Dr. Anthony Fletcher Installed as President of the Association of Black Cardiologists   •   LG Energy Solution to Take Firm Stance Against Patent Infringers   •   Minister Sudds highlights budget investments in support of Indigenous Reconciliation   •   Suzano Ventures invests up to US$5 million into Bioform Technologies to further develop bio-based plastic alternatives   •   Minister of Employment, Workforce Development and Official Languages highlights budget investments in support of Indigenous reco   •   Curio Digital Therapeutics Inc. Announces the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Clearance of MamaLift Plus™, the Fir   •   iHeartMedia and Deep Blue Sports + Entertainment Launch Women’s Sports Audio Network – The First-Ever Audio Platform   •   New Study in Colorado Reveals Alarming Rates of Colorado Teens Missing School   •   Voto Latino Announces Honorees for 16th Annual Our Voices Celebration   •   Star Refrigeration Sustainability expert urges Scottish Government to act on Heat in Buildings Bill as 2030 climate target scrap   •   Rocket Lab Successfully Deploys Satellites ~500km Apart to Separate Orbits For KAIST and NASA   •   Acer Among Top 5% Scoring Companies in S&P Global Corporate Sustainability Assessment   •   Tech Innovator Purba Majumder Recognized as One of North America's Top 100 Women Leaders in 2024
Bookmark and Share

Ethnic Media Assures More Effective And Accurate Census Count

 

New America Media Tells Congress to Use the Nation's Ethnic Media More Effectively to Increase Accuracy of the 2010 Census Count

WASHINGTON,  -- The US Census Bureau is missing opportunities to provide reporting instructions to diverse communities in the United States by failing to fully utilize the ethnic media that can reach more than 60 million adults in those communities, according to testimony from New America Media (NAM) in Congress today.

Sandy Close, NAM's executive director, called the 2010 Census advertising program an "unprecedented investment" in ethnic and community media, having identified 3,000 media outlets across the country. But she cautioned that many key media outlets were left out, including 47% of those that attended roundtable sessions organized by NAM and the Census Bureau last year to learn how they could help with the count.  She noted that several prominent African American papers had been excluded.

"Many are frustrated -- they don't know why they fell through the cracks.  Some are bitter. All very urgently want a role -- even if small -- and believe, as I do, that together they can move the needle those extra percentage points," said Ms. Close, testifying before the Oversight and Government Reform's Subcommittee on Information Policy, Census and National Archives. Her organization represents more than 2,500 ethnic media outlets across the country.

The roundtable discussions organized last year included more than 600 ethnic media representatives in 12 cities from coast to coast.  The ethnic media participating included media giants like Univision, Asian language dailies, BET and Clear Channel stations to established black and Spanish language weeklies, upstart radio and TV stations, as well as niche print and online outlets serving Burmese, Ethiopian, Arab, Russian, Mixtec, Punjabi and Samoan communities.

"Their hunger to participate in the 2010 Campaign is intense -- you could cut the exuberance at these gatherings with a knife," Ms. Close testified.  "For many media, it was the first time they'd come together as a media sector in the same city. They get the Census: they get their community's stake in a complete count, and they get their own."

In citing the importance of an accurate Census count not only on federal dollars, but private ones as well, she noted the experience of Juan Carlos Ramos of the El Tiempo Hispanic newspaper in New Orleans. Mr. Ramos said the 2000 Census undercounted Hispanics in New Orleans and as a result Coca Cola dropped New Orleans, and his paper, from their national ad campaign.

Many ethnic media outlets are frustrated by being excluded from the Census advertising.

"From our first briefing in March of 09 until our last one in early December, ethnic media attendees also expressed a uniform anxiety over the lack of transparency in the decision making process of the Census ad buy," Ms. Close said, adding that she has received correspondence from ethnic media outlets across the country not been utilized.

Moreover, there was also criticism that some of the communications vehicles chosen by the Census Bureau are not having the desired impact. She quoted Joe Orozco, of Hoopa Radio in northern California, lamenting that the Census spent the "the biggest chunk of money to reach American Indians" on billboards that don't have much of an impact on isolated reservations like his. "Most of us don't do a lot of freeway driving," she quoted Mr. Orozco as saying.

Ms. Close said that hundreds of ethnic media like Hoopa Radio want to inform and mobilize their communities to participate in the Census.  As the Census Bureau recognizes the regions with the lowest response rates, she recommended that the government fund a program similar to a NAM project launched to reach American Indian and indigenous communities in California.

The Save our Services campaign for Census 2010 replicates an approach that NAM has pioneered through numerous social marketing campaigns over the last decade. It relies upon local ethnic media outlets to design their own messaging campaigns and earned media components.  Under this program, Hoopa Radio received a small grant of $2,000 that will help pay to develop a PSA that will grab listeners' attention with a message that says:  "If we don't let ourselves be counted, they'll say no one lives here and take away our water rights."

Ms. Close cited reasons why the Census Bureau should utilize the ethnic media more. She noted that a survey by San Francisco State's Renaissance Center last year found that 68 percent of ethnic media leaders described their primary goal as service to the community, with less than a third listing making a profit as their goal. In addition, she said that while mainstream media audiences have sharply declined, there has been a 16 percent growth in the ethnic media audiences over the last five years.

"Even a modest investment of $2 million in those outlets that have been left out or, like Joe Orozco, believe they have more effective ways to get the message to their audiences could increase the response rate dramatically in some regions between the crucial period between April 15 and the end of July," Ms. Close said. "More important, it would acknowledge that not just the primary ethnic news outlets but the entire ethnic media sector has an indispensable role to play in how government communicates with the governed."

CONTACT:  Alexandra Moe, +1-202-615-6145

 

SOURCE New America Media

Back to top

RELATED LINKS
http://www.newamericamedia.org



Back to top
| Back to home page
Video

White House Live Stream
LIVE VIDEO EVERY SATURDAY
alsharpton Rev. Al Sharpton
9 to 11 am EST
jjackson Rev. Jesse Jackson
10 to noon CST


Video

LIVE BROADCASTS
Sounds Make the News ®
WAOK-Urban
Atlanta - WAOK-Urban
KPFA-Progressive
Berkley / San Francisco - KPFA-Progressive
WVON-Urban
Chicago - WVON-Urban
KJLH - Urban
Los Angeles - KJLH - Urban
WKDM-Mandarin Chinese
New York - WKDM-Mandarin Chinese
WADO-Spanish
New York - WADO-Spanish
WBAI - Progressive
New York - WBAI - Progressive
WOL-Urban
Washington - WOL-Urban

Listen to United Natiosns News