Morning Sun

U.S. Arabs urged to prioritize census

- By Jeff Karoub and Mike Householde­r

DEARBORN » At a Michigan gas station, the message is obvious — at least to Arabic speakers: Be counted in the 2020 census.

“Provide your community with more/additional opportunit­ies,” the ad on the pump handle reads in Arabic. In the fine print, next to “United States Census 2020,” it adds: “To shape your future with your own hands, start here.”

As state officials and nonprofit groups target hard-to-count groups like immigrants, people of color and those in poverty, many Arab Americans say the undercount is even more pronounced for them. That means one of the largest and most concentrat­ed Arab population­s outside the Middle East — those in the Detroit area — could be missing out on federal funding for education, health care, crime prevention and other programs that the census determines how to divvy up.

That also includes money to help states address the fallout from the coronaviru­s.

“We are trying to encourage people not just to fill it out because of all the reasons we had given before, where there’s education and health care and all of that, but also because it is essential for the federal government to know who is in Michigan at this point more than ever before,” said Rima Meroueh, director of policy and advocacy with Dearborn-based ACCESS, one of the largest Arab American advocacy nonprofits in the country.

The Arab American community checks many boxes that census and nonprofit officials say are hallmarks of the hardest-to-count communitie­s: large numbers of young children, non-english speakers, recent immigrants and those who often live in multifamil­y or rental housing.

Arabs arrived en masse to the U.S. as the auto industry ramped up and worker demand grew. By the time those jobs began to decline in more recent decades, communitie­s with strong Middle Eastern cultural roots had been firmly establishe­d in the Detroit area. It has remained a destinatio­n for people from across the Middle East fleeing conflict, reconnecti­ng with family or simply seeking a better life. Even those who resettle elsewhere often first make their way to Detroit and surroundin­g cities.

Advocates have pressed ahead with “get out the count” campaigns despite restrictio­ns designed to curb COVID-19. The pandemic has forced the Census Bureau to push back its deadline for finishing the 2020 count from the end of July to the end of October. It’s also asking Congress for permission to delay deadlines next year for giving census data to the states so they can draw new voting maps.

With the changes, ACCESS is stepping up its social media effort, mirroring it to focus as much on the once-a-decade count as their offices, which had been plastered with census posters, Meroueh said.

“If you check out our social media, it’s very census-heavy,” she said.

But groups face a hurdle after the Trump administra­tion decided not to include a category that counts people from the Middle East or North Africa as their own group. The Census Bureau recommende­d the so-called MENA box in 2017 after years of research and decades of advocacy.

The decision to scrap the choice angers many Arab Americans, who say it hinders representa­tion and needed funding. Democratic U.S. Rep. Rashida Tlaib, an Arab American representi­ng part of Detroit and several suburbs, expressed her displeasur­e while questionin­g Census Bureau director Steven Dillingham on Capitol Hill in February.

“The community did it right — they went through the process,” she said. “You’re making us invisible.”

Dillingham said the form would have a write-in box, allowing people to describe their ethnicity. It falls short for Tlaib, but Matthew Jaber Stiffler, a University of Michigan lecturer and research and content manager at the Arab American National Museum, said it’s better than nothing. Advocates will have to push harder to get people counted, he said.

“The onus is on community organizati­ons, and local and state government­s to get the people to complete the form, because it doesn’t say, ‘Are you Middle Eastern or North African?’” Stiffler said. “We’ll get really good data if enough people fill it out.”

Even though the MENA option isn’t there, Stiffler says census officials did preparator­y work for it. If someone writes “Syrian” on their form, for instance, Stiffler has been told that the census will code that within the larger MENA ancestry group.

Arabs arrived en masse to the U.S. as the auto industry ramped up and worker

demand grew. By the time those jobs began to decline in more recent decades, communitie­s with strong Middle Eastern cultural roots had been firmly establishe­d

in the Detroit area.

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