Cada mes, el equipo de Census Counts recopila noticias relacionadas con el censo de una amplia gama de medios de comunicación nacionales y regionales para mantener informadas y comprometidas a las partes interesadas en la equidad de datos.
Como siempre, puedes encontrar clips anteriores. aquí.
July 28, 2025 Census Coalition Clips
Nacional
Noticias AP | Noticias How redistricting in Texas and other states could change the game for US House elections
Redistricting usually happens after the once-a-decade population count by the U.S. Census Bureau or in response to a court ruling. Now, Texas Republicans want to break that tradition — and other states could follow suit. President Trump has asked the Texas Legislature to create districts, in time for next year’s midterm elections, that will send five more Republicans to Washington and make it harder for Democrats to regain the majority and blunt his agenda. The state has 38 seats in the House. Republicans now hold 25 and Democrats 12, with one seat vacant after the death of a Democrat.
Leah Askarinam | July 26, 2025
Noticias AP | Noticias Why are data nerds racing to save US government statistics?
The data nerds are fighting back. After watching data sets be altered or disappear from U.S. government websites in unprecedented ways after President Donald Trump began his second term, an army of outside statisticians, demographers and computer scientists have joined forces to capture, preserve and share data sets, sometimes clandestinely. Their goal is to make sure they are available in the future, believing that democracy suffers when policymakers don’t have reliable data and that national statistics should be above partisan politics.
Mike Schneider | July 25, 2025
American Community Media | News ‘Hungry for Data’—Pushing Deportations, Trump Admin Dismantles Privacy Guardrails
There has been little controversy about whether the information immigrants provide to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) in applying for “benefits” such as Temporary Protected Status (TPS) or humanitarian parole can be used for enforcement, for locating and detaining them. But can the information that low-income households must provide to federal/state programs like MedicAid (Medi-Cal) and SNAP (Food Stamps) be used by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to target them, track them, and detain them?
Edward Kissam | July 25, 2025
Government Executive | News Census is planning on hiring fewer temporary workers for the 2030 count, watchdog reports
The Census Bureau wants to hire fewer temporary workers for the 2030 count of the U.S. population and rely more on technology and data from other agencies, according to a recent Government Accountability Office report. A civil rights nonprofit, however, is concerned about how the Trump administration is developing its census plans and that such changes could undercount certain populations. “If people are not represented in the data, they are not represented in our democracy. They’re also not represented in the economy. They’re not represented in decision making,” said Meeta Anand, senior director for census and data equity at the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights.
Sean Michael Newhouse | July 25, 2025
Vision Monday | News More Americans Participating in Gig Economy, U.S. Census Bureau Finds
The gig economy may be having a bigger impact on the overall U.S. economy than previously thought. A report released by the U.S. Census Bureau finds that sole proprietorships make up more than 86 percent of nonemployers and of the total number nearly 68 percent of establishments in the U.S. economy. The report noted that industries contributing to the gig economy include taxi and limousine service at more than 1.3 million and couriers and messengers at more than 1.4 million.
Staff | July 25, 2025
Noticias AP | Noticias The US fertility rate reached a new low in 2024, CDC data shows
The fertility rate in the U.S. dropped to an all-time low in 2024 with less than 1.6 kids per woman, new federal data released Thursday shows. The U.S. was once among only a few developed countries with a rate that ensured each generation had enough children to replace itself — about 2.1 kids per woman. But it has been sliding in America for close to two decades as more women are waiting longer to have children or never taking that step at all.
Mike Stobbe | July 24, 2025
Estados
Florida
Tampa Bay Times | News DeSantis suggests redistricting Florida congressional seats before next census
Gov. Ron DeSantis could ask lawmakers to redraw congressional boundary lines after the Florida Supreme Court last week upheld a 2022 map that gave Republicans control of a North Florida district previously held by a Democrat. DeSantis raised the possibility of further redistricting Thursday as Texas Republicans look to redraw districts amid a push by the Trump administration to help the GOP keep its slim control of the U.S. House.
News Service of Florida | July 24, 2025
Illinois
Herald-News | News Plainfield residents can go online to fill out special census
Plainfield residents will begin receiving letters this week from the U.S. Census Bureau that contain information on how to complete a special census form online, the village said. Plainfield requested a special census due to the estimated 10% increase in its population since 2020, the year of the most recent U.S. census.
Judy Harvey | July 26, 2025
Publicaciones de blog e informes
Oficina del Censo de EE.UU. | Presione soltar 2030 Census Operational Plan
The 2030 Census Operational Plan is a high-level document that explains the operational design for the 2030 Census. It is the key way we communicate the 2030 Census design to staff and external stakeholders which outlines the full scope of the 2030 Census Program. Since we are in the early stage of the operational design, some areas described in the plan have more detail than others, this is common for areas already tested in the 2020 Census and earlier. This gradual approach helps us gather more information through testing and research, allowing us to refine and improve 2030 Census operations.
U.S. Census Bureau | July 24, 2025
Oficina del Censo de EE.UU. | Presione soltar 2024 Survey of Income and Program Participation
The U.S. Census Bureau today released data from the 2024 Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP) detailing the income and assistance program participation of individuals and households in the United States. The SIPP is a longitudinal survey, one that collects data from the same individuals over an extended period of time and measures changes in characteristics like economic well-being, family dynamics, education, assets, health insurance, child care, and food security.
Mitchell A. Friedmann | July 22, 2025
American Cancer Society | Research Article The impact of the 1997 Office of Management and Budget standards for collecting multiracial data on the assessment of race‐specific cancer rates of incidence and mortality in the United States
The differential implementation of the 1997 Office of Management and Budget (OMB) standards of collecting multiracial data affects the accuracy and comparability of race-specific cancer rates of incidence and mortality. The proportions of multiracial individuals in the incidence and death data were lower than those in the population data, with the degree varying by age, race, and geography. However, race definitions had minimal impact on rates for Whites, Blacks, and Asians.
Mandi Yu PhD, Natalie Joe PhD, Recinda L. Sherman PhD, Christopher J. Johnson MA, Serban Negoita MD, DrPH, Steve Scoppa BA, James (Todd) Gibson BA, Kathleen A. Cronin PhD, MPH | July 21, 2025
July 21, 2025 Census Coalition Clips
Nacional
Government Executive | News Census has long struggled with staffing shortages. Employees say Trump is making it worse
While the Census Bureau is best known for conducting the decennial count of every resident in the U.S., the agency continues to operate in years that don’t end in “0,” performing surveys that measure things like national unemployment and crime rates. Census employees, however, say their ability to collect the necessary data is being hamstrung by President Donald Trump’s government staffing cuts that are exacerbating longstanding workforce shortages at the agency and creating extra work that is taking a toll on personnel.
Sean Michael Newhouse | July 18, 2025
NPR | Noticias Democratic senators raise concerns about a new Trump citizenship data system
Three Democratic U.S. senators are raising concerns about a searchable citizenship data system developed under the Trump administration, warning that its use could lead to the disenfranchisement of eligible voters. NPR was the first news outlet to report in detail about the tool, which U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) says can be used to verify the citizenship of many people listed on state voter rolls if a Social Security number, name and date of birth are provided.
Jude Joffe-Block | July 17, 2025
New York Times | Noticias Renters Are Taking Over the Suburbs
Using U.S. Census Bureau data from the 20 largest U.S. metros and surrounding suburbs with a population of more than 10,000, researchers at Point2Homes found that the number of renter households in these areas grew to roughly six million by 2023, up by 231,000 from 2018. Suburbs are traditionally a refuge for people who can’t afford to own a home in a big city. But according to a new study, renters are beginning to dominate even the suburbs, leading developers to turn their attention away from urban centers.
Shayla Colon | July 17, 2025
Milwaukee Independent | Noticias U.S. Supreme Court is still processing lawsuits over the 2020 census halfway to the next one
The United States is halfway to the next once-a-decade census, but the Supreme Court is still dealing with lawsuits that grew out of the last one. The justices took up a challenge in March to Louisiana’s congressional map, which was drawn so that, for the first time, two of its six districts have majority Black populations that elected Black Democrats to Congress. Black Louisianans make up about one-third of the state’s population. Just two years ago, the court ruled 5-4 that Alabama discriminated against Black voters by adopting a congressional map with just one majority Black district, in violation of the landmark federal Voting Rights Act.
Milwaukee Independent | July 17, 2025
Milwaukee Independent | Noticias Census data reports decline in grandparent-provided childcare as reflection of pandemic and opioid trends
Fewer grandparents were living with and taking care of grandchildren, there was a decline in young children going to preschool and more people stayed put in their homes in the first part of the 2020s compared with the last part of the 2010s, according to U.S. Census Bureau data released in December, reflecting some of the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. The latest figures from the most comprehensive survey of American life compares the years of 2014-2018 and 2019-2023, timeframes before the COVID-19 pandemic and during the virus’ spread. The American Community Survey data show how lives were changed and family relationships altered by the pandemic and other occurrences like the opioid crisis.
Milwaukee Independent | July 17, 2025
NPR | Noticias Republicans renew a bid to remove noncitizens from the census tally behind voting maps
Republicans in Congress are reviving a controversial push to alter a key set of census numbers that are used to determine how presidents and members of the U.S. House of Representatives are elected. Ratified after the Civil War, the 14th Amendment says the “whole number of persons in each state” must be included in what are called apportionment counts, the population numbers based on census results that determine each state’s share of House seats and Electoral College votes for a decade. But GOP lawmakers have now released three bills this year that would use the 2030 census to tally residents without U.S. citizenship, and then subtract some or all of them from the apportionment counts. Republicans on the House Appropriations Committee unveiled the latest bill Monday.
Hansi Lo Wang | July 15, 2025
Estados
Texas
Noticias CBS | Noticias Trump wants Texas to redraw its congressional map to pick up more GOP seats. Here’s what to know
The Texas Legislature is set to convene Monday for a special session where it will attempt to redraw the state’s congressional map to boost President Trump and his allies’ efforts to maintain the GOP’s grip on the U.S. House in next year’s midterm elections. The state’s decision to recraft the boundaries of House districts comes midway through the decade and several years after its GOP-controlled Legislature adopted a redistricting plan in the wake of the 2020 Census.
Melissa Quinn, Caroline Linton | July 18, 2025
Publicaciones de blog e informes
Oficina del Censo de EE.UU. | Presione soltar Census Bureau Releases New Credit Access and Opportunity Data
The U.S. Census Bureau and Opportunity Insights (a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization based at Harvard University) today released new data including credit scores, delinquency rates, credit card balances, and mortgage and student loan balances by county, race and class (parental income) for children born between 1978 and 1985. Users can explore the data on the interactive Opportunity Atlas Module 1: Neighborhood Mobility Outcomes tool.
Mitchell A. Friedmann | July 17, 2025
Oficina del Censo de EE.UU. | Presione soltar Publicación de datos de la encuesta sobre tendencias y perspectivas empresariales
La Oficina del Censo de EE. UU. publicó hoy nuevos datos de la Encuesta de Tendencias y Perspectivas Empresariales (BTOS), una encuesta que mide las condiciones y proyecciones empresariales de forma continua. La BTOS incluye datos de empresas con múltiples unidades o ubicaciones. La BTOS seguirá recopilando datos complementarios a los elementos clave de otras encuestas económicas, como ingresos, empleados, horas e inventarios.
Julie Iriondo | July 17, 2025
Oficina del Censo de EE.UU. | Presione soltar La Oficina del Censo publica el calendario de estadísticas sobre ingresos, pobreza y seguro médico y las estimaciones de la Encuesta sobre la comunidad estadounidense
The U.S. Census Bureau is set to release the 2024 Income, Poverty and Health Insurance statistics from the Current Population Survey (CPS) Annual Social and Economic Supplement (ASEC) and the American Community Survey (ACS) in September.
Public Information Office | July 15, 2025
July 14, 2025 Census Coalition Clips
Nacional
Research Live | News Calls to increase funding for US census
The Census Project, a group of national, state and local organisations, wrote to Congressional appropriations leadership to submit a recommendation that the Census Bureau should receive $2bn in funding in the 2026 fiscal year. The White House has proposed that the agency receives $1.675bn, an increase on the level allocated for this year. Census stakeholders support no less than this amount in FY 2026, while recommending $2bn to support enhanced investments in key Census Bureau operations.
Research Live | July 14, 2025
FedScoop | News White House names new official to oversee federal statistical system
The White House Office of Management and Budget has a new official leading and coordinating the U.S. government’s federal statistical system. OMB Director Russell Vought on Thursday appointed Mark Calabria as chief statistician, adding to his existing government roles, a senior administration official confirmed to FedScoop on Friday. Calabria is currently a senior economist already working in OMB and at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Calabria replaces Karin Orvis, who had served in the role since 2022. The senior official said Orvis is still serving as the branch chief of the statistical policy arm within OMB’s Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs.
Madison Alder | July 11, 2025
El Washington Post | Noticias First thing we do, let’s fire all the statisticians
There’s more than one way to cook the books. You can doctor or delete data after it’s been collected. Alternatively, you can ensure the numbers are never collected in the first place. Lately, the Trump administration has been into leaning into that second scheme, by purging and defunding statistics agencies. For months, President Donald Trump has waged war on objective, reliable federal statistics. By “statistics,” I mean the bits of information, large and small, that Americans might take for granted but need to make sense of the world. These figures help families decide where to live, physicians how to treat their patients, and businesses what to sell or whether to hire. But increasingly, the administration has delayed, redacted or canceled statistical releases when results proved inconvenient.
Catherine Rampell | July 10, 2025
NPR | Noticias Sen. Rick Scott wants Census Bureau to ask about U.S. citizenship in decennial count
U.S. Sen. Rick Scott is urging his colleagues to require the U.S. Census Bureau to include a question about U.S. citizenship in counting the nation’s population. The Florida Republican senator and Sen. Bill Hagerty, R-Tennessee, on Monday introduced the Equal Representation Act to exclude non-U.S. citizens from the decennial count. Several other senators are co-sponsoring the legislation. “By restoring the census to its pre-2000 standard and including a citizenship question, this bill ensures that states like California don’t gain an unfair advantage over states like Florida, and that every citizen’s vote carries equal weight,” Scott said.
Sergio Bustos | July 8, 2025
Estados
Alaska
KFQD | News Alaskan Native Villages: Opportunity for Updated Population Data through Special Census Program
The U.S. Census Bureau is inviting comments on the extension of the Special Census Program, which allows governmental units to request updated population data between decennial censuses. Alaskan Native villages are eligible to request a Special Census, which can provide current data on population, housing units, and group quarters. Special Censuses are often requested when there is significant population change due to factors like annexation, growth, or new housing developments.
KFQD | July 11, 2025
Nueva York
Noticias del espectro | Noticias State Sen. Jeremy Cooney urges passage of census legislation over citizenship question
Last month, Capital Tonight spoke with census expert Jeff Wice who said that current projections indicate that New York state may lose two more congressional seats in the next census. But that’s only part of the story. The other, more urgent issue is legislation that’s moving through Congress that would add a citizenship question on the census form, as well as change how congressional representation is determined, suggesting it should be based solely on U.S. citizens rather than the total population. While that may sound reasonable, keep in mind that non-citizens, those here legally and not, use roads, hospitals and schools — infrastructure that requires federal funding based on the census count. If the congressional legislation passes, New York is projected to lose four congressional seats.
Susan Arbetter | July 8, 2025
Publicaciones de blog e informes
Oficina del Censo de EE.UU. | Presione soltar Census Bureau Releases New Estimates From the National Experimental Well-Being Statistics Project
The U.S. Census Bureau today released new estimates from its National Experimental Well-Being Statistics (NEWS) project. NEWS is a research-driven project with the goal to improve how the Census Bureau measures income and poverty. NEWS does this by exploring new methods for creating these economic “well-being” indicators by looking back at data collections from previous years, using a wider span of data sources, and applying new advanced analysis techniques.
Veronica Vaquer | July 14, 2025
The Census Project | Blog Post Senate Committee Leaves Census Funding Bill in Limbo While House Subcommittee Prepares to Meet
The full U.S. Senate Appropriations Committee markup on July 10, 2025 of the Fiscal Year 2026 Commerce Justice Science (CJS) Appropriations legislation, which funds the Census Bureau, was derailed (at least temporarily) by an unrelated dispute over the siting of the FBI’s headquarters. Meanwhile, the House CJS Appropriations Subcommittee announced it would meet to markup its own version of the legislation on July 15 at noon.
The Census Project | July 11, 2025
Oficina del Censo de EE.UU. | Blog World Population Day: July 11, 2025
World Population Day has been observed on July 11 every year since 1990. The World Population Clock provides an estimate of the global population at a given moment as well as an indication of how fast it is growing. The U.S. Census Bureau estimates the number of people in the world population by combining past population growth statistics with data for individual countries and areas from the International Database (IDB). The world population reached 8 billion in 2023.
Census Bureau | July 10, 2025
Oficina del Censo de EE.UU. | Presione soltar Business Formation Statistics Monthly Data Release — June 2025
The U.S. Census Bureau today released new Business Formation Statistics (BFS) for June 2025. The BFS provide timely and high frequency information on new business applications and formations in the United States. The BFS are a standard data product of the Census Bureau, developed in research collaboration with economists affiliated with the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, the University of Maryland, and the University of Notre Dame.
Julie Iriondo | July 10, 2025
Oficina del Censo de EE.UU. | Presione soltar Field of Bachelor’s Degree Report Now Available
The U.S. Census Bureau today released a new report that shows the demographic, social and geographic characteristics of bachelor’s degree holders by field of study. According to the report, Field of Bachelor’s Degree in the United States: 2022, bachelor’s degrees in business management and administration (4.8 million), psychology (3.7 million), general business (3.7 million), nursing (3.6 million), and general education (3.1 million) were the most common in 2022 among those age 25 and older.
Julie Iriondo | July 9, 2025
July 7, 2025 Census Coalition Clips
Nacional
NPR | Noticias As women have far fewer babies, the U.S. and the world face unprecedented challenges
Many researchers believe this accelerating global shift is being driven in large part by a positive reality. Young couples, and women in particular, have far more freedom and economic independence. They’re weighing their options and appear to be making very different choices about the role of children in their lives. This change in decision-making and behavior appears to be accelerating. New research from the United Nations found that the number of children born to the average woman worldwide has reached the lowest point ever recorded. In every country and every culture, women are having fewer than half as many children as they did in the 1960s.
Brian Mann, Sarah McCammon | July 7, 2025
Los New York Times | Noticias We Want to Hear From You: Are You Frustrated by Census and Racial Categories?
Americans are routinely asked to check off boxes about their race and ethnicity, but many say they do not see themselves reflected in the options. The issue has come up with categories that span various races, like Hispanic, or encompass a huge range of geographies and ethnicities, like Middle East and North African, but have not had a specific option. Similarly, people with complex immigration histories may feel stumped, as highlighted in a recent article about a college application by the New York mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani, in which he marked himself as Asian and African American.
The New York Times | July 4, 2025
The Washington Blade | News House Democrats oppose Bessent’s removal of SOGI from discrimination complaint forms
A letter issued last week by a group of House Democrats objects to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent’s removal of sexual orientation and gender identity as bases for sex discrimination complaints in several Equal Employment Opportunity forms. The letter explains the “critical role” played by the EEO given the strictures and limits on how federal employees can find recourse for unlawful workplace discrimination — namely, without the ability to file complaints directly with the Employment Opportunity Commission or otherwise engage with the agency unless the complainant “appeal[s] an agency’s decision following the agency’s investigation or request[s] a hearing before an administrative judge.”
Christopher Kane | July 1, 2025
El Federalista | Noticias Trump Removing Noncitizens From Census Would Affect Elections
If the second Trump administration fails to win court approval of its expected effort to exclude illegal migrants from the census, this time around, it will have backup. President Trump tried to end the practice during his first term, but President Biden overturned his predecessor’s policy before it was implemented. Now, buoyed by red state attorneys general and Republican legislators, the second Trump administration is determined “to clean up the census and make sure that illegal aliens are not counted,” White House Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy Stephen Miller said last month.
Ben Weingarten | June 30, 2025
Mediaite | News MTG Says Trump Supports Her Bill to Immediately Draw New Congressional Districts Excluding Non-Citizens
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) posted on X on Monday that President Donald Trump supports her bill requiring that the U.S. government conduct a new census “immediately” to remove non-citizens from the count for Congressional districts. “I just got off the phone with President Trump!!” wrote Greene on X, adding, “I told him about my new bill I am introducing that will save America’s elections from ever being stolen again! My bill will require the U.S. Census Bureau to conduct a new census immediately upon enactment of the bill. In conducting the new census of the U.S. population, it shall require questions determining the citizenship of each individual, and count US citizens only.”
Alex Griffing | June 30, 2025
Estados
Maryland
Maryland Matters | News Maryland aging slightly faster than U.S. as a whole, new Census numbers show
America is aging, but Maryland is aging faster. Those are the findings of new Census numbers that show the number of Marylanders age 65 and older grew by 3.35% from 2023 to 2024, while the number of those under age 18 fell by 0.06%. Nationally, the increase of older adults was 3.1% while those under 18 shrank by 0.10%. The state’s population overall rose by more than 45,000 last year, the most since 2015. While the one-year numbers are relatively small, analysts say they continue recent trends: The country’s median age and the population’s share of older adults are both continuously increasing.
Sam Gauntt | July 5, 2025
Nueva York
Los New York Times | Noticias Mamdani Identified as Asian and African American on College Application
Zohran Mamdani, the Democrat running for mayor of New York City, was born in Uganda. He doesn’t consider himself Black but said the application didn’t allow for the complexity of his background. In an interview on Thursday, Mr. Mamdani, 33, said he did not consider himself either Black or African American, but rather “an American who was born in Africa.” He said his answers on the college application were an attempt to represent his complex background given the limited choices before him, not to gain an upper hand in the admissions process.
Benjamin Ryan, Nicholas Fandos, and Dana Rubinstein | July 3, 2025
Washington
Los tiempos de Seattle | Noticias Seattle’s population passes the 800,000 mark, state data shows
Data released Friday from the Washington Office of Financial Management shows the city’s population hit 816,600 on April 1, a net gain of about 18,900 people from one year earlier. That’s a strong almost 2.4% growth rate. It also represents the first time Seattle’s population has passed the 800,000 mark. If current trends continue, Seattle’s population would overtake San Francisco’s within the next two years. According to California state data, San Francisco had 842,027 residents on January 1, down about 3,000 from the year before.
Gene Balk | July 7, 2025
Publicaciones de blog e informes
Oficina del Censo de EE.UU. | Presione soltar Business Trends and Outlook Survey Data Release — July 3, 2025
The U.S. Census Bureau today released new data products from the Business Trends and Outlook Survey (BTOS), a survey that measures business conditions and projections on an ongoing basis. The BTOS includes data for multiunit/multilocation businesses. BTOS will continue to collect data complementary to key items found on other economic surveys, such as revenues, employees, hours, and inventories. BTOS data are representative of all employer businesses in the U.S. economy, excluding farms. BTOS provides insight into the state of the economy by providing continuous, timely data for key economic measures every two weeks. By providing continuous data with geographic and subsector detail, BTOS captures the impact of events like natural disasters and economic crises and assists in monitoring recovery efforts.
Julie Iriondo | July 3, 2025
American Thinker | Opinion The Census Was Never Intended Just To Be A Body Count, But It Can Be Fixed
Are aliens “persons” for the purpose of the Census? The left is adamant that they are. The right says they’re not. A 2025 special census, excluding alien interlopers, could restore representation to citizens who actually pledge allegiance. This isn’t just a thought experiment—it’s a battle for America’s soul.
Ted Noel | July 7, 2025