• Amy Laskowski

    Senior Writer Twitter Profile

    Photo of Amy Laskowski. A white woman with long brown hair pulled into a half up, half down style and wearing a burgundy top, smiles and poses in front of a dark grey backdrop.

    Amy Laskowski is a senior writer at Boston University. She is always hunting for interesting, quirky stories around BU and helps manage and edit the work of BU Today’s interns. She did her undergrad at Syracuse University and earned a master’s in journalism at the College of Communication in 2015. Profile

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There are 4 comments on The Census Wants You!

  1. However, if someone comes from a city or neighborhood that is in greater need of federal money than Boston (where a great portion of the population is wealthy students), would they not want to make sure that more money goes to wherever they consider their true home to be?

    I understand the way that they’re selling the importance of filling out the census, but there seems to be a bit of deception involved. Yes, we’re told it’s important, but does a city like Boston get a larger share of the money than it should? I’ll be in Boston for two years as a student, then eight years elsewhere–in a city that needs more federal assistance. I don’t want my name to be counted here if it lessens the funds in my city, where they are needed more.

  2. The census counts people in a certain location for a specific date. People are counted in their “usual residence,” which is roughly defined as the place where people spend the majority of their time to eat and sleep. As a student who goes to my home out of state for the summer, I still spend over 70% of the year in my dorm at BU–like many other BU students–which means that my usual residence right now is currently in Boston. The purpose of the census is not to give more funds to one community over another, but instead, it’s like the ad says: the census is about taking a picture of a community at a certain point in time.

  3. The Census Bureau defines a person’s “usual residence” as the place where a person spends the majority of their time, and where that person eats and sleeps. It is virtually impossible to count every person in the US who may not have a standard place of residence including groups of people who are homeless, in college or in the military. As a result, the census has developed the preceding definition to gain the most accurate picture of the amount of people living in a certain place at a certain time to allow for the most fair method of funds distribution. The purpose of the census is not to give more funds to one community over another another, but instead, it’s like the ad says: the census is about taking a picture of a community at a certain point in time.

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