Proposed Information Collection; Comment Request; 2016 Census Test, 46239-46242 [2015-19005]
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 149 / Tuesday, August 4, 2015 / Notices
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
and responses will be due by February
12, 2018. Written comments must be
submitted on or before October 5, 2015
to ensure consideration of your
comments on the 2017 Economic
Census content.
ADDRESSES: Direct all written comments
regarding the 2017 Economic Census to
Kevin Deardorff, Chief, Economy Wide
Statistics Division, U.S. Census Bureau,
Room 8K154, Washington, DC 20233; or
Email [ec.frn17@census.gov].
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Economy-Wide Statistics Division, U.S.
Census Bureau, 4600 Silver Hill Road,
Room 6K141, Washington, DC 20233–
6700, by phone (800) 242–2184, or by
email ec.frn17@census.gov>.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. Background
Section 131 of Title 13 U.S.C. directs
the Secretary [of Commerce] to ‘‘. . .
take, compile, and publish censuses of
manufactures, of mineral industries, and
of other businesses, including the
distributive trades, service
establishments, and transportation
(exclusive of means of transportation for
which statistics are required by law to
be filed with, and are compiled and
published by, a designated regulatory
body), in the year 1964, then in the year
1968, and every fifth year thereafter, and
each such census shall relate to the year
immediately preceding the taking
thereof.’’
This notice announces that the
Census Bureau is preparing to conduct
the 2017 Economic Census. The
Economic Census is the U.S.
Government’s official 5-year measure of
American Business and the economy,
and has been taken periodically since
1810. The Economic Census is the most
comprehensive source of information
about American businesses from the
national to the local level. These
Economic Census data products provide
uniquely detailed basic measures that
are summarized by North American
Industry Classification System (NAICS)
industry for the U.S., states,
metropolitan areas, counties, economic
places, and ZIP Code areas. Data include
details on the product composition of
industry sales, receipts, revenue, or
shipments; and on a great variety of
industry-specific subjects. Additionally,
the Economic Census produces statistics
about businesses in Puerto Rico,
American Samoa, the Commonwealth of
the Northern Mariana Islands, Guam,
and the U.S. Virgin Islands, and it
provides data on selected specialinterest topics, including the
characteristics of business owners,
domestic freight shipments, and
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business expenses. Published data cover
close to 1,000 industries, 8,000 goods
and services, every state, the District of
Columbia, over 3,000 counties and
15,000 cities and towns.
The Economic Census is a primary
source of facts about the structure and
functioning of the U.S. economy.
Economic Census statistics are more
complete, specific, and reliable than any
other single set of economic
information. It provides comprehensive,
detailed, high quality, and authoritative
statistics that meet the needs of
government, businesses, policymakers,
academic researchers, and the American
public. The program’s data products
inform policies and programs that
promote business vitality, job creation,
and sustainable growth. Moreover, they
provide the official measures of output
for industries and geographic areas and
serve much of the foundation for the
National Income and Product Accounts,
Gross Domestic Product estimates, and
other composite measures of the
Nation’s economic performance. These
data supply weights and benchmarks for
indexes of industrial production,
productivity, and prices; and provide
benchmarks for other Federal statistical
series. Some of these statistical series
include current business surveys done
by the Census Bureau, which are used
by trade associations, business
organizations, economic development
agencies, and individual businesses to
assess and improve business
performance.
to your interests and provide us with
your comments for us to consider as we
prepare content for the 2017
questionnaires. In particular, Item 26
‘‘Special Inquiries’’ may be of the most
interest to you. The Special Inquiries
item is dedicated to variable questions
of particular interest to the industries to
which the questionnaire is directed.
While general questions are asked of all
establishments, these variable questions
allow special data to be collected, which
measure important changes in our
economy and support the needs of
individual industries. We are
particularly interested in comments on
the usefulness of existing inquiries for
continued inclusion and in suggestions
for new measures that would be
appropriate to include in the Economic
Census.
Notwithstanding any other provision
of law, no person is required to respond
to, nor shall a person be subject to a
penalty for failure to comply with a
collection of information subject to the
requirements of the Paperwork
Reduction Act (PRA) unless that
collection of information displays a
current valid Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) control number. The
Census Bureau, through the proper
established procedures, will be
obtaining an OMB control number
under the PRA as we get closer to
launching the program in 2017.
I have, therefore, directed that the
2017 Economic Census be conducted for
the purpose of collecting these data.
B. Electronic Collection
The 2017 Economic Census will be
the first to be conducted completely by
electronic collection (100 percent
Internet Collection). The electronic
instrument, Centurion, provides
improved quality with automatic data
checks and is context-sensitive to assist
the data provider in identifying
potential reporting problems before
submission, thus reducing the need for
follow-up. Centurion is Internet-based,
eliminating the need for downloading
software and increasing the integrity
and confidentiality of the data. The
Census Bureau will furnish usernames
and passwords for the electronic
instrument to the organizations
included in the survey, and an image of
the electronic instrument will be
available on the 2017 Economic Census
Web site once the census has launched.
Dated: July 30, 2015.
John H. Thompson,
Director, Bureau of the Census.
[FR Doc. 2015–19147 Filed 8–3–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–07–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Census Bureau
Proposed Information Collection;
Comment Request; 2016 Census Test
U.S. Census Bureau,
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
The Department of
Commerce, as part of its continuing
effort to reduce paperwork and
respondent burden, invites the general
public and other Federal agencies to
take this opportunity to comment on
C. Economic Census Content
proposed and/or continuing information
collections, as required by the
The Census Bureau posted copies of
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
the 2012 Economic Census forms on its
Web site at: https://bhs.econ.census.gov/ DATES: To ensure consideration, written
ec12/php/census-form.php. Please take
comments must be submitted on or
a moment to review the forms relevant
before October 5, 2015.
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SUMMARY:
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 149 / Tuesday, August 4, 2015 / Notices
Direct all written comments
to Jennifer Jessup, Departmental
Paperwork Clearance Officer,
Department of Commerce, Room 6616,
14th and Constitution Avenue NW,
Washington, DC 20230 (or via the
Internet at jjessup@doc.gov).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Requests for additional information or
copies of the information collection
instrument(s) and instructions should
be directed to Robin Pennington, Census
Bureau, HQ–4K065, Washington, DC
20233; (301) 763–8132 (or via email at
robin.a.pennington@census.gov).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
ADDRESSES:
I. Abstract
During the years preceding the 2020
Census, the Census Bureau will pursue
its commitment to reduce the costs of
conducting a decennial census, while
maintaining our commitment to quality.
A primary decennial census cost driver
is collection of data from members of
the public from which the Census
Bureau received no reply via initially
offered response options. Improving our
methods for increasing the number of
people who take advantage of selfresponse options (‘‘Optimizing SelfResponse’’) and further refining the
questionnaire content will help increase
the efficiency and effectiveness of
census operations and substantially
reduce costs. Additionally, making our
methods for enumerating households
that do not initially respond
(‘‘Nonresponse Followup’’) more
efficient can contribute to a less costly
census while maintaining high-quality
results.
The Census Bureau will conduct a
2016 Census Test, with components
designed to test new approaches or
validate existing approaches and
systems integration related to (1)
Optimizing Self-Response, including
contact strategies, language support, and
questionnaire content; and (2)
Nonresponse Followup, including
administrative records usage, and
technological and operational
improvements.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Optimizing Self-Response
The 2016 Census Test is designed to
evaluate several strategies to optimize
the rate at which the public selfresponds to the census. A higher rate of
self-response will mean fewer cases for
the Nonresponse Followup operation,
saving taxpayer money. Significant
areas of continued testing are:
• Evaluation and refinement of our
‘‘Internet push’’ strategy, where we do
not initially send paper questionnaires
to households, but rather invite them to
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complete the questionnaire online. We
will evaluate the number of online
invitations necessary before sending a
full paper questionnaire to an address.
• Updated and modernized
household contact strategies to
encourage self response, including text/
short message service (SMS)
communication and postcard reminders.
• Refinement of our non-English
support for respondents with limited
English proficiency, the inclusion of
non-English language letters and/or
brochures in mailings, and web
response addresses (Uniform Resource
Locators, or URLs) in various languages
on the incoming envelope.
• Further evaluation of questionnaire
content:
Æ We will include testing of a
combined race and Hispanic origin
question that is similar to one the
Census Bureau is using in the 2015
National Content Test. Based on results
from the 2010 Race and Hispanic Origin
Alternative Questionnaire Experiment
(Compton, et. al. 2012), the 2016 Census
Test provides an opportunity to further
test a combined race and Hispanic
origin question.
Æ On the Internet instrument only, we
will test a terminology change in the
race and ethnicity question specific to
the ‘‘Black and African American’’
category, by comparing the use of
‘‘American’’ to the abbreviated ‘‘Am.’’
This addresses a problem with this
abbreviation related to software
providing Section 508 compliance 1. We
are testing this on the Internet initially
because the path for testing and screens
on the Internet are more easily deployed
than paper versions. We will continue
and expand testing this terminology
change with paper questionnaires (selfresponse) in future testing.
Æ For the relationship question, the
2016 Census Test will include testing
new response categories for opposite sex
and same sex husband/wife/spouse and
unmarried partner. In addition, the
Internet data collection instrument will
also provide two versions of the
relationship question, with one version
eliminating the response categories
associated with unrelated household
members (‘‘roomer or boarder’’ and
‘‘housemate or roommate’’).
Æ The Internet data collection
instrument will also include various
ways to collect and confirm the number
of persons residing at an address.
Respondents will see one of three
screens about the existence of people on
the roster: one that displays the
1 Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act (29 U.S.C.
‘794 d) as amended by the Workforce Investment
Act of 1998 (Pub. L. 205–220)
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residence rule and asks for the number
of people in the household, one that
asks for the number of people who live
in the household but puts the residence
rule in the help text, and one that asks
if any other people live at the household
with the residence rule in the help text.
After the names of the roster members
are collected, the respondent will then
see one of two series of undercount
questions: one series asks for additional
people on two separate screens, and
another series asks for additional people
on only one screen. After the
demographic items are collected, the
respondent will then see overcount
questions in one of three forms,
depending on test panel. Some
respondents will see seven topic-based
questions that ask if anyone in the
household stayed at a particular type of
place. Some respondents who live in
small households (that is, households
with three or fewer people) will see one
person-based question that asks if a
specific person stayed in any of a
number of places. Other respondents
will see two household-level questions
that first ask if anyone in the household
stayed in another housing unit or if
anyone in the household stayed in a
group quarters. The quality of the final
household roster created from these
experimentally applied questions will
be evaluated by a coverage reinterview
conducted by telephone that will
contain extensive probes about missed
roster members or other places that
people sometimes stay.
Nonresponse Followup (NRFU)
The 2016 Census Test will be
instrumental to the Census Bureau in
testing new implementation and
management processes, the use of
automated data collection tools, and
approaches such as using administrative
records and third party data to reduce
the NRFU workload. This test allows us
to refine our use of administrative
records, technologies to support field
data collection and management, and
operational procedures.
• Administrative Records
• Continued evaluation of our plan to
use administrative records and other
third party data (such as from the
Internal Revenue Service, Center for
Medicare and Medicaid Services,
United States Postal Service, etc.) to
identify vacant housing units that do
not require a field visit during the
nonresponse follow-up operation.
Historically, the costs to verify and
follow up with these types of units have
been significant
• Continued evaluation of our plan to
use the ‘‘occupancy’’ status of
administrative records sources to
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enumerate housing units after a certain
number of NRFU contact attempts. This
includes quality evaluations of the
sources of the administrative records,
and reviews of the procedures by which
those administrative records are
produced (working with the source
agencies, etc.). This will help us to
decide in what scenarios the use of
administrative records is most
appropriate, the ideal number of
personal visits to attempt before
enumerating with these records, and
several other research questions.
• Supplemental mailings to housing
units that have been removed from the
NRFU operation, giving respondents an
additional chance to respond to the
2016 Census Test before final
disposition using administrative record
source data.
• Technological Improvements:
• Evaluation of our refined
operational control system and case
assignment processes, including
identifying efficiencies for field data
collection, as well as automated
assignments that are based on
enumerator availability and other
criteria.
• Continued testing of a software to
record housing unit status, interview,
and enumerations at nonresponding
housing units for operational readiness,
as well as the ability to deploy the
software on mobile devices that are
Census owned, personally owned, or
provided as a service.
• Continued evaluation of automated
training for field employees.
• The inclusion of additional
language translations to our
enumeration software. Previous versions
of this software provided translations in
Spanish only.
• Operational Procedures:
• Comparison of the effectiveness of
data collection modes (in-field
enumeration vs. centralized telephone
contact) to conduct telephone follow up
activities.
• Use of innovative survey
methodologies for NRFU cases,
including the continued testing of
different stopping rules for enumerators
(maximum visits before stopping work,
etc.); further evaluation of in-person vs.
phone contacts, and continued research
on when and how to attempt to obtain
proxy responses for a housing unit.
• Implementation of a refined field
management structure, designed to
lessen the number of supervisors
required in the field for conducting the
NRFU operation.
• Testing our re-interview operation,
including the rules by which cases are
selected for re-interview, the use of a
handheld device to input re-interview
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data, and a re-designed approach to
using call center staff to make the first
attempt at re-interviewing each case,
where appropriate. We will also test the
use of paradata collected from our
automated data collection instrument,
such as the recorded Global Positioning
System (GPS) location of field
interviews and the length of time for
interviews to be conducted, to help
detect and deter falsification by
enumerators.
II. Method of Collection
Test Sites
The Census Bureau will conduct the
2016 Census Test concurrently in
portions of Harris County, TX and Los
Angeles County, CA. These locations
offer particular characteristics that
support the Census Bureau’s research
goals. Conducting the 2016 Census Test
in urban areas will allow us to test our
assignment routing strategies in densely
populated areas and understand
challenges to field enumeration. Both
sites have populations that are
linguistically diverse and provide an
appropriate context to test our language
and translation services. Lastly, both
areas contain ‘‘hard to count’’
populations and areas with high
vacancy rates that will allow us to test
our follow-up activities with these
populations in this environment.
Self-Response
The housing units in the selected
areas included in the 2016 Census Test
will be contacted by mail and invited to
complete their questionnaire via the
Internet. Internet self response contact
methods include a letter, postcard, and
text (either as an invitation or as
reminders), a multi-lingual brochure
(either with a letter or in the envelope
with URL). We will also test optimal
strategies for delivering mail materials,
including paper questionnaires, to
households who do not or cannot
respond online.
We will continue to test our Non-ID
processing methodology as another
strategy for optimizing self-response.
Non-ID Processing refers to address
matching and geocoding for Census
responses that lack a preassigned
Census identification code. In the 2016
Census Test, we will continue to
develop our capability to conduct realtime Non-ID processing. This test will
allow us to interactively prompt a
respondent (while they are still online
filling out the form) for additional
address and location information if the
respondent’s address cannot be matched
to a Census ID or geocoded. A Non-ID
respondent whose address cannot be
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46241
matched to our address database will be
prompted during his or her Internet selfresponse session to confirm the address
information they provided while filling
out the form, or to indicate the location
of their address on an on-screen map.
This test will allow us to better
understand requirements related to
scalability of planned systems and
determine metrics for ongoing
monitoring and evaluation. If the
address match is not resolved during
automated processing Census staff will
attempt to manually match or geocode
addresses. We estimate that about one
percent of the overall Non-ID
respondents will be contacted as part of
the manual matching process.
Additionally, we plan to test a
mechanism for validating all Non-ID
respondents through the use of
administrative records. To further
explore our methodology for validating
Non-ID responses, a sample of Non-ID
responses will be selected for re-contact.
The re-contact is intended to validate
and re-collect information from a
respondent to confirm the existence of
the address and the persons enumerated
at that address. The re-contact may
occur through centralized phone
contacts or in-field enumeration.
Nonresponse Followup (NRFU)
If a household does not ultimately
respond to the self-response portion of
the test by a specified date, it is
included in the universe for the NRFU
portion of the test, during which
enumerators will attempt to follow up
with nonresponding households to
collect data. The Census Bureau will
test centralized phone contacts to
nonresponding cases prior to sending
cases to an enumerator in the field. In
advance of the full deployment of
enumerators following up with
nonresponding households, a small
number of the nonresponding cases may
be subject to early followup to allow for
live testing of systems, data collection
applications, and field procedures.
The Census Bureau will continue to
test our use of administrative records for
the removal of vacant housing units
from the NRFU universe and to
determine rules for when we can stop
making visit attempts to households,
and refer to administrative record data
instead. For each of these cases, we will
test a supplemental mailout to any
household that is removed from the
NRFU workload in this way as a final
attempt to generate a self-response.
The Census Bureau will conduct
NRFU with a combination of Censusowned, enumerator-owned, and mobile
devices provided as a service using the
Census developed enumeration
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 149 / Tuesday, August 4, 2015 / Notices
software. The use of employee-owned
equipment/services is commonly
referred to as ‘‘Bring Your Own Device,’’
or BYOD. It is important to note, that for
Census-owned devices, BYOD devices,
or devices provided as a service that the
data collection application collects and
securely transmits respondents’ data.
The use of mobile devices that are
Census-owned, enumerator-owned, or
provided as a service will enable the
Census Bureau to assess options for a
secure and cost-effective approach to
the NRFU data collection.
Nonresponse Followup Quality Control
Reinterview (NRFU–RI)
A sample of cases that have been
enumerated via Nonresponse Followup
will be selected for reinterview. This
operation is intended to help us
pinpoint possible cases of enumerator
falsification. Like the NRFU operation
before it, NRFU–RI will use the Census
Bureau’s enumeration software on
mobile devices (Census-owned, BYOD,
and devices provided as a service). We
will also test centralized phone contacts
of reinterview cases before sending
them to an enumerator in the field,
providing potential cost savings.
Additional Followup Operations
Understanding the accuracy of
administrative records usage to identify
vacant addresses and for the household
composition of occupied housing units
will inform decisions associated with
the design of the 2020 Census. The
Census Bureau may conduct additional
followup with cases to obtain the most
accurate Census Day status of each
housing unit. The intent is to revisit
addresses where we find discrepancies
between the NRFU results and
administrative records information for
the address. This mostly will include
those addresses where information
collected during NRFU conflicts with
information we have from
administrative records for that address.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Language Services
Telephone questionnaire assistance
will be available in languages other than
English.
Focus Groups
To evaluate the use of new contact
strategies, enumeration methods, and
efforts to reduce burden, the Census
Bureau will conduct focus groups,
comprised of various categories of
respondents and non-respondents.
These focus groups are intended to
gather information about respondent
perspectives. Participants will be asked
about their experiences with the 2016
Census Test, including but not limited
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to: Their reactions and thoughts about
being contacted by the Census Bureau
by alternative methods, the perceived
legitimacy of these contacts; opinions
about Bring Your Own Device; and their
opinions on the use of administrative
records by the Census Bureau.
Participants will also be asked about
their general concerns with government
collection, cyber security, and
protection of confidential data. At the
end of the focus groups, we may be
asking participants for whom we have
acquired additional data from a
commercial third party to verify
whether this information is accurate.
III. Data
OMB Control Number: 0607–XXXX.
Form Number(s): Paper and electronic
questionnaires; numbers to be
determined.
Type of Review: Regular submission.
Affected Public: Households/
Individuals.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
Self responders [Internet/Telephone/
Paper]: 250,000 respondents.
Nonresponse Followup Cases:
120,000 respondents.
Nonresponse Followup Quality
Control Re-Interview Cases: 12,000
respondents.
Manual Non-ID Processing Cases
requiring a phone call to the
respondent: 400.
Validation of Non-ID responses: 5000.
Administrative Records Followup:
5000.
Focus Groups:
Focus Group Selection Contact: 288.
Focus Groups: 160 participants.
Total: 392,848 respondents.
Estimated Time Per Response:
Paper/Internet Responders: 10
minutes per response.
Nonresponse Followup Cases: 10
minutes per response.
Nonresponse Followup Quality
Control Re-Interview Cases: 10 minutes
per response.
Non-ID Manual Processing Cases: 5
minutes.
Non-ID Respondent Validation: 10
minutes per response.
Administrative Records Followup: 10
minutes per response.
Focus Groups:
Focus Group Selection Contact: 3
minutes per response.
Focus Groups: 120 minutes per
response.
Estimated Total Annual Burden
Hours:
Self responders [Internet/Paper/
Telephone]: 41,667 hours.
Nonresponse Followup Cases: 20,000
hours.
Nonresponse Followup Quality
Control Re-Interview Cases: 2,000 hours.
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Sfmt 9990
Non-ID Manual Processing Cases: 33
hours.
Non-ID Respondent Validation: 834
hours.
Administrative Records Followup:
834 hours.
Focus Groups:
Focus Group Selection Contact: 16
hours.
Focus Groups: 320 hours.
Total: 65,704 hours.
Estimated Total Annual Cost to
Public: For the 2016 Census Test,
respondents who are contacted by text
message may incur charges depending
on their plan with their service
provider. The Census Bureau estimates
that the total cost to respondents will be
no more than $20,000. There are no
other costs to respondents other than
their time to participate in this data
collection.
Respondent’s Obligation: Mandatory.
Legal Authority: Title 13 U.S.C.
Sections 141 and 193.
IV. Request for Comments
Comments are invited on: (a) Whether
the proposed collection of information
is necessary for the proper performance
of the functions of the agency, including
whether the information shall have
practical utility; (b) the accuracy of the
agency’s estimate of the burden
(including hours and cost) of the
proposed collection of information; (c)
ways to enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and (d) ways to minimize the
burden of the collection of information
on respondents, including through the
use of automated collection techniques
or other forms of information
technology.
Comments submitted in response to
this notice will be summarized and/or
included in the request for OMB
approval of this information collection;
they also will become a matter of public
record.
Dated: July 29, 2015.
Glenna Mickelson,
Management Analyst, Office of the Chief
Information Officer.
[FR Doc. 2015–19005 Filed 8–3–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–07–P
E:\FR\FM\04AUN1.SGM
04AUN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 149 (Tuesday, August 4, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 46239-46242]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-19005]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Census Bureau
Proposed Information Collection; Comment Request; 2016 Census
Test
AGENCY: U.S. Census Bureau, Commerce.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of Commerce, as part of its continuing effort
to reduce paperwork and respondent burden, invites the general public
and other Federal agencies to take this opportunity to comment on
proposed and/or continuing information collections, as required by the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
DATES: To ensure consideration, written comments must be submitted on
or before October 5, 2015.
[[Page 46240]]
ADDRESSES: Direct all written comments to Jennifer Jessup, Departmental
Paperwork Clearance Officer, Department of Commerce, Room 6616, 14th
and Constitution Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20230 (or via the Internet
at jjessup@doc.gov).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Requests for additional information or
copies of the information collection instrument(s) and instructions
should be directed to Robin Pennington, Census Bureau, HQ-4K065,
Washington, DC 20233; (301) 763-8132 (or via email at
robin.a.pennington@census.gov).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Abstract
During the years preceding the 2020 Census, the Census Bureau will
pursue its commitment to reduce the costs of conducting a decennial
census, while maintaining our commitment to quality. A primary
decennial census cost driver is collection of data from members of the
public from which the Census Bureau received no reply via initially
offered response options. Improving our methods for increasing the
number of people who take advantage of self-response options
(``Optimizing Self-Response'') and further refining the questionnaire
content will help increase the efficiency and effectiveness of census
operations and substantially reduce costs. Additionally, making our
methods for enumerating households that do not initially respond
(``Nonresponse Followup'') more efficient can contribute to a less
costly census while maintaining high-quality results.
The Census Bureau will conduct a 2016 Census Test, with components
designed to test new approaches or validate existing approaches and
systems integration related to (1) Optimizing Self-Response, including
contact strategies, language support, and questionnaire content; and
(2) Nonresponse Followup, including administrative records usage, and
technological and operational improvements.
Optimizing Self-Response
The 2016 Census Test is designed to evaluate several strategies to
optimize the rate at which the public self-responds to the census. A
higher rate of self-response will mean fewer cases for the Nonresponse
Followup operation, saving taxpayer money. Significant areas of
continued testing are:
Evaluation and refinement of our ``Internet push''
strategy, where we do not initially send paper questionnaires to
households, but rather invite them to complete the questionnaire
online. We will evaluate the number of online invitations necessary
before sending a full paper questionnaire to an address.
Updated and modernized household contact strategies to
encourage self response, including text/short message service (SMS)
communication and postcard reminders.
Refinement of our non-English support for respondents with
limited English proficiency, the inclusion of non-English language
letters and/or brochures in mailings, and web response addresses
(Uniform Resource Locators, or URLs) in various languages on the
incoming envelope.
Further evaluation of questionnaire content:
[cir] We will include testing of a combined race and Hispanic
origin question that is similar to one the Census Bureau is using in
the 2015 National Content Test. Based on results from the 2010 Race and
Hispanic Origin Alternative Questionnaire Experiment (Compton, et. al.
2012), the 2016 Census Test provides an opportunity to further test a
combined race and Hispanic origin question.
[cir] On the Internet instrument only, we will test a terminology
change in the race and ethnicity question specific to the ``Black and
African American'' category, by comparing the use of ``American'' to
the abbreviated ``Am.'' This addresses a problem with this abbreviation
related to software providing Section 508 compliance \1\. We are
testing this on the Internet initially because the path for testing and
screens on the Internet are more easily deployed than paper versions.
We will continue and expand testing this terminology change with paper
questionnaires (self-response) in future testing.
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\1\ Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act (29 U.S.C. `794 d) as
amended by the Workforce Investment Act of 1998 (Pub. L. 205-220)
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[cir] For the relationship question, the 2016 Census Test will
include testing new response categories for opposite sex and same sex
husband/wife/spouse and unmarried partner. In addition, the Internet
data collection instrument will also provide two versions of the
relationship question, with one version eliminating the response
categories associated with unrelated household members (``roomer or
boarder'' and ``housemate or roommate'').
[cir] The Internet data collection instrument will also include
various ways to collect and confirm the number of persons residing at
an address. Respondents will see one of three screens about the
existence of people on the roster: one that displays the residence rule
and asks for the number of people in the household, one that asks for
the number of people who live in the household but puts the residence
rule in the help text, and one that asks if any other people live at
the household with the residence rule in the help text. After the names
of the roster members are collected, the respondent will then see one
of two series of undercount questions: one series asks for additional
people on two separate screens, and another series asks for additional
people on only one screen. After the demographic items are collected,
the respondent will then see overcount questions in one of three forms,
depending on test panel. Some respondents will see seven topic-based
questions that ask if anyone in the household stayed at a particular
type of place. Some respondents who live in small households (that is,
households with three or fewer people) will see one person-based
question that asks if a specific person stayed in any of a number of
places. Other respondents will see two household-level questions that
first ask if anyone in the household stayed in another housing unit or
if anyone in the household stayed in a group quarters. The quality of
the final household roster created from these experimentally applied
questions will be evaluated by a coverage reinterview conducted by
telephone that will contain extensive probes about missed roster
members or other places that people sometimes stay.
Nonresponse Followup (NRFU)
The 2016 Census Test will be instrumental to the Census Bureau in
testing new implementation and management processes, the use of
automated data collection tools, and approaches such as using
administrative records and third party data to reduce the NRFU
workload. This test allows us to refine our use of administrative
records, technologies to support field data collection and management,
and operational procedures.
Administrative Records
Continued evaluation of our plan to use administrative
records and other third party data (such as from the Internal Revenue
Service, Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, United States
Postal Service, etc.) to identify vacant housing units that do not
require a field visit during the nonresponse follow-up operation.
Historically, the costs to verify and follow up with these types of
units have been significant
Continued evaluation of our plan to use the ``occupancy''
status of administrative records sources to
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enumerate housing units after a certain number of NRFU contact
attempts. This includes quality evaluations of the sources of the
administrative records, and reviews of the procedures by which those
administrative records are produced (working with the source agencies,
etc.). This will help us to decide in what scenarios the use of
administrative records is most appropriate, the ideal number of
personal visits to attempt before enumerating with these records, and
several other research questions.
Supplemental mailings to housing units that have been
removed from the NRFU operation, giving respondents an additional
chance to respond to the 2016 Census Test before final disposition
using administrative record source data.
Technological Improvements:
Evaluation of our refined operational control system and
case assignment processes, including identifying efficiencies for field
data collection, as well as automated assignments that are based on
enumerator availability and other criteria.
Continued testing of a software to record housing unit
status, interview, and enumerations at nonresponding housing units for
operational readiness, as well as the ability to deploy the software on
mobile devices that are Census owned, personally owned, or provided as
a service.
Continued evaluation of automated training for field
employees.
The inclusion of additional language translations to our
enumeration software. Previous versions of this software provided
translations in Spanish only.
Operational Procedures:
Comparison of the effectiveness of data collection modes
(in-field enumeration vs. centralized telephone contact) to conduct
telephone follow up activities.
Use of innovative survey methodologies for NRFU cases,
including the continued testing of different stopping rules for
enumerators (maximum visits before stopping work, etc.); further
evaluation of in-person vs. phone contacts, and continued research on
when and how to attempt to obtain proxy responses for a housing unit.
Implementation of a refined field management structure,
designed to lessen the number of supervisors required in the field for
conducting the NRFU operation.
Testing our re-interview operation, including the rules by
which cases are selected for re-interview, the use of a handheld device
to input re-interview data, and a re-designed approach to using call
center staff to make the first attempt at re-interviewing each case,
where appropriate. We will also test the use of paradata collected from
our automated data collection instrument, such as the recorded Global
Positioning System (GPS) location of field interviews and the length of
time for interviews to be conducted, to help detect and deter
falsification by enumerators.
II. Method of Collection
Test Sites
The Census Bureau will conduct the 2016 Census Test concurrently in
portions of Harris County, TX and Los Angeles County, CA. These
locations offer particular characteristics that support the Census
Bureau's research goals. Conducting the 2016 Census Test in urban areas
will allow us to test our assignment routing strategies in densely
populated areas and understand challenges to field enumeration. Both
sites have populations that are linguistically diverse and provide an
appropriate context to test our language and translation services.
Lastly, both areas contain ``hard to count'' populations and areas with
high vacancy rates that will allow us to test our follow-up activities
with these populations in this environment.
Self-Response
The housing units in the selected areas included in the 2016 Census
Test will be contacted by mail and invited to complete their
questionnaire via the Internet. Internet self response contact methods
include a letter, postcard, and text (either as an invitation or as
reminders), a multi-lingual brochure (either with a letter or in the
envelope with URL). We will also test optimal strategies for delivering
mail materials, including paper questionnaires, to households who do
not or cannot respond online.
We will continue to test our Non-ID processing methodology as
another strategy for optimizing self-response. Non-ID Processing refers
to address matching and geocoding for Census responses that lack a
preassigned Census identification code. In the 2016 Census Test, we
will continue to develop our capability to conduct real-time Non-ID
processing. This test will allow us to interactively prompt a
respondent (while they are still online filling out the form) for
additional address and location information if the respondent's address
cannot be matched to a Census ID or geocoded. A Non-ID respondent whose
address cannot be matched to our address database will be prompted
during his or her Internet self-response session to confirm the address
information they provided while filling out the form, or to indicate
the location of their address on an on-screen map. This test will allow
us to better understand requirements related to scalability of planned
systems and determine metrics for ongoing monitoring and evaluation. If
the address match is not resolved during automated processing Census
staff will attempt to manually match or geocode addresses. We estimate
that about one percent of the overall Non-ID respondents will be
contacted as part of the manual matching process. Additionally, we plan
to test a mechanism for validating all Non-ID respondents through the
use of administrative records. To further explore our methodology for
validating Non-ID responses, a sample of Non-ID responses will be
selected for re-contact. The re-contact is intended to validate and re-
collect information from a respondent to confirm the existence of the
address and the persons enumerated at that address. The re-contact may
occur through centralized phone contacts or in-field enumeration.
Nonresponse Followup (NRFU)
If a household does not ultimately respond to the self-response
portion of the test by a specified date, it is included in the universe
for the NRFU portion of the test, during which enumerators will attempt
to follow up with nonresponding households to collect data. The Census
Bureau will test centralized phone contacts to nonresponding cases
prior to sending cases to an enumerator in the field. In advance of the
full deployment of enumerators following up with nonresponding
households, a small number of the nonresponding cases may be subject to
early followup to allow for live testing of systems, data collection
applications, and field procedures.
The Census Bureau will continue to test our use of administrative
records for the removal of vacant housing units from the NRFU universe
and to determine rules for when we can stop making visit attempts to
households, and refer to administrative record data instead. For each
of these cases, we will test a supplemental mailout to any household
that is removed from the NRFU workload in this way as a final attempt
to generate a self-response.
The Census Bureau will conduct NRFU with a combination of Census-
owned, enumerator-owned, and mobile devices provided as a service using
the Census developed enumeration
[[Page 46242]]
software. The use of employee-owned equipment/services is commonly
referred to as ``Bring Your Own Device,'' or BYOD. It is important to
note, that for Census-owned devices, BYOD devices, or devices provided
as a service that the data collection application collects and securely
transmits respondents' data. The use of mobile devices that are Census-
owned, enumerator-owned, or provided as a service will enable the
Census Bureau to assess options for a secure and cost-effective
approach to the NRFU data collection.
Nonresponse Followup Quality Control Reinterview (NRFU-RI)
A sample of cases that have been enumerated via Nonresponse
Followup will be selected for reinterview. This operation is intended
to help us pinpoint possible cases of enumerator falsification. Like
the NRFU operation before it, NRFU-RI will use the Census Bureau's
enumeration software on mobile devices (Census-owned, BYOD, and devices
provided as a service). We will also test centralized phone contacts of
reinterview cases before sending them to an enumerator in the field,
providing potential cost savings.
Additional Followup Operations
Understanding the accuracy of administrative records usage to
identify vacant addresses and for the household composition of occupied
housing units will inform decisions associated with the design of the
2020 Census. The Census Bureau may conduct additional followup with
cases to obtain the most accurate Census Day status of each housing
unit. The intent is to revisit addresses where we find discrepancies
between the NRFU results and administrative records information for the
address. This mostly will include those addresses where information
collected during NRFU conflicts with information we have from
administrative records for that address.
Language Services
Telephone questionnaire assistance will be available in languages
other than English.
Focus Groups
To evaluate the use of new contact strategies, enumeration methods,
and efforts to reduce burden, the Census Bureau will conduct focus
groups, comprised of various categories of respondents and non-
respondents. These focus groups are intended to gather information
about respondent perspectives. Participants will be asked about their
experiences with the 2016 Census Test, including but not limited to:
Their reactions and thoughts about being contacted by the Census Bureau
by alternative methods, the perceived legitimacy of these contacts;
opinions about Bring Your Own Device; and their opinions on the use of
administrative records by the Census Bureau. Participants will also be
asked about their general concerns with government collection, cyber
security, and protection of confidential data. At the end of the focus
groups, we may be asking participants for whom we have acquired
additional data from a commercial third party to verify whether this
information is accurate.
III. Data
OMB Control Number: 0607-XXXX.
Form Number(s): Paper and electronic questionnaires; numbers to be
determined.
Type of Review: Regular submission.
Affected Public: Households/Individuals.
Estimated Number of Respondents: Self responders [Internet/
Telephone/Paper]: 250,000 respondents.
Nonresponse Followup Cases: 120,000 respondents.
Nonresponse Followup Quality Control Re-Interview Cases: 12,000
respondents.
Manual Non-ID Processing Cases requiring a phone call to the
respondent: 400.
Validation of Non-ID responses: 5000.
Administrative Records Followup: 5000.
Focus Groups:
Focus Group Selection Contact: 288.
Focus Groups: 160 participants.
Total: 392,848 respondents.
Estimated Time Per Response:
Paper/Internet Responders: 10 minutes per response.
Nonresponse Followup Cases: 10 minutes per response.
Nonresponse Followup Quality Control Re-Interview Cases: 10 minutes
per response.
Non-ID Manual Processing Cases: 5 minutes.
Non-ID Respondent Validation: 10 minutes per response.
Administrative Records Followup: 10 minutes per response.
Focus Groups:
Focus Group Selection Contact: 3 minutes per response.
Focus Groups: 120 minutes per response.
Estimated Total Annual Burden Hours:
Self responders [Internet/Paper/Telephone]: 41,667 hours.
Nonresponse Followup Cases: 20,000 hours.
Nonresponse Followup Quality Control Re-Interview Cases: 2,000
hours.
Non-ID Manual Processing Cases: 33 hours.
Non-ID Respondent Validation: 834 hours.
Administrative Records Followup: 834 hours.
Focus Groups:
Focus Group Selection Contact: 16 hours.
Focus Groups: 320 hours.
Total: 65,704 hours.
Estimated Total Annual Cost to Public: For the 2016 Census Test,
respondents who are contacted by text message may incur charges
depending on their plan with their service provider. The Census Bureau
estimates that the total cost to respondents will be no more than
$20,000. There are no other costs to respondents other than their time
to participate in this data collection.
Respondent's Obligation: Mandatory.
Legal Authority: Title 13 U.S.C. Sections 141 and 193.
IV. Request for Comments
Comments are invited on: (a) Whether the proposed collection of
information is necessary for the proper performance of the functions of
the agency, including whether the information shall have practical
utility; (b) the accuracy of the agency's estimate of the burden
(including hours and cost) of the proposed collection of information;
(c) ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected; and (d) ways to minimize the burden of the
collection of information on respondents, including through the use of
automated collection techniques or other forms of information
technology.
Comments submitted in response to this notice will be summarized
and/or included in the request for OMB approval of this information
collection; they also will become a matter of public record.
Dated: July 29, 2015.
Glenna Mickelson,
Management Analyst, Office of the Chief Information Officer.
[FR Doc. 2015-19005 Filed 8-3-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-07-P