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United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

Testimony before the Subcommittee on Federal Financial Management, 
Government Information, Federal Services, and International Security, 
Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, U.S. Senate: 

For Release on Delivery: 
Expected at 1:30 p.m. EDT:
Wednesday, April 6, 2011: 

2010 Census: 

Preliminary Lessons Learned Highlight the Need for Fundamental Reforms: 

Statement of Robert Goldenkoff:
Director:
Strategic Issues: 

GAO-11-496T: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-11-496T, a testimony before the Subcommittee on 
Federal Financial Management, Government Information, Federal 
Services, and International Security, Committee on Homeland Security 
and Governmental Affairs, U.S. Senate. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

GAO added the 2010 Census to its list of high-risk programs in 2008 in 
part because of (1) long-standing weaknesses in the Census Bureau’s 
(Bureau) information technology (IT) acquisition and contract 
management function, (2) difficulties in developing reliable life-
cycle cost estimates, and (3) key operations that were not tested 
under operational conditions. These issues jeopardized the Bureau’s 
readiness for the count. Moreover, societal trends, such as concerns 
over privacy, have made a cost-effective census an increasingly 
difficult challenge. At about $13 billion, 2010 was the costliest U.S. 
Census in history. As requested, this testimony focuses on lessons 
learned from the 2010 Census, and initiatives that show promise for 
producing a more cost-effective population count in 2020. This 
testimony is based on completed and ongoing work, including an 
analysis of Bureau documents, interviews with Bureau officials, and 
field observations of census operations in urban and rural locations 
across the country. 

What GAO Found: 

In February 2011, GAO removed the 2010 Census from its High-Risk List 
because the Bureau generally completed its peak enumeration activities 
and released congressional apportionment and redistricting data 
consistent with its operational plans. The Bureau improved its 
readiness for the census by strengthening its risk management 
activities, enhancing systems testing, and meeting regularly with 
executives from its parent agency, the Department of Commerce. Strong 
congressional oversight was also critical. Still, the 2010 Census 
required an unprecedented commitment of resources, and the cost of 
enumerating each housing unit has escalated from around $16 in 1970, 
to around $98 in 2010, in constant 2010 dollars. Based on the results 
of the 2010 and prior censuses, the following four early lessons 
learned could help secure a more cost-effective enumeration in 2020: 

1. Reexamine the Nation’s Approach to Taking the Census: The Bureau 
has used a similar approach to count most of the population since 
1970. However, the approach has not kept pace with changes to society. 
Moving forward, it will be important for the Bureau to rethink its 
approach to planning, testing, implementing, and monitoring the census 
to address long-standing challenges. 

2. Assess and Refine Existing Operations Focusing on Tailoring Them to 
Specific Locations and Population Groups: The Bureau plans to complete 
over 70 studies of the 2010 Census covering such topics as the Bureau’
s publicity efforts and field operations. As this research is 
completed, it will be important for it to assess the value-added of a 
particular operation in order for it to determine how best to allocate 
its resources for 2020. 

3. Institutionalize Efforts to Address High-Risk Areas: Focus areas 
include incorporating best practices for IT acquisition management; 
developing reliable cost estimates; and ensuring key operations are 
fully tested, in part by developing clearly stated research 
objectives, a thoroughly documented data collection strategy, and 
methods for determining the extent to which specific activities 
contributed to controlling costs and enhancing quality. 

4. Ensure that the Bureau’s Management, Culture, and Business 
Practices Align with a Cost-Effective Enumeration: The Bureau will 
need to ensure that its organizational culture and structure, as well 
as its approach to strategic planning, human capital management, 
collaboration, and other internal functions are focused on delivering 
more cost-effective outcomes. 

The Bureau has launched an ambitious planning program for 2020. As 
these actions gain momentum, it will be important that they enhance 
the Bureau’s capacity to control costs, ensure quality, and adapt to 
future technological and societal changes. 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO is not making new recommendations in this testimony, but past 
reports recommended that the Bureau strengthen its testing of key IT 
systems, better document and update its cost estimates, and develop an 
operational plan that integrates performance, budget, and other 
information. The Bureau generally agreed with GAO’s findings and 
recommendations and is taking steps to implement them. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-496T] or key 
components. For more information, contact Robert Goldenkoff at (202) 
512-2757 or goldenkoffr@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Chairman Carper, Ranking Member Brown, and Members of the Subcommittee: 

I am pleased to be here today to discuss planning efforts for the 2020 
Census. The next enumeration might seem far over the horizon, but our 
reviews of the 1990, 2000, and now 2010 Censuses have shown that early 
planning and strong congressional oversight can help reduce the costs 
and risks of the national headcount. As you know, because of societal 
trends, including an increasingly diverse population and concerns over 
personal privacy, a cost-effective census has become inherently 
difficult. Going forward, the singular challenge facing the U.S. 
Census Bureau (Bureau) is how best to control the cost of future 
enumerations while maintaining their accuracy. 

This afternoon's hearing is especially timely. Just one year after 
Census Day 2010, and with Census Day 2020 still 9 years down the road, 
today's session provides an early and important opportunity to look 
back on the lessons learned from the recent enumeration while 
simultaneously kicking off the congressional oversight necessary to 
help ensure the reforms needed for the next enumeration proceed on 
track. Indeed, past experience has shown that strong and continuing 
congressional involvement--especially while there is still time to 
make decisions and influence the direction of the census--is essential 
to the decennial's ultimate success. 

Moreover, the fundamental design of the enumeration--mail out and mail 
back of the census form with in-person follow-up for nonrespondents-- 
has been in use since 1970, and suffers from declining response rates. 
In short, this approach is no longer capable of cost-effectively 
counting a population that is growing steadily larger, more diverse, 
increasingly difficult to find, and reluctant to participate in the 
census. Much like going up a down escalator, over the past 40 years, 
the Bureau has been investing substantially more resources each decade 
in an effort to keep pace with key results from prior enumerations. 
The 2010 Census, at around $13 billion, was the most expensive 
headcount in our nation's history. Meanwhile, the cost of conducting 
the census has, on average, nearly doubled each decade since 1970 in 
constant 2010 dollars. If that growth rate continues unchecked, we 
could be looking at spending more than $25 billion on the 2020 Census. 

Early and focused attention is also needed because the census--a 
constitutionally mandated effort--is critical to our nation, as the 
results are used to apportion seats in Congress, redraw congressional 
districts, help allocate more than $400 billion in federal aid to 
state and local governments each year, and remake local political 
boundaries. Census data are also used for investment decisions by the 
public and private sectors. Unfortunately, the Bureau's planning 
efforts for the last 3 decennials fell short, which resulted in 
operational challenges that jeopardized a successful census. The 
magnitude of these problems led us to add the 2000 and 2010 Censuses 
to our list of high-risk federal programs in 1997 and 2008.[Footnote 1] 

In 2008, for example, we designated the 2010 Census a GAO high-risk 
area because (1) long-standing weaknesses in the Bureau's information 
technology (IT) acquisition and contract management function, (2) 
difficulties in developing reliable life-cycle cost estimates, and (3) 
key operations that were not tested under operational conditions, all 
jeopardized a cost-effective enumeration.[Footnote 2] 

In February 2011, we removed the 2010 Census from the High-Risk List 
because the Bureau generally completed its peak census data collection 
activities consistent with its operational plans; released the state 
population counts used to apportion Congress on December 21, 2010, 
several days ahead of the legally mandated end-of-year deadline; and 
remaining activities appeared to be on track. More recently, on March 
24, 2011, the Bureau announced it had completed the release of data 
that states use to redraw federal, state, and local legislative 
districts. 

In removing the 2010 Census from our High-Risk List we noted that the 
Bureau improved its readiness for the census by taking such steps as 
strengthening its risk management activities, enhancing systems 
testing, bringing in experienced personnel to key positions, 
implementing our prior recommendations, and meeting regularly with 
executives from its parent agency, the Department of Commerce. 
[Footnote 3] Importantly, we removed the high-risk designation because 
of the Bureau's strong commitment to and top leadership support for 
addressing problems; boosting its capacity to address shortcomings; 
and developing a corrective action plan, among other actions, and not 
simply because the census was coming to a close. Moreover, active 
congressional oversight--including 12 hearings convened by the House 
and Senate since we first named the 2010 Census a high-risk area--
helped ensure the Bureau effectively designed and managed operations 
and kept the enumeration on schedule. The operational success of the 
2010 Census is also a tremendous credit to the hundreds of thousands 
of career and temporary Bureau employees who diligently implemented a 
vast array of census-taking activities, often under difficult 
circumstances; and to the public, private, tribal, and nonprofit 
organizations of all sizes that voluntarily partnered with the Bureau 
and raised awareness of the census. 

Going forward, while 2020 might seem distant, several issues suggest 
that it is not too early for stakeholders to start considering the 
improvements necessary to make the next national headcount as cost- 
effective as possible. These issues include: (1) the scope of the 
reforms needed, (2) the amount of taxpayer dollars at stake, (3) the 
criticality of a successful count, and (4) the Bureau's past planning 
difficulties. As requested, my remarks today will focus on lessons 
learned from the 2010 Census, and initiatives that show promise for 
producing an accurate and cost-effective population count in 2020. 

In summary, while still assessing its conduct of the 2010 Census, as 
the Bureau continues its planning efforts for 2020, it will be 
essential for it to address the following four lessons learned: 

* reexamine and perhaps fundamentally transform the way the Bureau 
plans, tests, implements, monitors, and evaluates future enumerations; 

* assess and refine existing census-taking operations with an eye 
toward tailoring them to specific geographic areas and population 
groups; 

* continue to address those shortcomings that led us to designate the 
2010 Census a high-risk area including following key practices 
important for managing IT and strengthening its ability to develop 
reliable life-cycle cost estimates; and: 

* ensure that the Bureau's management, culture, business practices, 
and automated systems are all aligned with a cost-effective 
enumeration. 

While the Bureau needs to do all of this and more, an additional 
lesson learned is that the Bureau cannot achieve a successful census 
on its own. Rather, the enumeration is a shared national undertaking 
where federal agencies, state, local, and tribal governments, 
nonprofit and private organizations, and ultimately the public at 
large, all have vital roles to play. Congress too, has an essential 
responsibility. As was underscored by the 2010 experience, House and 
Senate involvement was essential for obtaining regular updates on the 
Bureau's progress in addressing the operational challenges it was 
facing, helping to hold the agency accountable for results, and 
providing the Bureau with resources needed to conduct a successful 
population count. Today's hearing, Mr. Chairman, builds on these past 
efforts, and will help ensure that lessons learned are documented and 
acted upon in the years ahead, raises Congress's confidence that the 
Bureau has learned from 2010, and that the journey toward 2020 
continues in the right direction. 

My testimony today is based on our completed work related to key 2010 
operations and the Bureau's planning efforts for 2020,[Footnote 4] as 
well as, ongoing work that is focused on 2010 Census cost drivers and 
the 2020 life-cycle cost estimate. For both completed and ongoing work 
we analyzed key documents such as budgets, plans, procedures, and 
guidance for the selected activities; and interviewed cognizant Bureau 
officials at headquarters and local census offices. In addition, for 
our completed work, we made on-site observations of key census-taking 
activities across the country including such urban locations as Los 
Angeles, California; Atlanta, Georgia; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; 
Brooklyn, New York; New Orleans, Louisiana; and Washington, D.C., as 
well as such less populated areas as Meridian, Mississippi, and New 
Castle, Delaware. We selected these locations because of their 
geographic and demographic diversity, among other factors. To obtain 
information on various management and organizational reforms that 
could help the Bureau become more accountable and results oriented, we 
reviewed our prior work on governmentwide reexamination, as well as 
leading practices and attributes in the areas of IT management, 
organizational performance, collaboration, stewardship, and human 
capital.[Footnote 5] More detail on our scope and methodology is 
provided in each issued product. 

On March 18, 2011, we provided the Bureau with a statement of facts 
related to the information included in this statement, and Bureau 
officials provided technical comments, which we included as 
appropriate. We conducted our work in accordance with generally 
accepted government auditing standards. Those standards require that 
we plan and perform the audits to obtain sufficient, appropriate 
evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our findings and 
conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe that the 
evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our findings and 
conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

Background: 

In conducting the 2010 Census, the Bureau encountered two sets of 
challenges: internal management challenges that affected the Bureau's 
overall readiness and led us to designate the 2010 Census as a high- 
risk area, as well as external sociodemographic challenges such as 
more non-English speakers and people residing in makeshift and other 
nontraditional living arrangements. As shown in figure 1, the cost of 
enumerating each housing unit has escalated from around $16 in 1970, 
to around $98 in 2010, in constant 2010 dollars (an increase of over 
500 percent). At the same time, the mail response rate--a key 
indicator of a cost-effective census--has declined from 78 percent in 
1970 to 63 percent in 2010. In many ways, the Bureau has been 
investing substantially more resources each decade just to try and 
match the results of prior enumerations. 

Figure 1: The Average Cost of Counting Each Housing Unit (in Constant 
2010 Dollars) Has Escalated Each Decade, While Mail Response Rates 
Have Declined: 

[Refer to PDF for image: combination line and vertical bar graph] 

Year: 1970; 
Average cost per housing unit (in constant 2010 dollars): $16; 
Mail response rate: 78%. 

Year: 1980; 
Average cost per housing unit (in constant 2010 dollars): $30; 
Mail response rate: 75%. 

Year: 1990; 
Average cost per housing unit (in constant 2010 dollars): $39; 
Mail response rate: 66%. 

Year: 2000; 
Average cost per housing unit (in constant 2010 dollars): $70; 
Mail response rate: 66%. 

Year: 2010; 
Average cost per housing unit (in constant 2010 dollars): $98; 
Mail response rate: 63%. 

Source: GAO analysis of Census Bureau data. 

Note: In the 2010 Census the Bureau used only a short-form 
questionnaire. For this statement, we use the 1990 and 2000 Census 
short-form mail response rate when comparing 1990, 2000, and 2010 mail-
back response rates. Census short-form mail response rates are 
unavailable for 1970 and 1980, so we use the overall response rate. 

[End of figure] 

Beginning in 1990, we reported that rising costs, difficulties in 
securing public participation, and other long-standing challenges 
required a revised census methodology--a view that was shared by other 
stakeholders.[Footnote 6] Achieving acceptable results using these 
conventional methods has required an increasingly larger investment of 
fiscal resources, which in the coming years will likely become scarcer. 

Indeed, the 2010 Census required an unprecedented commitment of 
resources, including recruiting more than 3.8 million total 
applicants--roughly equivalent to the entire population of Oklahoma--
for its temporary workforce; and rose in cost from an initial estimate 
of $11.3 billion in 2001 to around $13 billion. According to the 
Bureau, several factors were largely behind the escalating costs of 
the 2010 Census including (1) a flawed acquisition strategy, (2) the 
need to hire a large number of field staff to enumerate people who did 
not mail back their census forms, and (3) substantial investments in 
updating the Bureau's address list just prior to the start of the 
enumeration. 

Lesson Learned #1: Reexamine the Nation's Approach to Taking the 
Census: 

The results of prior enumerations underscore the fact that simply 
refining current methods--some of which have been in place for 
decades--will not bring about the reforms needed to control costs 
while maintaining accuracy given ongoing and newly emerging societal 
trends. Since 1970, the Bureau has used a similar approach to count 
the vast majority of the population. For example, the Bureau develops 
an address list of the nation's housing units and mails census forms 
to each one for occupants to complete and send back. Over time, 
because of demographic and attitudinal trends, securing an acceptable 
response rate has become an increasing challenge. Our concerns about 
the rising cost and diminishing returns of the census are not new. In 
the mid-1990s, for example, we and others concluded that the 
established approach for taking the census had exhausted its potential 
for counting the population cost-effectively and that fundamental 
design changes were needed to reduce census costs and improve the 
quality of data collected.[Footnote 7] 

A fundamental reexamination of the nation's approach to the census 
will require the Bureau to rethink its approach to planning, testing, 
implementing, monitoring, and evaluating the census, and addressing 
such questions as: Why was a certain program initiated? What was the 
intended goal? Have significant changes occurred that affect its 
purpose? Does it use prevailing leading practices? 

Our December 2010 report noted potential focus areas for such a 
reexamination. These include better leveraging of innovations in 
technology and social media to more fully engage census stakeholders 
and the general public on census issues; and reaching agreement on a 
set of criteria that could be used to weigh the trade-offs associated 
with the need for high levels of accuracy on the one hand, and the 
increasing cost of achieving that accuracy on the other hand.[Footnote 
8] 

One of the areas that the Bureau would like to leverage for the 2020 
Census is the use of an Internet response option. The Bureau provided 
the opportunity for respondents to complete the 2000 Census short 
forms on the Internet--protected by a 22-digit identification number. 
According to Bureau officials, for the 2000 Census, about 60,000 short 
forms were completed via the Internet. The Bureau originally planned 
to include the Internet in the 2010 Census, but then decided not to, 
because the benefits gained through processing less paper, as well as 
improvements to the quality of data, were outweighed by the cost of 
developing the Internet response option and the risks associated with 
the security of census data. To examine its use for the 2020 decennial 
census, the Bureau will need to review many of those same issues and 
address the following questions: 

* To what extent could an Internet response option lower data 
collection costs for the Bureau? 

* To what extent could an Internet response option increase the 
quality of data collected? 

* To what extent does the use of an Internet response option pose a 
risk to the confidentiality of census data? 

Moreover, given that the research, development, and testing efforts 
for 2020 will play out over the decade-long census life-cycle, what is 
the optimal way to ensure continuity and accountability for an 
enterprise that takes years to complete and extends beyond the tenure 
of many elected political leaders? The Director of the Census Bureau 
can, in concept, provide a measure of continuity, but of the 11 census 
directors who have served since July 1969 (not including the current 
director), the average tenure was around 3 years, and only 1 director 
has served more than 5 years. Further, in the decade leading up to the 
2010 Census, the Bureau was led by 4 different directors and several 
acting directors. The turnover in the Bureau's chief executive officer 
position makes it difficult to develop and sustain efforts that foster 
change, produce results, mitigate risks, and control costs over the 
long term. 

The heads of a number of executive agencies serve fixed appointments, 
based on Presidential nomination and Senate confirmation, including 
the Director of the Office of Personnel Management (4 years), the 
Commissioner of Labor Statistics (4 years), and the Commissioner of 
Internal Revenue (5 years). We believe that the continuity resulting 
from a fixed-term appointment could provide the following benefits to 
the Bureau: 

* Strategic vision. The director needs to build a long-term vision for 
the Bureau that extends beyond the current decennial census. Strategic 
planning, human-capital succession planning, and life-cycle cost 
estimates for the Bureau all span the decade. 

* Sustaining stakeholder relationships. The director needs to 
continually expand and develop working relationships and partnerships 
with governmental, political, and other professional officials in both 
the public and private sectors to obtain their input, support, and 
participation in the Bureau's activities. 

* Accountability. The life-cycle cost for a decennial census spans a 
decade, and decisions made early in the decade about the next 
decennial census guide the research, investments, and tests carried 
out throughout the entire 10-year period. Institutionalizing 
accountability over an extended period may help long-term decennial 
initiatives provide meaningful and sustainable results. 

Lesson Learned #2: Assess and Refine Existing Operations Focusing on 
Opportunities to Tailor Census-Taking Activities to Specific Locations 
and Population Groups: 

As noted earlier, a key indicator of a cost-effective census is the 
mail response rate, which is the percentage of all housing units in 
the mail-back universe, including those that are later found to be 
nonexistent or unoccupied. High response rates are essential because 
they save taxpayer dollars and ensure a more accurate enumeration. 
According to the Bureau, for every percentage point increase in mail 
response in 2010, the Bureau saved $85 million that would otherwise 
have been spent on in-person follow-up efforts. Also, according to the 
Bureau, it costs 42 cents to mail back each census form in a postage- 
paid envelope, compared with an average estimate of $57 for field 
activities necessary to enumerate each home in person. Moreover, mail 
returns tend to have better quality data, in part because as time goes 
on after Census Day (April 1), people move, or may have difficulty 
recalling who was residing with them. 

For the 2010 Census, the Bureau expected a response rate of 59 percent 
to 65 percent. The actual mail response rate on April 19 when the 
Bureau initially determined the universe of houses to visit for 
nonresponse follow-up (NRFU)[Footnote 9] was just over 63 percent, 
well within the Bureau's range of estimates. Achieving this response 
rate was an important accomplishment given the nation's increasing 
diversity. 

As illustrated in figure 2, the Bureau met its expected response rate 
in all but 11 states. The highest response rate (71.7 percent) was in 
Minnesota, while the lowest response rate (51 percent) was in Alaska. 
At the same time, response rates in all but 2 states--Hawaii and South 
Carolina--as well as the District of Columbia, declined anywhere from 
0.8 to 8.2 percentage points when compared to 2000, thus underscoring 
the difficulty the Bureau will face in the future in trying to sustain 
response rates.[Footnote 10] 

Key factors aimed at improving the mail response rate included the 
mailing of an advance letter and a reminder postcard, and an 
aggressive marketing and outreach program. In addition, this was the 
first census the Bureau sent a second or "replacement" questionnaire 
to households. Replacement questionnaires were sent to around 25 
million households in census tracts that had the lowest response rates 
in the 2000 Census, and 10 million replacement questionnaires were 
sent to nonresponding households in other census tracts that had low-
to-moderate response rates in 2000. 

Figure 2: The Bureau Met Its Minimum Mail Response Rate Goal of 59 
Percent in All but 11 States, but Rates Generally Declined Compared to 
2000: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustrated U.S. map] 

2010 mail response rates: 

Met Bureau minimum mail response rate goal: 
Arkansas: 59.5% (-5.2); 
California: 64.6% (-4.3); 
Colorado: 64.6% (-4.9); 
Connecticut: 66.1% (-2.8); 
Delaware: 60.4% (-2.2); 
District of Columbia: 60.4% (1.5); 
Florida: 59.1% (-3.6); 
Georgia: 59.2% (-5); 
Hawaii: 60.1% (1); 
Idaho: 74.7% (-2.2); 
Illinois: 67.3% (-0.8); 
Indiana: 67% (-1.9); 
Iowa: 71.3% (-3.4); 
Kansas: 67.4% (-2.3); 
Kentucky: 62.6% (-2.6); 
Maryland: 66.1% (-1.7); 
Massachusetts: 65% (-3.5); 
Michigan: 65.4% (-5.8); 
Minnesota: 71.7% (-2.8); 
Missouri: 65.5% (-3.2); 
Montana: 63% (-5.4); 
Nebraska: 69.1% (-5.1); 
New Hampshire: 61.8% (-5.0); 
New Jersey: 64.1% (-3.2); 
New York: 60.4% (-2.2); 
North Carolina: 61.5% (-0.9); 
North Dakota: 67.1% (-4.7); 
Ohio: 66.2% (-5.0); 
Oregon: 63.9% (-2.5); 
Pennsylvania: 67.6% (-2.1); 
Rhode Island: 62.4% (-3.7); 
South Carolina: 60.7% (2.7); 
South Dakota: 65.4% (-8.2); 
Tennessee: 63.4% (-0.8); 
Texas: 60% (-3.1); 
Utah: 65.3% (-1.8); 
Virginia: 66.2% (-4.1); 
Washington: 63.4% (-1.7); 
Wisconsin: 71.4% (-4.3); 
Wyoming: 61.3% (-3.8). 

Did not meet Bureau minimum mail response rate goal: 
Alabama: 58.6% (-2.1); 
Alaska: 51% (-4.8); 
Arizona: 58.2% (-4.5); 
Louisiana: 57.4% (-2.3); 
Maine: 55.2% (-6.2); 
Mississippi: 57.5% (-4.1); 
Nevada: 58.4% (-6.5); 
New Mexico: 56.7% (-4.0); 
Oklahoma: 58.8% (-5.2); 
Vermont: 57.9% (-4.2); 
West Virginia: 56.9% (-6.7). 

Source: GAO analysis of preliminary Census Bureau data; Map Resources 
(map). 

Note: Number in bold reflects the 2010 response rate as of April 19, 
2010. Number in parentheses reflects the percentage change in response 
rate from 2000 to 2010. The 2000 Census response rate is as of April 
18, 2000. 

[End of figure] 

To determine if these and other census-taking activities were 
effective, the Bureau plans to complete over 70 studies covering such 
topics as marketing and publicity, field operations, privacy and 
confidentiality, and language barriers. Moreover, in July 2010, the 
Bureau developed a database for cataloging all recommendations from 
these 2010 studies, as well as recommendations from our office, the 
Department of Commerce Inspector General's Office, and the National 
Academy of Sciences, among others. According to a Bureau official, 
this database will allow the Bureau to link 2010 recommendations to 
2020 research and testing, in an attempt to ensure that all 
recommendations coming out of 2010 are incorporated into 2020 research. 

These studies of the 2010 Census are extremely important for informing 
decisions on the design of the 2020 Census. However, some will not be 
completed by fiscal year 2012, when the Bureau plans to start research 
and testing for the 2020 Census. Bureau officials said they will give 
priority to studies that align with the 2020 Census strategic plan. 
[Footnote 11] In moving forward, it will be important for the Bureau 
to complete 2010 Census studies and stay on track to ensure that study 
results, where appropriate, are incorporated into 2020 research. As 
such, until all studies from the 2010 Census are finished, the Bureau 
will not have a complete picture of what worked well, or know what 
improvements are needed for 2020. 

Moreover, in several of the programs we reviewed, assessments were not 
always focused on the value-added of a particular operation, such as 
the extent to which it reduced costs and/or enhanced data quality. 
This information would be useful for improving operations, identifying 
possible duplicative efforts, and identifying potential cost savings 
for 2020. 

As one illustration, a complete and accurate address list, along with 
precise maps are the fundamental building blocks of a successful 
census. If the Bureau's address list, known as the Master Address File 
(MAF) and maps are inaccurate, people can be missed, counted more than 
once, or included in the wrong location. To build an accurate address 
list and maps, the Bureau conducted a number of operations throughout 
the decade, some of which were extremely labor-intensive. For example, 
the Bureau partnered with the U.S. Postal Service and other federal 
agencies; state, local, and tribal governments; local planning 
organizations; the private sector; and nongovernmental entities. 
Moreover, the Bureau employed thousands of temporary census workers to 
walk every street in the country to locate and verify places where 
people could live, in an operation called address canvassing. Three 
additional activities were aimed at properly identifying and locating 
dormitories, nursing homes, prisons, and other group living 
arrangements known as "group quarters." 

In a 2009 testimony, we noted that with the cost of counting each 
housing unit growing at a staggering rate, it is important for the 
Bureau to determine which of its multiple MAF-building operations 
provide the best return on investment in terms of contributing to 
accuracy and coverage.[Footnote 12] A number of operations might be 
needed to help locate people residing in different types of living 
arrangements, as well as to ensure housing units missed in one 
operation get included in a subsequent operation. However, the extent 
to which each individual operation contributes to the overall accuracy 
of the MAF is uncertain. This in turn makes it difficult for the 
Bureau to fully assess the extent to which potential reforms such as 
reducing or consolidating the number of address-building operations, 
might affect the quality of the address list. As one example, while 
the Bureau plans study options for targeted address canvassing as an 
alternative to canvassing every street in the country, the Bureau's 
evaluation plan does not specify whether the Bureau will look across 
MAF-building activities and compare how each individual operation 
contributes to the overall accuracy and completeness of the address 
list and at what cost. 

Leveraging such data as local response rates, census sociodemographic 
information, as well as other data sources and empirical evidence, 
might also help control costs and improve accuracy by providing 
information on ways the Bureau could more efficiently allocate its 
resources. For example, some neighborhoods might require a greater 
level of effort to achieve acceptable results, while in other areas, 
those same results might be accomplished with fewer resources. 

To the extent the Bureau targeted various activities during the 2010 
Census, initial indications suggest that those efforts went well. For 
example, the Bureau developed job aids to address location-specific 
training challenges. In one example, partly in response to our 
recommendations, to help ensure the Bureau would develop an accurate 
address list in those areas affected by Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, and 
Ike, the Bureau developed supplemental training materials for natural 
disaster areas to help census workers identify less conventional 
places where people might be living such as homes marked for 
demolition, converted buses and recreational vehicles, and 
nonresidential space such as storage areas above restaurants.[Footnote 
13] 

As another example, the Bureau budgeted around $297 million on paid 
media to raise awareness and encourage public participation in the 
census, about $57 million (24 percent) more than in 2000 in constant 
2010 dollars. To determine where paid media efforts might have the 
greatest impact, the Bureau developed predictive models based on 2000 
Census data and the evaluations of other efforts used for 2000. By 
better targeting paid media buys by area and message, the Bureau 
expected to more effectively reach those who have historically been 
the hardest to count. However, according to the Bureau, this modeling 
could have been more robust had the data from 2000 done a better job 
of isolating the impact of paid media from other components of the 
Bureau's outreach efforts, among other factors. 

Simply put, the Bureau made important progress in using data to 
determine where to spend its resources. It will be important for the 
Bureau to expand on those efforts in 2020, as well as to develop 
information on the return on investment of key census operations. 

Lesson #3: Institutionalize Efforts to Address High-Risk Areas: 

A key priority for the Bureau will be to fully address those areas 
that led us to designate the 2010 Census a high-risk program. The 
problems the Bureau encountered in managing its IT systems, developing 
reliable life-cycle cost estimates, and testing key operations under 
census-like conditions were cross-cutting in that they affected a 
number of different activities, and thus threatened the Bureau's 
readiness for the census. The Bureau has taken steps to address these 
vulnerabilities. In the years ahead, it will be important for the 
Bureau to continue the progress it has made to date and ensure that 
any changes are fully integrated into its basic business practices. 

Incorporate Best Practices for IT Acquisition Management: 

IT is critical to a successful census because it helps support the 
Bureau's data collection, analysis, and dissemination activities. 
However, the Bureau has had long-standing difficulties with the 
development and acquisition of automated systems. For example, during 
the 2000 Census, the Bureau had to grapple with untimely and 
inaccurate management information, a lack of mature and effective 
software and systems development processes, inadequate testing of key 
systems, inadequate security controls, and an insufficient number of 
experienced staff to manage expensive and complex system projects. 
Both we and the Department of Commerce Inspector General made a series 
of recommendations to address these issues, and the Bureau took steps 
to implement them. Still, problems reemerged during the run-up to the 
2010 Census. For example, while the Bureau planned to use automation 
and technology to improve the coverage, accuracy, and efficiency of 
the 2010 Census, in June 2005, we noted that the Bureau had not fully 
implemented key practices important to managing IT, including 
investment management, system development and management, and 
enterprise architecture[Footnote 14] management.[Footnote 15] As a 
result, we concluded that the Bureau's IT investments were at 
increased risk of mismanagement, and were more likely to experience 
cost and schedule overruns and performance shortfalls. 

As development of the IT systems progressed, these problems were 
realized. For example, the Field Data Collection Automation program, 
which included the development of handheld computers to collect 
information for address canvassing and NRFU, experienced substantial 
schedule delays and cost increases.[Footnote 16] As a result, the 
Bureau later decided to abandon the planned use of handheld data- 
collection devices for NRFU and reverted to paper questionnaires. 
According to the Bureau, this change added between $2.2 and $3 billion 
to the total cost of the census. 

The Bureau developed a new automated system to manage the paper-based 
approach, but the system experienced outages, slow performance, and 
problems generating and maintaining timely progress reports. 
Workarounds ultimately enabled the Bureau to successfully implement 
NRFU. However, the Bureau was still limited in its ability to 
effectively monitor productivity or implement quality-assurance 
procedures as documented in its operational plans. 

Therefore, as the Bureau prepares for 2020, among other actions it 
will be important for it to continue to improve its ability to manage 
its IT investments. Leading up to the 2010 Census, we made numerous 
recommendations to the Bureau to improve its IT management procedures 
by implementing best practices in risk management, requirements 
development, and testing.[Footnote 17] The Bureau implemented many of 
our recommendations, but not our broader recommendation to 
institutionalize these practices at the organizational level. The 
challenges experienced by the Bureau in acquiring and developing IT 
systems during the 2010 Census further demonstrate the importance of 
establishing and enforcing a rigorous IT acquisition management policy 
Bureau-wide. In addition, it will be important for the Bureau to 
improve its ability to consistently perform key IT management 
practices, such as IT investment management, system development and 
management, and enterprise architecture management. The effective use 
of these practices can better ensure that future IT investments will 
be pursued in a way that optimizes mission performance. 

Develop More Reliable Life-Cycle Cost Estimates: 

Accurate cost estimates are essential for a successful census because 
they help ensure that the Bureau has adequate funds and that Congress, 
the Administration, and the Bureau itself can have reliable 
information on which to base decisions. However, we noted in our 2008 
report that the Bureau's cost estimate for the 2010 Census lacked 
detailed documentation on data sources and significant assumptions, 
and was not comprehensive because it did not include all 
costs.[Footnote 18] We noted that the Bureau had insufficient policies 
and procedures, and inadequately trained staff for conducting high-
quality cost estimation for the decennial census, and therefore 
recommended that the Bureau take a variety of steps to improve the 
credibility and accuracy of its cost estimates. Moreover, following 
best practices from our Cost Estimating and Assessment Guide, such as 
defining necessary resources and tasks, could have helped the Bureau 
generate more reliable cost estimates.[Footnote 19] 

Partly as a result of these issues, some operations had substantial 
variances between their initial cost estimates and their actual costs. 
For example, the Bureau initially estimated that NRFU would cost 
around $2.25 billion. However, by the end of the operation, the Bureau 
reported using approximately $1.59 billion, which was 29 percent lower 
than budgeted. At the same time, another operation--address 
canvassing--was around $88 million (25 percent) more than its initial 
budget of $356 million, according to a preliminary Bureau estimate. 

Moving forward, it will be important for the Bureau to ensure the 
reliability of the 2020 cost estimate, and the Bureau has already 
taken several actions in that regard. For example, based on 
recommendations from our June 2008 report, Bureau officials have 
stated that some of their budget staff have been trained and certified 
in cost estimation. The Bureau also has started using the Decennial 
Budget Integration Tool (DBiT). According to the Bureau, once it has 
completed entering all needed budget data, DBiT will consolidate 
budget information and enable the Bureau to better document its cost 
estimates. 

Further, as a part of its planning for 2020, Bureau officials said 
that they have developed and provided to the Office of Management and 
Budget (OMB) for its review a rough order of magnitude estimate for 
the 2020 Census--based on information at this early stage of 2020 
planning. In addition, the Bureau plans to develop a range of full 
life-cycle cost estimates in fiscal year 2013. As noted in our cost 
estimating guide, a life-cycle cost estimate can be thought of as a 
"cradle to grave" approach to managing a program throughout its useful 
life. Life-cycle costing enhances decision making, especially in early 
planning and concept formulation. Therefore, as the Bureau develops 
its estimates for 2020, it will be important for the Bureau to 
identify all cost elements that pertain to the program from initial 
concept all the way through operations and support. 

Providing reliable cost estimates that are developed early in a 
project's life-cycle and accompanied by sound justification will be 
important in order for Congress to make informed decisions about the 
levels at which to fund future decennial censuses. More specifically, 
greater fiscal transparency, before committing to a final design and a 
particular level of spending, could help inform deliberations on the 
extent to which (1) the cost of the census is reasonable, (2) trade- 
offs will need to be made with competing national priorities, and (3) 
additional dollars spent on the census yield better results. 

Ensure Key Census-Taking Activities Are Fully Tested: 

The census can be seen as a large, complex, yet inherently fragile 
machine comprised of thousands of moving parts, all of which must 
function in concert with one another in order to secure a cost- 
effective count. In short, while the census is under way, the 
tolerance for any breakdowns is quite small. Given this difficult 
operating environment, rigorous testing is a critical risk mitigation 
strategy because it provides information on the feasibility and 
performance of individual census-taking activities, their potential 
for achieving desired results, and the extent to which they are able 
to function together under full operational conditions. 

As the Bureau geared up for 2010, we expressed our concern about the 
testing of key IT systems and other census-taking activities. For 
example, partly because of the performance problems with the handheld 
computers noted earlier, the Bureau decided not to include two census 
operations (NRFU and Vacant/Delete Check) in the full dress rehearsal 
for the census that was scheduled for 2008.[Footnote 20] In lieu of a 
full dress rehearsal, the Bureau tested individual components of the 
census in isolation. However, without a full dress rehearsal, the 
Bureau was unable to demonstrate that various enumeration activities 
could function under near-census-like conditions. Although the Bureau 
had performed many of these activities in previous censuses, some 
operations--such as mailing a second questionnaire to households that 
did not complete their census forms by a certain date, the removal of 
late mail returns, and fingerprinting hundreds of thousands of 
temporary census workers--were new for 2010 and introduced new 
operational risks. While the actual enumeration generally proceeded 
according to expectations, some operations, most notably the automated 
system that the Bureau developed to manage the paper-based NRFU 
operation noted earlier, were unable to function under operational 
loads in part because of a compressed testing schedule. 

Moving forward, as the Bureau refines and implements its testing 
plans, our past work on census testing has shown that it will be 
important for its strategy to include, but not be limited to, these 
key components of a sound study: 

* clearly stated objectives with accompanying performance measures; 

* research questions linked to test objectives and, as appropriate, a 
clear rationale for why sites were selected for field tests; 

* a thoroughly documented data collection strategy; 

* input from stakeholders and lessons learned considered in developing 
test objectives; and: 

* a data analysis plan including, as appropriate, methods for 
determining the extent to which specific activities contribute to 
controlling costs and enhancing quality.[Footnote 21] 

While the Bureau does not plan to conduct its first major census test 
until April 2014, as part of its research and testing for 2020 the 
Bureau plans to conduct 26 tests in support of six different design 
alternatives between fiscal years 2012 and 2014. These design 
alternatives include, for example, improving the existing 2010 design, 
using administrative records for nonresponse follow-up, or increasing 
the number of available response options such as the Internet or cell 
phones. Key elements of the Bureau's research and testing strategy 
include: 

* performing many small focused field tests in lieu of a few large 
field tests as was the case for the 2010 Census; 

* setting up a virtual Local Census Office at Census Bureau 
headquarters to test new census methods; and: 

* using the American Community Survey--an ongoing Bureau survey of 
population and housing characteristics that is administered throughout 
the decade--as a vehicle to test specific census methods. 

These tests will be important for determining the feasibility of 
different design alternatives. We believe that given the number of 
tests and design alternatives that the Bureau plans to evaluate, it 
will be important to have a management structure in place for 
essential functions such as coordinating the tests; determining 
priorities; tracking the results; assessing their implications; 
weighing cost, accuracy, and other trade-offs; and ensuring that 
findings and recommendations are funneled to appropriate senior Bureau 
leadership for action. 

Lesson Learned #4: Ensure That the Bureau's Management, Culture, and 
Business Practices Are Aligned with a Cost-Effective Enumeration: 

On the basis of our earlier work on high-performing organizations, 
fundamental reforms will mean ensuring that the Bureau's 
organizational culture and structure, as well as its approach to 
strategic planning, human-capital management, internal collaboration, 
knowledge sharing, capital decision making, risk and change 
management, and other internal functions are aligned toward delivering 
more cost-effective outcomes.[Footnote 22] Indeed, some of the 
operational problems that occurred during the 2010 and prior censuses 
are symptomatic of deeper organizational issues. For example, the lack 
of staff skilled in cost estimation during the 2010 Census points to 
inadequate human-capital planning, while, as noted above, IT problems 
stemmed from not fully and consistently performing certain functions 
including IT investment management. 

Moreover, the Bureau's own assessment of its organization found that 
it has a number of strengths including a culture that is committed to 
accuracy, precision, objectivity, and the overall mission of the 
census, as well as a workforce that understands decennial operations, 
procedures, and critical subject matter. At the same time, the 
Bureau's assessment noted there were several areas for improvement. 
For example: 

* the Bureau is an insular organization and does not always embrace 
open communications, transparency, innovation, and change; 

* there were difficulties in drawing on assets and methods from across 
the agency; 

* the organizational structure makes it difficult to oversee a large 
program and hampers accountability, succession planning, and personal 
development, among other factors; and: 

* staff with core skills and experience were lacking in such areas as 
management of large programs and projects; cost estimating; and 
sophisticated technology, systems, and development. 

While reforms will be needed along a number of fronts, our recent work 
on governmentwide strategic human capital management highlights some 
key steps--some of which the Bureau is already taking--to help ensure 
it identifies and closes current and emerging skill gaps to ensure the 
Bureau has the workforce needed to effectively and efficiently design 
and execute a successful census. These steps include: 

* developing workforce plans that fully support the Bureau's need for 
highly skilled talent, including defining the root causes of skills 
gaps, identifying effective solutions to any shortages, and taking 
action to implement those solutions; 

* ensuring recruitment, hiring, and development strategies are 
responsive to changing applicant and workforce needs; and: 

* evaluating the performance of initiatives to address critical skill 
gaps and make appropriate adjustments.[Footnote 23] 

The Bureau Has Launched an Ambitious Planning Program for 2020: 

The Bureau, recognizing that it cannot afford to continue operating 
the way it does unless it fundamentally changes its method of doing 
business, has already taken some important first steps in addressing 
these questions, as well as other areas. For example, the Bureau is 
looking to reform certain aspects of its IT systems planning, in part 
to ensure that the technical infrastructure needed for 2020 will be 
tested many times before operations begin. The Bureau also is 
rebuilding its research directorate to lead early planning efforts, 
and has plans to assess and monitor the skills and competencies needed 
for the 2020 headcount. 

Further, the Bureau already has developed a strategic plan for 2020 
and other related documents that, among other things, lay out the 
structure of planning efforts; outline the mission and goals for 2020; 
and describe the research and testing phase of the next enumeration. 
For example, to address major cost drivers such as field 
infrastructure, labor, and IT systems, as well as, the quality of data 
collected, the Bureau has identified the following four research 
tracks that focus on an: 

* Expanded, Automated, and Tailored Response, which attempts to reduce 
paper, make it easier for the population to be counted, and tailor 
response options, such as the Internet. 

* Reengineered Field Structure, including a Bureau-wide integrated IT 
infrastructure that, for example, will allow for a real-time, Web-
based system to manage data collection in the field. 

* Continual Address Frame Updating and Targeting, which, for example, 
expands the sources of data, to include commercial databases and 
administrative records, in the Master Address File so that a full 
address canvassing may not be required at the end of the decade. 

* Using Administrative Records for Nonresponse, which includes a major 
study to determine to what extent administrative records can be used 
for nonrespondents. 

The Bureau's early planning efforts are noteworthy given the Bureau's 
long-standing challenges in this area. For example, in 1988, just 
prior to the 1990 Census, we noted that the Bureau's past planning 
efforts generally started late, experienced delays, were incomplete, 
and failed to fully explore innovative approaches.[Footnote 24] 
Planning for the 2000 Census also had its shortcomings, including, as 
we noted in our 2004 report, a persistent lack of priority-setting, 
coupled with minimal research, testing, and evaluation documentation 
to promote informed and timely decision making.[Footnote 25] And, 
while the planning process for the 2010 Census was initially more 
rigorous than for past decennials, in 2004 we reported that the 
Bureau's efforts lacked a substantial amount of supporting analysis, 
budgetary transparency, and other information, making it difficult for 
us, Congress, and other stakeholders to properly assess the 
feasibility of the Bureau's design and the extent to which it could 
lead to greater cost-effectiveness compared to alternative approaches. 
As a result, in 2004, we recommended that the Bureau develop an 
operational plan for 2010 that consolidated budget, methodological, 
and other relevant information into a single, comprehensive document. 

The Bureau later developed specific performance targets and an 
integrated project schedule for 2010. However, the other elements we 
recommended were only issued piecemeal, if available at all, and were 
never provided in a single, comprehensive document. Because this 
information was critical for facilitating a thorough, independent 
review of the Bureau's plans, as well as for demonstrating to Congress 
and other stakeholders that the Bureau could effectively design and 
manage operations and control costs, we believe that had it been 
available, it could have helped stave off, or at least reduce, the IT 
and other risks that confronted the Bureau as Census Day drew closer. 

The Bureau's strategic plan for 2020, first issued in 2009, is a 
"living" document that will be updated as planning efforts progress. 
As the approach for 2020 takes shape, it will be important for the 
Bureau to avoid some of the problems it had in documenting the 
planning process for the 2010 Census, and pull all the planning 
elements together into a tactical plan or road map. This will help 
ensure the Bureau's reform initiatives stay on track, do not lose 
momentum, and coalesce into a viable path toward a more cost-effective 
2020 Census. On the basis of our work on planning for the 2010 Census, 
a road map for 2020 could include, but not be limited to, the 
following elements that could be updated on a regular basis: 

* specific, measurable performance goals, how the Bureau's efforts, 
procedures, and projects would contribute to those goals, and what 
performance measures would be used; 

* descriptions of how the Bureau's approaches to human-capital 
management, organizational structure, IT acquisitions, and other 
internal functions are aligned with the performance goals; 

* an assessment of the risks associated with each significant 
decennial operation, including the interrelationships between the 
operations and a description of relevant mitigation plans; 

* detailed milestone estimates for each significant decennial 
operation, including estimated testing dates, and justification for 
any changes to milestone estimates; 

* detailed life-cycle cost estimates of the decennial census that are 
credible, comprehensive, accurate, and well-documented as stipulated 
by OMB and GAO guidance; and: 

* a detailed description of all significant contracts the Bureau plans 
to enter into and a risk management plan for those contracts. 

A comprehensive road map could generate several important benefits. 
For example, it could help ensure a measure of transparency and 
facilitate a more collaborative approach to planning the next census. 
Specifically, an operational plan could function as a template for 
2020 giving stakeholders a common framework to assess and comment on 
the design of the census and its supporting infrastructure, the 
resources needed to execute the design, and the extent to which it 
could lead to greater cost-effectiveness compared to alternative 
approaches. Further, it could be used to monitor the Bureau's progress 
in implementing its approach, and hold the agency accountable for 
results. Importantly, to the extent the plan--or aspects of it--are 
made available using social media tools, it could prompt greater and 
perhaps more constructive civic engagement on the census, by fostering 
an ongoing dialog involving individuals and communities of 
stakeholders throughout the decade. 

Concluding Observations: 

The Bureau goes to great lengths each decade to improve specific 
census-taking activities, but these incremental modifications have not 
kept pace with societal changes that make the population increasingly 
difficult to locate and count cost-effectively. The Bureau is fully 
aware of this problem and has wasted no time in turning the corner on 
the 2010 Census and launching the planning efforts needed for a more 
cost-effective enumeration come 2020. 

Many components are already in place, and a number of assessment and 
planning activities are already occurring. At the same time, the 
Bureau has also been responsive to the recommendations we have made in 
our past work. As these actions gather momentum in the years ahead, it 
will be important that they put the Bureau on a trajectory that boosts 
its capacity to conduct an accurate count, control costs, manage 
risks, and be more nimble in adapting to social, demographic, 
technological, and other changes that can be expected in the future. 
It will also be important for Congress to continue its strong 
oversight of the census to help ensure the progress the Bureau has 
made thus far continues going forward. We look forward to supporting 
the Subcommittee in its decision making and oversight of the decennial 
census. 

Chairman Carper, Ranking Member Brown, and Members of the 
Subcommittee, this concludes my prepared statement. I would be pleased 
to respond to any questions that you might have at this time. 

GAO Contacts: 

If you have any questions on matters discussed in this statement, 
please contact Robert Goldenkoff at (202) 512-2757 or by e-mail at 
goldenkoffr@gao.gov. Other key contributors to this testimony include 
Benjamin Crawford, Vijay D'Souza, Dewi Djunaidy, Ronald Fecso, Robert 
Gebhart, Richard Hung, Signora May, Lisa Pearson, Jonathan Ticehurst, 
and Timothy Wexler. 

[End of section] 

Related GAO Products: 

High-Risk Series: An Update. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-278]. Washington, D.C.: February 
2011. 

2010 Census: Data Collection Operations Were Generally Completed as 
Planned, but Long-standing Challenges Suggest Need for Fundamental 
Reforms. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-193]. 
Washington, D.C.: December 14, 2010. 

2010 Census: Key Efforts to Include Hard-to-Count Populations Went 
Generally as Planned; Improvements Could Make the Efforts More 
Effective for Next Census. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-45]. Washington, D.C.: December 14, 
2010. 

2010 Census: Follow-up Should Reduce Coverage Errors, but Effects on 
Demographic Groups Need to Be Determined. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-154]. Washington, D.C.: December 
14, 2010. 

2010 Census: Plans for Census Coverage Measurement Are on Track, but 
Additional Steps Will Improve Its Usefulness. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-324]. Washington, D.C.: April 23, 
2010. 

2010 Census: Data Collection Is Under Way, but Reliability of Key 
Information Technology Systems Remains a Risk. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-567T]. Washington, D.C.: March 25, 
2010. 

2010 Census: Key Enumeration Activities Are Moving Forward, but 
Information Technology Systems Remain a Concern. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-430T]. Washington, D.C.: February 
23, 2010. 

2010 Census: Census Bureau Continues to Make Progress in Mitigating 
Risks to a Successful Enumeration, but Still Faces Various Challenges. 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-132T]. Washington, 
D.C.: October 7, 2009. 

2010 Census: Census Bureau Should Take Action to Improve the 
Credibility and Accuracy of Its Cost Estimate for the Decennial 
Census. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-554]. 
Washington, D.C.: June 16, 2008. 

2010 Census: Census at Critical Juncture for Implementing Risk 
Reduction Strategies. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-659T]. Washington, D.C.: April 9, 
2008. 

Information Technology: Significant Problems of Critical Automation 
Program Contribute to Risks Facing 2010 Census. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-550T]. Washington, D.C.: March 5, 
2008. 

Information Technology: Census Bureau Needs to Improve Its Risk 
Management of Decennial Systems. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-259T]. Washington, D.C.: December 
11, 2007. 

2010 Census: Census Bureau Has Improved the Local Update of Census 
Addresses Program, but Challenges Remain. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-736]. Washington, D.C.: June 14, 
2007. 

Information Technology Management: Census Bureau Has Implemented Many 
Key Practices, but Additional Actions Are Needed. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-661]. Washington, D.C.: June 16, 
2005. 

21st Century Challenges: Reexamining the Base of the Federal 
Government. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-325SP]. 
Washington, D.C.: February 1, 2005. 

Information Technology Investment Management: A Framework for 
Assessing and Improving Process Maturity. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-394G]. Washington, D.C.: March 1, 
2004. 

Comptroller General's Forum, High-Performing Organizations: Metrics, 
Means, and Mechanisms for Achieving High Performance in the 21st 
Century Public Management Environment. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-343SP]. Washington, D.C.: February 
13, 2004. 

Human Capital: Key Principles for Effective Strategic Workforce 
Planning. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-39]. 
Washington, D.C.: December 11, 2003. 

2010 Census: Cost and Design Issues Need to Be Addressed Soon. 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-37]. Washington, D.C.: 
January 15, 2004. 

2000 Census: Lessons Learned for Planning a More Cost-Effective 2010 
Census. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-03-40]. 
Washington, D.C.: October 31, 2002. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] GAO, High Risk Series: Quick Reference Guide, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/HR-97-2] (Washington, D.C.: Feb. 1, 
1997), and GAO, Information Technology: Significant Problems of 
Critical Automation Program Contribute to Risks Facing 2010 Census, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-550T] (Washington, 
D.C.: Mar. 5, 2008). 

[2] High-risk areas are areas GAO has called special attention to 
because of their vulnerability to mismanagement or their broad need 
for reform. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-550T]. 

[3] GAO, High-Risk Series: An Update, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-278] (Washington, D.C.: February 
2011). 

[4] See related GAO products at the end of this statement. 

[5] See for example: GAO, Information Technology Investment 
Management: A Framework for Assessing and Improving Process Maturity, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-394G] (Washington, 
D.C.: March 2004); Comptroller General's Forum, High-Performing 
Organizations: Metrics, Means, and Mechanisms for Achieving High 
Performance in the 21st Century Public Management Environment, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-343SP] (Washington, 
D.C.: Feb. 13, 2004); Results-Oriented Government: Practices That Can 
Help Enhance and Sustain Collaboration among Federal Agencies, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-15], (Washington, D.C.: 
Oct. 21, 2005); 21st Century Challenges: Reexamining the Base of the 
Federal Government, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-325SP] (Washington, D.C.: February 
2005); and Human Capital: Key Principles for Effective Strategic 
Workforce Planning, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-39] 
(Washington, D.C.: Dec. 11, 2003). 

[6] See for example, GAO, Decennial Census: Preliminary 1990 Lessons 
Learned Indicate Need to Rethink Census Approach, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/T-GGD-90-18] (Washington, D.C.: Aug. 
8, 1990); and 2000 Census: Progress Made on Design, but Risks Remain, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-97-142] (Washington, 
D.C.: July 14, 1997). 

[7] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-97-142]. 

[8] GAO, 2010 Census: Data Collection Operations Were Generally 
Completed as Planned, but Long-standing Challenges Suggest Need for 
Fundamental Reforms, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-193] (Washington, D.C.: Dec. 14, 
2010). 

[9] NRFU is the largest and most costly census field operation, where 
the Bureau sends enumerators to collect data from households that did 
not mail back their census forms. 

[10] In the 2000 Census, the Bureau used both long-and short-form 
questionnaires. The short-form questionnaire had a higher response 
rate because it had fewer questions. For the 2010 Census, the Bureau 
used only a short-form questionnaire. For this report we use the 2000 
Census short-form mail response rate when comparing 2000 and 2010 mail-
back response rates. 

[11] The strategic plan for the 2020 Census defines the Census 
Bureau's mission and vision for 2020 and discusses the goals the 
Bureau will need to accomplish its mission. 

[12] GAO, 2010 Census: Efforts to Build an Accurate Address List Are 
Making Progress, but Face Software and Other Challenges, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-140T] (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 21, 
2009). 

[13] GAO, 2010 Census: Census Bureau Has Improved the Local Update of 
Census Addresses Program, but Challenges Remain, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-736] (Washington, D.C.: June 14, 
2007). 

[14] A well-defined enterprise architecture provides a clear and 
comprehensive picture of an entity, whether it is an organization 
(e.g., a federal department) or a functional or mission area that cuts 
across more than one organization (e.g., personnel management). This 
picture consists of snapshots of both the enterprise's current or "As 
Is" environment and its target or "To Be" environment, as well as a 
capital-investment road map for transitioning from the current to the 
target environment. 

[15] GAO, Information Technology Management: Census Bureau Has 
Implemented Many Key Practices, but Additional Actions Are Needed, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-661] (Washington, D.C.: 
June 16, 2005). 

[16] GAO, Census 2010: Census at Critical Juncture for Implementing 
Risk Reduction Strategies, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-659T] (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 9, 
2008); Information Technology: Census Bureau Needs to Improve Its Risk 
Management of Decennial Systems, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-259T] (Washington, D.C.: Dec. 11, 
2007); and [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-550T]. 

[17] See, for example, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-661]; GAO, Census Bureau: Important 
Activities for Improving Management of Key 2010 Decennial Acquisitions 
Remain to be Done, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-
444T] (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 1, 2006); Information Technology: Census 
Bureau Needs to Improve Its Risk Management of Decennial Systems, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-79] (Washington, D.C.: 
Oct. 5, 2007); and Information Technology: Census Bureau Testing of 
2010 Decennial Systems Can Be Strengthened, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-262] (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 5, 
2009). 

[18] GAO, 2010 Census: Census Bureau Should Take Action to Improve the 
Credibility and Accuracy of Its Cost Estimate for the Decennial 
Census, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-554] 
(Washington, D.C.: June 16, 2008). 

[19] GAO, GAO Cost Estimating And Assessment Guide: Best Practices for 
Developing and Managing Capital Program Costs, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-3SP] (Washington, D.C.: March 2009). 

[20] Vacant/Delete Check is an operation the Bureau conducts to verify 
the status of housing units flagged earlier in the census as being 
unoccupied or nonexistent. 

[21] GAO, 2010 Census: Basic Design has Potential, but Remaining 
Challenges Need Prompt Resolution, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-9] (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 12, 
2005). 

[22] See for example: [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-394G], [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-39], [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-343SP], [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-325SP], and [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-15]. 

[23] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-278]. 

[24] GAO, Transition Series: Commerce Issues, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/OCG-89-11TR] (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 1, 
1988). 

[25] GAO, 2010 Census: Cost and Design Issues Need to Be Addressed 
Soon, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-37] (Washington, 
D.C.: Jan. 15, 2004). 

[End of section] 

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