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Brooklyn Nonprofits Receive Nearly $500K in Funding to Help the Borough’s Census Response Rate

We are proud to award $493,216 in state funding in partnership with Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adam to community-based organizations to help increase the 2020 Census count.

Read the Full Story from AM New York

As of Sept. 15, 56.6 percent of Brooklyn’s households have responded to the census. With just under two weeks until the deadline, Brooklyn has the lowest response rate compared to the rest of the four boroughs — Brooklyn is also considered the hardest-to-count country in New York State, with roughly 80 percent of Brooklyn residents living in hard-to-reach neighborhoods.

“We have less than two weeks left to make Brooklyn and New York City count. The stakes could not be higher. An undercount will mean a loss of political representation and federal resources at a time when we can least afford it. I urge those who have not yet filled out their Census to do so as soon as possible. It is an act of civic altruism to your neighbors and your community,” said Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams.

The funding will go towards creating advertising through the media, including print and digital media, television, local radio, billboard or social media advertisements, as well as signage to promote filling out the census. The funding will also go towards more targeted advertising, including placing advertisements in ethnic press outlets and creating multilingual outreach materials and media campaigns, a transit advertisement program targeting Americans and non-English speaking people and the production of newsletters and flyers for elderly populations.

Informational kiosks will be set up in strategic locations to target the hard-to-count Brooklyn populations, which will have shareable printed outreach materials such as posters, flyers and multi-lingual palm cards. The funding will also be used to implement phone-banking and texting outreach operations as well as provide brochures and census sign-up capabilities at local food pantries. 

“Brooklyn’s nonprofit community–the most trusted Census messengers–fought hard for this funding and we are proud to help deploy this critical support to bolster their essential work in advance of the 2020 survey deadline,” said Cecilia Clarke, President and CEO, Brooklyn Community Foundation. “As founding members of the Brooklyn Complete Count Committee, we have long recognized that making Brooklyn count 100% in the 2020 Census is a matter of racial and social justice for our communities, to ensure that everyone gets the resources and representation they are owed. We are grateful to New York State for its investment in getting Brooklyn to the finish line.”
 
The following organizations will act as sub-grantees who will carry out this work in Kings County:

  • 67 Precinct Clergy Council
  • Apna Brooklyn Community Center, Inc.
  • Arab-American Family Support Center
  • Asian American Federation
  • Bridge Street Development Corporation
  • Brooklyn Community Services
  • Brooklyn Public Library
  • Churches United For Fair Housing
  • East Flatbush Village, Inc.
  • East New York Restoration Local Development Corporation
  • Faith in New York
  • Flatbush Development Corporation
  • Grand Street Settlement, Inc.
  • Haiti Cultural Exchange
  • Mixteca Organization, Inc.
  • Neighbors Allied for Good Growth dba North Brooklyn Neighbor
  • St. Nicks Alliance
  • The Campaign Against Hunger
  • The New York Immigration Coalition, Inc.
  • The New York Urban League
Categories: 
Census 2020

Liane Stegmaier

Chief of Staff (She/Her/Hers)