I mean, the funny part is that we didn’t live here at the time, so I’ve actually answered the census three times already. Once at the address we did live at, and twice now for the one we didn’t live at, and I just got a fourth request.
It says “Census2020” on the paper. And the person who came to the door clearly identified herself as being with the census.
Earlier in the year the Census Bureau conducted the ACS(American Community Survey), which is entirely different from the Census itself and does not eliminate the need to fill out the actual Census survey.
I encountered quite a few people who claimed that they already did the Census either online, via mail or in person and, after eliminating the ones that thought that receiving the half-sheet notice telling them to contact the Census Bureau counted as actually taking the Census(a disturbingly higher number than you might think), there were still enough of these claims to make you think the system is a bit broken in places.
I suspect that the antiquated computer system they use cannot both collect and collate at the same time, so if someone fills out and submits Census data after their name has been sent out to us Census workers the data just isn’t being updated effectively.
A lot of it is the right hand not knowing what the left hand is doing. Written response went to Office A, web-based response went to Office B, while a census person, ignorant of all this, out trying to get you to call/write/go online to Office C.
I had a stats expert explain that the redundancy is needed for an accurate count, but it sure is annoying.
It’s tough to be sure what’s happening. After you filed online and then moved to a new home, the follow-up visits were probably connected to finding out about who lived in your current home on April 1, 2020.
There is a software bug in the enumerator’s iPhones. The first time an enumerator visits an address that’s occupied by an “In Mover” they ask the In Mover if he knows anything about who was living in that domicile on April 1. If he doesn’t know then the enumerator is sent back again in about 3 days.
The iPhone instructs the enumerator to knock on the door again, but also has a list of instructions that says not to contact the InMover (who has already said that they don’t know anything). So, if an enumerator numbly follows his instructions, without reading all the counter-commands, he could visit an In Mover THREE times, before being instructed to attempt to find a “proxy” (a neighbor, an apartment manager, or someone walking their dog past the house, who might know something about the April 1st residents).
I don’t know if that explains any or all of your redundant contacts, but it’s a real, and common, thing that causes multiple visits.
To clarify: I filled the census out online twice (well, now three times). Once for the old address and once (now twice) for the new.
And when the enumerator spoke to me personally, I told her who was living in the house on April 1. No one was. I wasn’t unaware of who was living here.
But anyway. I do realize that there are bugs and inefficiencies in the process.