Building Partnerships On the Road to Census 2000 - Census Bureau - census-2025

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The first of a series of Census 2000 briefs, titled Overview of Race and Hispanic Origin, showed the following for the 274.6 million people who reported only one race: White 75.1 percent. Black or African American 12.3 percent. American Indian and Alaska Native 0.9 percent.
In previous censuses, responses to the race question were limited to a single category; in 2000, for the first time, respondents could check as many boxes as necessary to identify their race. A 1996 law mandated a new question on grandparents as care givers.
The census tells us who we are and where we are going as a nation, and helps our communities determine where to build everything from schools to supermarkets, and from homes to hospitals. It helps the government decide how to distribute funds and assistance to states and localities.
In previous censuses, responses to the race question were limited to a single category; in 2000, for the first time, respondents could check as many boxes as necessary to identify their race.
This was the first census in which a stateCaliforniarecorded a population of over 30 million, as well as the first in which two statesCalifornia and Texasrecorded populations of more than 20 million.
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The largest group reported White alone, ac- counting for 75 percent of all people living in the United States. The Black or African American alone population represented 12 percent of the total. Just under 1 percent of all respondents indi- cated only American Indian and Alaska Native.
(For the 2000 Census, there is a proposal to use sampling to adjust for undercount, and to follow up some people who do not mail back their census forms.

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