So, I just got back from an out of town trip (I've been living out of a suitcase for pretty much two months, off and on.) to find this "Community work project survey" in my mailbox. Apparently they want to build a sidewalk on my street because my street is considered a "Low to middle income neighborhood" and is eligible for funding for such projects. A sidewalk would be awesome. I hope we get one. We had to pay for our pavement and street lights out of pocket.
It asks a bunch of questions, including but not limited to:
How many people live there?
How much is your family income?
What ethnicity are you?
I got the thing late last night and it was due today or tomorrow. Some census type drone showed up here earlier this evening to collect it. I didn't talk to him. In fact, I didn't know he was here until the husband came back in and told me about. Which is too bad, because I had a few questions of my own:
1. Isn't this was the census I filled out was for (I got the short form. Which is good, because I wouldn't have filled out the long form.The short form is reasonable, so I filled it out and turned it in. )? That's how they explain what the census info is for, right? So they know where to fund projects such as these?
2. How is my ethnicity relevant? If I am the wrong ethnicity, do we not get our sidewalk? What ethnicity qualifies for a free sidewalk, exactly? We're a bit of a mix on our street, if I'm the wrong ethnicity, is the sidewalk going to stop in front of my house and pick up when the next house comes up with the proper DNA living in it? My husband is tri racial, does that mean they'll partially pave it or use a shittier grade concrete in front of my place than in front of houses with the proper ethnicity they're looking for? Or maybe they'll make it one or two thirds narrower in front of my place?
The husband just kindly told the worker (who was very nice) that the questions were too intrusive, we'd already filled out our census form from when they did that, and so we weren't going to turn the survey back in. The worker told him that we were something like the forth house on our side of the street that had declined. I should mention my street is a cul de sac and is not that long. Four is a pretty good number of declines. And the guy wasn't half done.
So I guess I"m just sort of flabbergasted at the perceived need to send out something like this. I mean, I keep coming back to the whole census thing. These surveys are not cheap to do. Why are they doing this when they just took an official census not long ago?
It asks a bunch of questions, including but not limited to:
How many people live there?
How much is your family income?
What ethnicity are you?
I got the thing late last night and it was due today or tomorrow. Some census type drone showed up here earlier this evening to collect it. I didn't talk to him. In fact, I didn't know he was here until the husband came back in and told me about. Which is too bad, because I had a few questions of my own:
1. Isn't this was the census I filled out was for (I got the short form. Which is good, because I wouldn't have filled out the long form.The short form is reasonable, so I filled it out and turned it in. )? That's how they explain what the census info is for, right? So they know where to fund projects such as these?
2. How is my ethnicity relevant? If I am the wrong ethnicity, do we not get our sidewalk? What ethnicity qualifies for a free sidewalk, exactly? We're a bit of a mix on our street, if I'm the wrong ethnicity, is the sidewalk going to stop in front of my house and pick up when the next house comes up with the proper DNA living in it? My husband is tri racial, does that mean they'll partially pave it or use a shittier grade concrete in front of my place than in front of houses with the proper ethnicity they're looking for? Or maybe they'll make it one or two thirds narrower in front of my place?
The husband just kindly told the worker (who was very nice) that the questions were too intrusive, we'd already filled out our census form from when they did that, and so we weren't going to turn the survey back in. The worker told him that we were something like the forth house on our side of the street that had declined. I should mention my street is a cul de sac and is not that long. Four is a pretty good number of declines. And the guy wasn't half done.
So I guess I"m just sort of flabbergasted at the perceived need to send out something like this. I mean, I keep coming back to the whole census thing. These surveys are not cheap to do. Why are they doing this when they just took an official census not long ago?
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