Census test kicking off across Australia

The Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) has announced that its large-scale Census test of around 100,000 households across Australia will start rolling out this week.  

ABS Census executive director and national spokesperson, Andrew Henderson, said the test was part of the extensive planning for the next Census in August 2021. 

“This is the biggest test we’ll run before the Census to make sure it is easy for people to complete, our processes work and the Census form captures information accurately,” Mr Henderson said. 

“Please take part if you’re selected for the test. Your participation will help us make sure the next Census is successful and produces the highest quality data.

“This data is used to plan and deliver infrastructure and services across the country – things that individuals, families and communities use every day like schools, health care, transport and roads. 

“Census data has also been crucial during the coronavirus pandemic to help model the economic and social impacts of COVID-19,” he said.         

Mr Henderson explained that households selected for the test will soon receive a letter or form with instructions on how to take part. 

“You can complete your test form as soon as you receive your instructions if you know who will be at home on Census test night Tuesday 27 October 2020,” Mr Henderson said. 

“You can also do it on Census test night or afterwards. This window of time, rather than a single night, will also be available for the Census next year – for the first time in the history of the Census. 

“We know people expect flexibility and convenience, so this will make it easier for people to fill in their form when it best suits them,” he said. 

The last Australian Census increased the retention period for names and addresses from 18 months in the 2006 and 2011 censuses to four years in the 2016 Census. That move prompted Australian Senate crossbenchers to suggest not filling out those sections on the Census over privacy concerns.

These concerns were heightened as it was the first time online submission was preferred over the traditional paper forms.

They are yet to indicate whether they will make the same recommendations next year.

For more information about the Census test visit www.census.abs.gov.au.

Have you been selected to take part in the Census test? What questions have you noticed that are different? Will you be providing your name and address details?

4 comments

I filled in my Census test today. Nothing complicated and I did provide my name and address. I've got nothing

to hide. They asked the usual questions, how many live at your house, were you at this address during the last

Census. They send you a receipt when you have finished it. If you don't reply they will send you a reminder and if

you still don't reply you can expect a visit from a Census Field Officer.

Fill it in when it comes in, no problems with the questions but cannot really understand why they need to know whether I am Aboriginal, Torres Straight Islander. Like to see the question reworked if it has to be asked at all into: - Are you an indigenous Australian or have you been born overseas, skin color should not matter. Have lived in South Africa for a few years and everyone classified. Would have thought that we left this sad story behind us.

Mariner,  these figures collected by the answer to Question about Aboriginal and TI etc is one of the only way of tracking population proprtions etc.  Simply being born here after British colonisation, does not make someone Indigenous, still need to be of Aboriginal or TI origin.

McDaddy - that is only because we designed it so, there is no longer a question about how much you are indigenous, you just have to say you are and that in my humble opinion is stupid. I am indigenous to a country in Europe and I got papers to prove that. But as citizens we are all the same and no-one wants to make us different. Aren't we on the way to an apartheid system in this country? Us and them? Not all in this together as the ABC jingle says?

Mariner- I think you'll find it is just used to direct funding to programs like closing the gap etc. So you are descendant of the Saami peoples?

What difference does skin colour make when referring to being of indigenous extraction?  Most "indigenous" folk have white genes in then to a greater or lesser extent anyway.

   

Question is: Who is allowed to check it? How do they know we fill it in correctly, do we give honest answers. I do not want to fill in questionnaires about my income apart from the ATO and Centrelink.

When we go and vote all I need a name and address here, not even ID is checked. If you want to vote with your mate's name no problem. Reckon that should be fixed - in Australia everyone can have ID. In my State the driver's licence will do or you can get the Photo Card, free for age pensioners, valid for 10 years.

WE all do have an Australian ID - its called a Tax File Number.  I know that you can opt not to have one but in practice its almost impossible to live without one.  On the matter of security, data on a computer is never completely safe, even if the computer is in a locked secure room, isolated from the internet and with secure restricted access.  Look at the recent data breaches - nothing is safe and never will be.  About the only safeguard you can control is how much you reveal on social media.  Welcome to the 21st century.  And by the way, data mining companies can control much in our lives using data either publicly available or hacked from so called secure storage - targeted advertising and fake political news, to name two obvious areas.

You cannot show a tax file number at a polling booth or voting station, it needs a photo and address to show who you are. I needed one in the bank the other day, no problem as I carry an ID all times.

No need to get worried people your secret lives is no secret, the government already knows all. All they are concerned about is how many bodies dead or alive were in your house on census night.

Do you have to list the dead ones as well? Wonder how they fill in their forms.

There are some situations where being of Aboriginal heritage indicates the risk of disadvantage. For e.g. Aboriginal people are more prone to particular health problems, such as kidney disease and diabetes. Knowing about someone’s heritage is obviously important in health settings. That is the reason why the question is asked on the census form whether you are Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander, not because of skin colour.

4 comments



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