You’re number 1: Residents of remote Eskimo village in Alaska up first in 2010 census count

By Rachel Doro, AP
Monday, January 25, 2010

You’re number 1: Alaska village up first in census

NOORVIK, Alaska — The U.S. Census Bureau is launching its 2010 count of the nation’s residents in a remote Alaska village. Census Bureau Director Robert Groves flew to Noorvik in northwest Alaska on Monday to count the first household in the Inupiat Eskimo community of 650. Groves and other officials were taken to the village school by sled dog teams driven by schoolchildren; he even took a brief stint at the reins.

“Thank you for that greeting, that was spectacular,” Groves told Noorvik Mayor Bobby Wells after a large crowd gathered at the school to meet him.

The first to be counted will be Clifton Jackson, a World War II veteran and the oldest resident, according to residents.

Villagers have prepared a day of festivities at the school to welcome Groves and other visiting federal, state and tribal officials. The residents plan to hold traditional dances, an Inupiat fashion show and a feast of subsistence foods including moose and caribou.

The school also will serve as lodging for Groves and most of the 50 visitors, who will bunk down in empty classrooms.

Census workers and trained locals are expected to take a week to interview the rest of Noorvik’s residents, using the same 10-question forms to be mailed to most households on March 15. Census workers also will visit 217 other rural Alaska communities in the coming weeks.

Alaskans in rural communities that, like Noorvik, are not linked by roads have been the first residents counted since the 1990 census. These communities are the places where the process is first conducted in person by census workers, who also make personal visits to nonresponding residents around the country.

It’s easier to get census counters to the villages around Alaska before muddy conditions brought on by the spring thaw makes access more difficult, according to Ralph Lee, director of the bureau’s Seattle region, which oversees Alaska.

Many rural Alaskans also still live off the land, fishing and hunting for their food. Lee said it’s important to reach villagers before they set off for fishing camps or hunting expeditions.

After the weather warms, Noorvik residents will hunt for moose, caribou, seal, geese and ducks. They also will fill their freezers with salmon, trout and other fish from the Kobuk River.

Noorvik Mayor Bobby Wells said a handful of residents spend even winter in their camps, but they’re expected to be in the community for the count because of its influence on federal funding and congressional representation.

Noorvik, just north of the Arctic Circle, was chosen as the launching point after census officials met with leaders in a number of Alaska villages. Lee said Noorvik turned out be ideal because it is a good size and only 45 miles east of a hub town, Kotzebue, a destination for commercial flights. From the town of 3,100, the census travelers are taking a quick charter flight to Noorvik.

Village leaders also were very open about wanting the enumeration to begin there, Lee said.

Associated Press Photographer Carolyn Kaster contributed to this report.

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