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All ‘Usual Residents’ to Be Counted in National Census

By: , August 28, 2022

The Key Point:

The Statistical Institute of Jamaica (STATIN) is advising the public that only persons who are “usual residents” of Jamaica on Census Day, will be counted in the 15th Population and Housing Census when data collection gets under way.
All ‘Usual Residents’ to Be Counted in National Census
Photo: Yhomo Hutchinson
All ‘Usual Residents’ to Be Counted in National Census
Photo: Yhomo Hutchinson
Prime Minister, the most Hon. Andrew Holness (right), greets Director-General, Statistical Institute of Jamaica (STATIN), Carol Coy, during the recent launch of the 2022 Population and Housing Census at the AC Marriott Kingston Hotel. Looking on are (left to right) STATIN Deputy Director-General, Leesha Delatie-Budair; and Chairman, Professor David Tennant.

The Facts

  • The census is a count of the country’s population and provides social and demographic data, details of the housing stock, and information at the community level and on hard-to-count population.
  • Data collection will begin on September 13 and end in December 2022.

The Full Story

The Statistical Institute of Jamaica (STATIN) is advising the public that only persons who are ‘usual residents’ of Jamaica on Census Day, Monday September 12, will be counted in the 15th Population and Housing Census when data collection gets under way.

Usual residents are those persons who spend the greater part of the year (six months or more) or on average four nights of the week at the same residence.

“Whether you are a citizen or not, if you are a resident in Jamaica on Census Day, you will be counted,” said Director-General, STATIN, Carol Coy, at the recent launch event held at the AC Marriott Kingston Hotel.

Census Day will serve as the reference point for the data being collected.

Ms. Coy further informed that visitors staying in hotels, guesthouses or on ships in harbour, diplomatic personnel and persons not normally resident in Jamaica but who maintain summer homes, will not be counted.

“For example, we have relatives who have homes in Jamaica, and they’ll come back for about four months for the year; they will not be counted because they are not a usual resident of Jamaica,” Ms. Coy explained.

The census is a count of the country’s population and provides social and demographic data, details of the housing stock, information at the community level and on hard-to-count population.

The main area of counting will be within persons’ private homes.

“We will also be going to correctional institutions, children’s homes, infirmaries and drop-in centres, boarding and residential schools, university and college residencies, military camps, police training schools and police barracks, hospitals and homes providing specialised long-term care and persons living on the street and in the cays,” Ms. Coy said.

Ms. Coy further encouraged participation in the census, noting that all responses are confidential and that “census data are important for the development of our community, parish and country”.

The 2022 Census is being conducted under the theme ‘Yuh Count, Mi Count, All A Wi Count’.

More than 7,500 field workers have been recruited to conduct the engagement that will see tablet computers being used for the first time in the data-collection exercise.

Data collection will begin on September 13 and end in December.

Last Updated: August 28, 2022

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