Here's the latest AI Photo of Ditas, I prompted ChatGPT the other day.
Ditas Katague is recognized as a premier national expert in multi-ethnic civic engagement. During her time leading the California Complete Count – Census 2020 Office and as the Associate Director for Communications at the U.S. Census Bureau, she deployed data-driven, highly localized outreach strategies to empower historically undercounted and marginalized communities.
Her specific, groundbreaking outreach methods focus heavily on breaking down trust barriers and creating targeted accessibility:
1. Activating "Trusted Messengers"
Katague recognized that government agencies are often met with deep-seated distrust in immigrant and minority neighborhoods. Rather than relying strictly on government personnel, her strategy funneled resources into grassroots networks. [
- Community-Based Organizations (CBOs): Her office partnered directly with local non-profits, faith leaders, and neighborhood advocates who already held the community's trust.
- Ethnic Media Partnerships: Instead of just buying mainstream ads, Katague built targeted alliances with niche, Black-owned, Hispanic, and Asian media outlets. For instance, she worked with Voice Media Ventures to address educational gaps and distrust specifically within California's Black communities.
2. Micro-Targeted "In-Language" Communications
Language barriers are a major deterrent to civic participation. Katague pioneered multilingual and multimedia campaigns that adapted strictly to the unique demographics of tiny, localized geographic zones.
- Customized Messaging: Materials were translated into dozens of languages and dialects to ensure comfort and clarity.
- Cultural Contextualization: Language support wasn't just literal translation; the messaging was tailored to address the unique cultural fears of specific populations—such as reassuring undocumented immigrants about data privacy and confidentiality.
3. Data-First Mapping (The CA Hard-to-Count Index)
Katague utilized advanced data analytics to decide exactly where to deploy limited outreach budgets.
- Resource Allocation: She used the California Hard-to-Count (CA-HTC) Index alongside the "SwORD" mapping portal to pinpoint exactly which street blocks and neighborhoods had historical trends of low participation.
- Precision Deployment: This data told her field teams precisely where to send door-to-door canvassers, where to mail flyers, and which specific ethnic groups needed immediate attention.
4. Physical Accessibility Hubs (QACs and QAKs)
To bridge the digital divide for households lacking reliable broadband internet, Katague oversaw the deployment of physical walk-in assistance centers.
- Questionnaire Assistance Centers (QACs): These were pop-up stations located in trusted local areas like public libraries, markets, and community hubs where residents could securely log on to computers to fill out their forms.
- Questionnaire Assistance Kiosks (QAKs): These stations provided dedicated, in-person language support to physically walk residents through any confusing terminology in the government paperwork.
5. Multi-Agency and Caseworker Integration
Rather than treating civic engagement as an isolated event, Katague embedded outreach infrastructure into preexisting public service networks.
- Caseworker Training: State and local social workers, health caseworkers, and school staff were trained to talk about the importance of community representation during their everyday interactions with multi-ethnic families.
- School-Based Curriculums: She utilized pilot school programs to educate children about civic participation, knowing they would bring that vital information home to their immigrant parents
By giving local communities the funds, languages, and technical tools to count themselves, Katague's outreach models achieved self-response rates that repeatedly outpaced national averages.
Before moving to her high-profile national census roles, Ditas Katague served as the Chief of Staff to California Public Utilities Commissioner Catherine Sandoval. During her six-year term in this role (from 2011 to 2017), she was responsible for democratizing the regulatory process for the state's 39 million residents.
The California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) regulates massive private companies that provide everyday essential needs—like electricity, natural gas, clean water, and telephone lines. Katague used her background in grassroots communication to completely overhaul how regular, working-class communities interacted with this powerful government agency.Her core areas of impact at the CPUC included:
1. Opening Up the "Utility Rate Case" Process
When utility companies want to raise monthly electricity or gas prices, they must go through a rigid legal process called a "rate case." Historically, these proceedings were dominated by high-priced corporate lawyers, making them incredibly difficult for regular citizens to understand.
- Simplifying Complex Systems: Katague worked to improve public access to the rate and regulation pipeline. She translated confusing technical jargon about energy grids and infrastructure costs into plain language so everyday consumers knew exactly how price shifts would affect their wallets.
- Structuring Public Participation Hearings (PPHs): She helped oversee the scheduling and format of community hearings. This allowed low-income families and neighborhood groups to look the regulators in the eye and give formal public testimonies before any rate hikes were approved.
2. Championing Environmental Justice Rulemaking
Environmental justice is the idea that poor or minority neighborhoods should not suffer from higher rates of pollution or weaker public services just because of their ZIP code.
- Policy Oversight: As Chief of Staff, Katague directly managed the Commissioner's team of advisors to embed environmental justice goals straight into official state rulemaking.
- Protecting Vulnerable Communities: She fought to ensure that when the state planned major updates to telecommunications or clean energy infrastructure, local immigrant and rural communities were actively invited to the planning table rather than ignored.
3. Expanding Telecommunications Access (The Digital Divide)
Commissioner Sandoval’s office focused heavily on expanding internet and telephone access to tribal lands, poor rural farming areas, and inner-city neighborhoods.
- Universal Access: Katague coordinated public outreach campaigns to let low-income families know about subsidized telephone and broadband internet programs (like California LifeLine).
- Listening to the Disconnected: She helped bring the Commission's attention to areas with poor cell service or high internet costs, making sure that multi-ethnic communities were treated as vital stakeholders in the state's technology future.
By building open pathways into the CPUC's legal hearings, Katague proved that the same outreach models she used for the U.S. Census could be used to protect consumers and hold powerful utility companies accountable.
Finally, Her Photo of the Day at Our Andaman Thai Dinner Last Night



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