DavidEduardo said:holyradio said:David, since you seem to know everything about this issue... I thought you might know the answer to this question. Do you have to be a legal US citizen to be on the Arbriton PPM panel in Las Vegas?
Nope.
You don't have to be a citizen to be in the US. You can be a legal resident, too (with a "green card" which is, actually, pink). Or a tourist. Or a student.
You don't have to be a citizen or even a legal resident to be counted in the US Census. You just have to live in the US.
Since Arbitron uses a derivative of the Census (processed by Claritas) to define the "universe" of each market, it's pretty obvious that neither citizenship nor legal residency would be a requirement. Having some kind of permanent residence is, but only so that the docking of the meters can take place and so the meters can be attributed to a particular sampling unit. Otherwise, anyone is eligible.
Well David,
I’m sure glad that Arbitron just made Spanish speaking illegal immigrants more valuable in PPM than an English speaking US citizen. I’m sure the general market stations that got jumped by both Spanish Language stations should feel that this absolutely fair and justified.