Chicago Sun-Times

QUICK WAY TO UNDERMINE CENSUS? ASK PEOPLE ABOUT CITIZENSHI­P

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Are you a legal citizen of the United States?

That question, in some shape or form, could be included in the 2020 Census, and that’s not good.

It could result in serious financial harm to Illinois and other states that have significan­t immigrant population­s, increase the already high cost of conducting the Census and undermine the entire point of the effort.

If the purpose of the Census, conducted every 10 years, is to get an accurate count of how many people live in the United States, regardless of legal status, poking around with a question about citizenshi­p is an excellent way to fail.

The results of the Census determine each state’s share of representa­tion in Congress, as well as each state’s cut of the hundreds of billions of dollars in federal money allocated every year. If the Census includes “a question regarding citizenshi­p” on its questionna­ire, as the Justice Department has requested, there will be a significan­t undercount in Illinois and other states with so- called “hard to count” population­s.

Add that to the Census Bureau’s other big problems this year — underfundi­ng and mismanagem­ent — and the result will be a 2020 Census count that nobody can trust.

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross would be wise to tell the Justice Department that its question won’t be on the final Census form to be submitted to Congress for approval by the end of March. If Ross does throw the question in, Congress should throw it out.

The Census Bureau already has its hands full trying to ensure its first mostly online census works smoothly. The bureau’s director left in May and hasn’t been replaced, and Congress is insisting the bureau spend no more than the $ 13 billion it spent the last time around, despite 10 years of inflation and millions more people to count.

There is too little time left to field- test the citizenshi­p question, which normally would be done, but anybody can guess what the reception would be. Undocument­ed immigrants wouldn’t fill out the forms. Neither would large numbers of legal immigrants, worried about which group of foreigners President Donald Trump will target next.

Already, the 2020 Census is unlikely to be kind to Illinois, which likely will slip in status to being only the sixth- largest state, and experts predict Chicago will drop down a rung to become the nation’s fourthlarg­est city.

Illinois’ congressio­nal delegation likely will shrink even if the Census count is accurate.

The more people withdraw into the shadows, declining to participat­e in the Census, the more the bureau will be forced to send out enumerator­s to track down those people. That’s expensive and not especially effective. The final count still will be shaky.

The Justice Department, led by Jeff Sessions, an attorney general known for his anti- immigratio­n agenda, says it wants to include the citizenshi­p question as part of an effort to better enforce our nation’s election laws.

Before all else, the purpose of the Census is to count everybody. Let’s stick to the job.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/ AP FILE PHOTO ?? Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross appears on Oct. 12 before the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform to discuss preparing for the 2020 Census in Washington.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/ AP FILE PHOTO Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross appears on Oct. 12 before the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform to discuss preparing for the 2020 Census in Washington.

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