Connecticut Post

Judge: Census count must continue

- WA S H I N G T O N P O S T

A federal judge has ordered that the 2020 Census continue until Oct. 31, blocking for now the government’s efforts to complete the survey in time to deliver apportionm­ent data to the president by the end of the year.

The ruling late Thursday night by U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh of the Northern District of California follows a tense week in which the government appeared to try to circumvent a preliminar­y injunction against ending the count early.

After a surprise announceme­nt Monday that the bureau was moving the end date by just five days, from Sept. 30 to Oct. 5, plaintiffs in the case asked Koh to provide clarificat­ion of her earlier order and other sanctions.

Rejecting the government’s argument that the request was “an attempt to radically modify the preliminar­y injunction,” Koh’s new ruling clarified that the end date for collection must revert to Oct. 31, as the bureau had originally planned.

It also ordered that on Friday, the government must send text messages to all Census Bureau employees notifying them of the Oct. 31 end date, and that Director Steven Dillingham must file a declaratio­n by Monday that “unequivoca­lly confirms Defendants’ ongoing compliance with the Injunction Order and details the steps Defendants have taken to prevent future violations of the Injunction Order.”

The suit, brought by the National Urban League and a group of counties, cities and others, said a truncated schedule would irreparabl­y harm communitie­s that might be undercount­ed.

On Friday, Kristen Clarke, president and executive director of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, which is arguing the case, said, “Once again, the court has stopped the administra­tion in its tracks.” Noting that some states with significan­t minority population­s still face an undercount, she added, “Much work remains to be done to achieve an accurate census count that satisfies constituti­onal standards.”

The Justice and Commerce department­s did not respond to requests for comment.

The government had appealed Koh’s Sep. 24 injunction to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit, which denied the appeal Tuesday.

Neverthele­ss, Koh found that after her injunction, the government continued to tell employees to wind down operations by Sept. 30, and the Census Bureau’s website, “which is updated daily,” continued for four days after her injunction to say that data collection would end that day.

The ruling said the court had received “a slew of emails from enumerator­s across the country that include supervisor texts with erroneous informatio­n and that express concern about the ending of field operations without adequate counts.”

Koh’s ruling found that the government’s switch to a Monday deadline had “the same legal defects” as the revised “Replan” that it abruptly announced in early August, which shaved one month off the count.

Canceling a hearing planned for Friday afternoon, Koh set a case management conference for Tuesday.

Earlier this year, the bureau had said it was extending the count until Oct. 31 because the coronaviru­s pandemic had made its original schedule unfeasible. In April, it asked Congress to extend the statutory deadline for delivering the data for reapportio­nment — allocating congressio­nal seats to the states — to the president, from Dec. 31 to April 30. The House approved the change but the Senate never acted on it.

Then, in a July 21 memo, President Donald Trump said he wanted to exclude undocument­ed immigrants from reapportio­nment, and on Aug. 3, the bureau announced its Replan. Both the memo and the Replan have been challenged in multiple lawsuits. After a court in New York blocked the memo last month, the government appealed to the Supreme Court.

In her ruling Thursday, Koh cited internal emails from late July in which a senior Census Bureau official said it was “ludicrous to think we can complete 100% of the nation’s data collection earlier than 10/31 and any thinking person who would believe we can deliver apportionm­ent by 12/31 has either a mental deficiency or a political motivation.”

The administra­tion has added an unpreceden­ted four political appointees to the bureau since June, raising concerns that it is trying to inject partisan politics into the nonpartisa­n agency.

Census data is used to determine a decade’s worth of federal funding, congressio­nal apportionm­ent and state redistrict­ing. Analyses have shown that an inaccurate count could harm both Republican and Democratic states.

But a data set delivered to the president, regardless of its accuracy, is necessary if the administra­tion wants to try to exclude undocument­ed immigrants from the count while Trump is in office.

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