Houston Chronicle

Wildfires and hurricanes disrupt final weeks of the 2020 census

- By Mike Schneider

ORLANDO, Fla. — Already burdened by the coronaviru­s pandemic and a tightened deadline, the Census Bureau must now contend with several natural disasters as wildfires and hurricanes disrupt the final weeks of the nation’s once-a-decade headcount.

The fires on the West Coast forced tens of thousands of people to flee homes in California and Oregon before they could be counted, and tens of thousands of others were uncounted in Louisiana communitie­s hit hard last month by Hurricane Laura. Nearly a quarter-million more households were uncounted in areas affected this week by Hurricane Sally.

The disasters add to the already laborious task of counting of every U.S. resident and increase the risk that the effort will miss people in some parts of the country.

“I can’t project if Mother Nature is going to let us finish, but we are going to do the best we can,” said Al Fontenot, associate director of the Census Bureau, who has repeatedly said the bureau is on target to complete the count at the end of the month.

The disasters make it challengin­g or impossible for census takers to visit households that have not yet answered questionna­ires. And time is running out, with just two weeks left until the census is scheduled to end on Sept. 30.

In major cities in California and Oregon, smoke from nearby wildfires poses a health threat for census takers as they knock on doors.

Officials in San Jose, Calif., are encouragin­g residents to respond to census questions online or by phone or mail.

If there is an undercount, states affected by the disasters could be shortchang­ed when some $1.5 trillion in federal spending is distribute­d annually to pay for roads, schools, health care and other programs. Since the census also determines how many congressio­nal seats each state gets, states such as California that are on the verge of losing a seat because of declining population could see their political power diluted.

Rep. Jimmy Gomez, a Democrat from Los Angeles, said the recent disasters are another reason the deadline for ending the 2020 census should be extended by a month.

Because of the pandemic, the Census Bureau pushed back the deadline for finishing the count from the end of July to the end of October. Then the agency announced last month that the deadline would be changed to the end of September after the Republican-controlled Senate failed to pass a Census Bureau request for more time to turn in numbers used for redrawing congressio­nal districts.

Some Democrats and activists believe the expedited schedule is politicall­y motivated. A coalition of cities and civil rights groups are suing in federal court in San Jose, seeking an extra month.

The San Jose lawsuit contends that the sped-up timetable will cause Latinos, Asian Americans and immigrants to be overlooked. Government attorneys say the Census Bureau will not have enough time to process the data to meet an end-of-the-year deadline if the count does not finish in September.

The Census Bureau estimated there were 248,000 uncounted households affected by Hurricane Sally in Alabama and Florida; 34,000 uncounted households affected by Hurricane Laura in Louisiana; close to 80,000 uncounted households in California affected by wildfires; and 17,500 Oregon households also threatened by the flames.

The disasters worry the federal judge in the San Jose lawsuit, who is considerin­g whether to extend the count by a month. During a recent hearing, Judge Lucy Koh said some workers at her courthouse had been evacuated and their neighborho­ods were destroyed.

“Here we’ve been told not to go outside for 28 days because of unsafe air. How are you doing six visits to households when people can’t go outside?” Koh asked government attorneys. “How are we going to count in this reality for us?”

 ?? Noah Berger / Associated Press ?? The Almeda Fire leveled homes in Phoenix, Ore. With several natural disasters including wildfires and hurricanes disrupting the final weeks of the headcount, the deadline could be extended another month.
Noah Berger / Associated Press The Almeda Fire leveled homes in Phoenix, Ore. With several natural disasters including wildfires and hurricanes disrupting the final weeks of the headcount, the deadline could be extended another month.
 ?? Gerald Herbert / Associated Press ?? The Census Bureau estimated there were 248,000 uncounted households affected by Hurricane Sally in Alabama and Florida.
Gerald Herbert / Associated Press The Census Bureau estimated there were 248,000 uncounted households affected by Hurricane Sally in Alabama and Florida.

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