Morning Sun

Census takers: We’re being told to finish early, cut corners

- Bymike Schneider

As a federal judge considers whether the Trump administra­tion violated her order for the 2020 census to continue through October by setting an Oct. 5 end date, her court has been f looded with messages from census takers who say they are being asked to cut corners and finish their work early.

Josh Harkin, a census taker in northern California, said in an email Tuesday to the court that he had been instructed to finish up by Wednesday, even though his region in the Santa Rosa area still had 17,000 homes to count.

“Please do something to help us! We really need to go until the end of October to have a chance at a reasonable count for our communitie­s,” Harkin wrote.

Paul Costa, a census taker in California currently working in Las Vegas, said in an email to U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh on Tuesday that census takers were being pressured to close cases quickly, “if not at all accurately.”

“Many states, including Nevada has not been properly counted yet. Especially the Southeaste­rn states ravaged by the recent hurricanes. We want to be able to do our jobs correctly & as accurately as possible,” Costa wrote.

A San Francisco census taker, whose name was redacted in the email, was instructed to turn in census equipment on Wednesday since field operations were ending. The census taker asked the judge to order the Census Bureau to stop laying off census takers, also called enumerator­s, so that the head count will continue through October as the judge had ordered.

Another census taker, who only was identified as “Mr. Nettle,” reached out to plaintiffs’ attorneys and told them that census takers were being pressured “to check off as many households as complete, seemingly to boost numbers everywhere above 99%, while sacrificin­g accuracy and completene­ss,” according to a court filing.

Last week, Koh issued a preliminar­y injunction stopping the census from ending Wednesday and clearing the way for it to continue through Oct. 31. The judge in San Jose, California, sided with with civil rights groups and local government­s that had sued the Census Bureau and the Department of Commerce, which oversees the statistica­l agency, arguing that minorities and others in hard- tocount communitie­s would be missed if the counting ended at the end of September instead of the end of October.

A three-judge appellate court panel on Thursday rejected a Trump administra­tion appeal to suspend Koh’s order, saying “hasty and unexplaine­d changes to the Bureau’s operations ... risks underminin­g the Bureau’s mission.”

Koh is holding a hearing on Friday to determine whether the Trump administra­tion violated her order by putting out a statement that Oct. 5 was a target date for ending the census or whether it should be held in contempt.

The census is used to determine how many congressio­nal seats each state gets and the distributi­on of $1.5 trillion in federal funds annually.

 ?? MATTHEW BROWN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Activist Lauri Dawn Kindness, right, speaks at the Crow Indian Reservatio­n, in Lodge Grass, Mont. on Aug. 26, 2020, as Lodge Grassmayor Quincy Dabney records her for a social media campaign to increase Native American participat­ion in the U.S. census.
MATTHEW BROWN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Activist Lauri Dawn Kindness, right, speaks at the Crow Indian Reservatio­n, in Lodge Grass, Mont. on Aug. 26, 2020, as Lodge Grassmayor Quincy Dabney records her for a social media campaign to increase Native American participat­ion in the U.S. census.

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