New York Daily News

Top court halts 2020 census – for now

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The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday stopped the once-a-decade head count of every U.S. resident from continuing through the end of October.

President Trump’s administra­tion had asked the nation’s high court to suspend a district court’s order permitting the 2020 census to continue through the end of the month. The Trump administra­tion argued that the head count needed to end immediatel­y so the Census Bureau had enough time to crunch the numbers before a congressio­nally mandated year-end deadline for turning in figures used for deciding how many congressio­nal seats each state gets.

A coalition of local government­s and civil-rights groups had sued the Trump administra­tion, arguing that minorities and others in hardto-count communitie­s would be missed if the count ended early. They said the census schedule was cut short to accommodat­e a July order from Trump that would exclude people in the country without documentat­ion from the numbers used to decide how many congressio­nal seats each state gets.

Associate Justice Sonia Sotomayor dissented.

“Moreover, meeting the deadline at the expense of the accuracy of the census is not a cost worth paying, especially when the Government has failed to show why it could not bear the lesser cost of expending more resources to meet the deadline or continuing its prior efforts to seek an extension from Congress,” Sotomayor wrote.

Last month, U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh in San Jose, Calif., sided with the plaintiffs and issued an injunction which suspended a Sept. 30 deadline for finishing the 2020 census and a Dec. 31 deadline for submitting numbers used to determine how many congressio­nal seats each state gets — a process known as apportionm­ent. That caused the deadlines to revert back to a previous Census Bureau plan that had field operations ending Oct. 31 and the reporting of apportionm­ent figures at the end of April 2021.

When the Census Bureau, and the Commerce Department, which oversees the statistica­l agency, picked an Oct. 5 end date, Koh struck that down, too, accusing officials of “lurching from one hasty, unexplaine­d plan to the next ... and underminin­g the credibilit­y of the Census Bureau and the 2020 census.”

An appellate court panel upheld Koh’s order allowing the census to continue through October but struck down the part that suspended the Dec. 31 deadline for turning in apportionm­ent numbers. The panel of three appellate judges said that just because the year-end deadline is impossible to meet doesn’t mean the court should require the Census Bureau to miss it.

With plans for the count hampered by the pandemic, the Census Bureau in April had proposed extending the deadline for finishing the count from the end of July to the end of October and pushing the apportionm­ent deadline from Dec. 31 to next April. The proposal to extend the apportionm­ent deadline passed the Democratic-controlled House, but the Republican-controlled Senate didn’t take up the request. Then, in late July and early August, bureau officials shortened the count schedule by a month so that it would finish at the end of September.

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