Porterville Recorder

San Diego ending census door-knocking early

- By MIKE SCHNEIDER

ORLANDO, Fla. — Already under criticism for plans to end the 2020 census at the end of September, a month earlier than previously scheduled, the U.S. Census Bureau expects to finish up its most labor-intensive operation for getting an accurate head count even earlier in one of the largest U.S. cities.

Door-knocking operations for the 2020 census are expected to end in the San Diego area on Sept. 18 instead of the end of the month, for census takers, also known as enumerator­s, who visit homes that haven’t yet responded to the questionna­ire, according to a Census Bureau official.

“We hope all of our workload will be complete and there will not be any more enumerator­s out on the street,” Roberto Garcia, a partnershi­p specialist in San Diego, said almost two weeks ago during an online meeting with metro San Diego leaders who are helping motivate residents to answer the census questionna­ire.

Garcia said people who haven’t yet responded to the census questionna­ire after the door-knocking stops will still be able to do so online, by mail or by telephone.

Census Bureau spokesman Michael Cook said that there are some places in the U.S. that will finish with the door-knocking phase earlier than the Sept. 30 deadline because they have completed the needed work.

Cook didn’t say which other areas may wrap up before the end-of-september deadline.

Between the time these areas finish with doorknocki­ng and the Sept. 30 deadline for ending the head count, “they are going to take a fine tooth comb and make sure nothing is missed,” Cook said.

A coalition of cities, states and civil rights groups are suing the Census Bureau to stop the statistica­l agency from ending the head count at the end of September. The 2020 census will be used to determine how $1.5 trillion in federal spending is distribute­d and how many congressio­nal seats each states gets in a process known as apportionm­ent.

Because of the pandemic, the Census Bureau revised its deadlines so that the 2020 census would finish at the end of October. But the bureau shortened that deadline to the end of September last month. That came after it became clear the Republican- controlled Senate wouldn’t take up legislatio­n passed by the Democratic- controlled House that would extend the Census Bureau’s deadlines for turning over apportionm­ent and redistrict­ing data.

The Senate inaction coincided with President Donald Trump directing the agency to exclude people in the country illegally from figures used for redrawing congressio­nal districts, according to a lawsuit filed in San Jose seeking to stop the count from ending in September.

More than a half-dozen other lawsuits are challengin­g Trump’s order, which civil rights groups say is unconstitu­tional and an attempt to limit the power of Latinos and immigrants of color.

A third of San Diego County’s 3.3 million residents are Hispanic, according to Census Bureau figures.

“Any additional truncation of Census household data collection, especially if concentrat­ed in particular geographie­s, is beyond irresponsi­ble,” said Thomas Saenz, president and general counsel of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educationa­l Fund. “Any whiff of possible political targeting — suspicions obviously triggered by the Trump administra­tion’s troubling pattern in other areas — severely undermines confidence in Census 2020.”

 ?? AP PHOTO BY TED S. WARREN ?? In this April 1 file photo, people walk past posters encouragin­g participat­ion in the 2020 Census in Seattle’s Capitol Hill neighborho­od. The U.S. Census Bureau has spent much of the past year defending itself against allegation­s that its duties have been overtaken by politics.
AP PHOTO BY TED S. WARREN In this April 1 file photo, people walk past posters encouragin­g participat­ion in the 2020 Census in Seattle’s Capitol Hill neighborho­od. The U.S. Census Bureau has spent much of the past year defending itself against allegation­s that its duties have been overtaken by politics.

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