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Judge: Census violated order; demands mass text to workers

- By Mike Schneider

ORLANDO, Fla. — A federal judge ordered the Census Bureau to text every 2020 census worker by Friday, letting them know the head count of every U.S. resident is continuing through the end of the month and not ending next week, as the agency previously had announced in violation of her court order.

The new order issued late Thursday by U. S. District Lucy Koh in San Jose, California, instructed the Census Bureau to send out a mass text saying an Oct. 5 target data for finishing the nation’s head count is not in effect and that people can still answer the questionna­ire and census takers can still knock on doors through Oct. 31.

The judge also ordered Census Bureau director Steven Dillingham to file a declaratio­n with the court by the start of next week confirming his agency was following a preliminar­y injunction she had issued last week.

Besides deciding how many congressio­nal seats and Electoral College votes each state gets, the census also determines how $1.5 trillion in federal spending is distribute­d annually. Among other things, that spending includes highway funding and money for health care and education.

Judge Koh wrote in Thursday’s decision that the Census Bureau and Commerce Department, which oversees the agency, had violated her injunction “in several ways.” She threatened them with sanctions or contempt proceeding­s if they violated the injunction again.

“Defendants’ disseminat­ion of erroneous informatio­n; lurching from one hasty, unexplaine­d plan to the next; and unlawful sacrifices of completene­ss and accuracy of the 2020 Census are upending the status quo, violating the Injunction Order, and underminin­g the credibilit­y of the Census Bureau and the 2020 Census,” the judge wrote. “This must stop.”

Koh’s injunction last week suspended a Sept. 30 deadline for ending the head count and also a Dec. 31 deadline for turning in numbers used to determine how many congressio­nal seats each state gets in a process known as apportionm­ent. By doing this, the deadlines reverted 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.

By issuing the injunction, the judge sided with civil rights groups and local government­s that had sued the U.S. Census Bureau and the U.S. Department of Commerce. Those groups had argued that minorities and others in hard-to-count communitie­s would be missed if the counting ended in September.

Koh referred to a tweet by the Commerce Department and Census Bureau last Monday that they now were targeting Oct. 5 as the date to end the census as “a hasty and unexplaine­d change to the Bureau’s operations that was created in 4 days.”

“The decision also risks further underminin­g trust in the Bureau and its partners, sowing more confusion, and depressing Census participat­ion,” Koh wrote.

In court papers, attorneys for the federal government argued that the Commerce Department and the Census Bureau had been complying with the judge’s injunction.

The Census Bureau said it sent out the mandated message Friday afternoon. “As a result of court orders, the October 5, 2020 target date is not operative, and data collection operations will continue through October 31, 2020,” the message read. “Employees should continue to work diligently and enumerate as many people as possible. Contact your supervisor with any questions.”

 ?? AP-Matthew Brown, File ?? Lauri Dawn Kindness (left) helps a family participat­e in the U.S. Census as part of a campaign to increase Native American participat­ion in the count, on the Crow Indian Reservatio­n, in Lodge Grass, Montana.
AP-Matthew Brown, File Lauri Dawn Kindness (left) helps a family participat­e in the U.S. Census as part of a campaign to increase Native American participat­ion in the count, on the Crow Indian Reservatio­n, in Lodge Grass, Montana.

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