Texarkana Gazette

Groups asking for restrainin­g order to stop census wind-down

-

ORLANDO, Fla. — Days after the U.S. Census Bureau said that it had already taken steps to wind down operations for the 2020 census, a coalition of cities, counties and civil rights groups on Friday tried to stop the statistica­l agency in its tracks.

The coalition asked a federal judge in San Jose to issue a temporary restrainin­g order stopping the Census Bureau from taking any further actions toward ending the once-a-decade head count of every U.S. resident.

The coalition is asking a judge in a lawsuit to make the Census Bureau restore its previous deadline for finishing the census to the end of October, instead of using a revised plan to end operations at the end of September. Arguments aren’t scheduled until the middle of the month.

The door-knocking phase of the 2020 didn’t start for most of the U.S. until the beginning of August, so winding down operations in September will lead to an inaccurate count that overlooks minority communitie­s, the plaintiffs said in a court filing. During the door-knocking phase, census takers go to households that haven’t yet answered the census questionna­ire online, by phone or by mail. The lawsuit contends the Census Bureau changed the schedule to accommodat­e a directive from President Donald Trump to exclude people in the country illegally from the numbers used in redrawing congressio­nal districts, a process known as apportionm­ent. More than a half dozen other lawsuits have been filed in tandem across the country, challengin­g Trump’s memorandum as unconstitu­tional and an attempt to limit the power of Latinos and immigrants of color during apportionm­ent.

But an attorney for the federal government, Alexander Sverdlov, told U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh on Friday that any concerns about the bureau’s revised plan are unwarrante­d. When a region reaches between 85% to 90% of households counted, its census takers are redirected to other areas that still need counting, he said. The problem isn’t with the Census Bureau’s revised plan but with an end-of-the year deadline to turn over numbers used for redrawing congressio­nal districts, and Congress hasn’t granted an extension that would allow the Census Bureau to end the count at the later date, Sverdlov said.

Koh didn’t say when she would make a decision.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States