The Commercial Appeal

Census Bureau stops laying off some staff

- Mike Schneider

ORLANDO, Fla. – Two days after a federal judge ordered the U.S. Census Bureau to stop winding down 2020 census operations, the statistica­l agency said Tuesday in court papers that it's refraining from laying off some census takers and it's restoring some qualitycon­trol steps.

The Census Bureau said it's refraining from laying off census takers who were in the late phases of the head count of every U.S. resident and those door-knockers still are being assigned homes to visit in an effort to get answers for the 2020 census questionna­ire.

However, the bureau will still terminate workers because of performanc­e concerns, according to the court papers outlining a plan for how the Census Bureau and the Commerce Department, which oversees the statistica­l agency, will comply with the judge's order.

The temporary restrainin­g order issued late Saturday by U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh in San Jose, California, stops the Census Bureau from winding down operations until a court hearing for a preliminar­y injunction is held Sept. 17.

The once-a-decade head count of every U.S. resident helps determine how $1.5 trillion in federal funding is distribute­d and how many congressio­nal seats each state gets in a process known as apportionm­ent.

The temporary restrainin­g order was requested by a coalition of cities, counties and civil rights groups that had sued the Census Bureau, demanding it restore its previous plan for finishing the census at the end of October, instead of using a revised plan to end operations at the end of September.

The coalition had argued the earlier deadline would cause the Census Bureau to overlook minority communitie­s in the census, leading to an inaccurate count.

The Census Bureau's plan outlining compliance with the order says some quality-control steps that had been eliminated with the changed schedule will be restored.

Those include verifying vacant homes, making extra home visits to households with conflicting informatio­n about whether they are vacant and making extra home visits when investigat­ing potential cases of fraud.

Attorneys for the federal government asked the judge to convert the temporary restrainin­g order into a preliminar­y injunction if she planned to extend the order past the Sept. 17 hearing so the Census Bureau can start the appeals process.

Because of the pandemic, the Census Bureau pushed back ending the count from the end of July to the end of October and asked Congress to extend the deadline for turning in the numbers used for redrawing congressio­nal districts from December, as required by law, into next spring.

When the Republican-controlled Senate failed to take up the request, the bureau was forced to create a revised schedule that had the census ending in September, according to the statistica­l agency.

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.

The revised plan would have the Census Bureau handing in the apportionm­ent numbers at the end of December, under the control of the Trump administra­tion, no matter who wins the election in November.

More than a half dozen other lawsuits have been filed in tandem across the country.

Koh appeared frustrated by the inability of government attorneys to say when precisely the decision was made to change the plan so field operations would finish at the end of September instead of the end of October.

The judge found the lack of administra­tive records hard to believe. “I do not understand the government's refusal to be transparen­t about what they have decided to do,” Koh said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States