The Maui News

Census whiplashed by changing deadlines

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Shortly after the Supreme Court ruled that the Trump administra­tion can end the 2020 census, a text message went out to field supervisor­s in Northern California telling them to start collecting the iPhones their census takers use for gathering household informatio­n during their doorknocki­ng.

It was the fifth time in two months that they were given a new end date — this one today — for the head count of everyone living in the U.S.

The Supreme Court decision Tuesday was just the latest case of whiplash for the census, which has faced starts and stops from the pandemic, natural disasters and court rulings, as well as confusion over when it was going to end and questions over whether minorities, immigrants, poor people and others would be counted accurately.

Minority groups have historical­ly been undercount­ed in the once-a-decade census that determines how many congressio­nal seats each state gets, as well as how $1.5 trillion in federal spending is distribute­d each year, and advocates said the two-week-shorter schedule will make that even worse.

“The Trump administra­tion is acting out of fear. They fear a future America where we are majority minority. They don’t want to see the power shift,” Meeta Anand, a fellow at the New York Immigratio­n Coalition, said Wednesday. “They will ignore the rules. They will do everything they can to make sure the true nature of our society is not reflected.”

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