The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Census hit by cyberattac­k, U.S. count unaffected, report states

- By Mike Schneider

U.S. Census Bureau computer servers were exploited last year during a cybersecur­ity attack, but it didn’t involve the 2020 census, and hackers’ attempts to keep access to the system were unsuccessf­ul, according to a watchdog report released Wednesday.

The attack took place in January 2020 on the bureau’s remote access servers.

According to the Office of Inspector General, the Census Bureau missed opportunit­ies to limit its vulnerabil­ity to the attack and didn’t discover and report the attack in a timely manner. The statistica­l agency also failed to keep sufficient system logs, which hindered the investigat­ion, and was using operating system no longer supported by the vendor, the watchdog report said.

The bureau’s firewalls stopped the attacker’s attempts to maintain access to the system through a backdoor, but unauthoriz­ed changes were still made, including the creation of user accounts, the report said.

In a written response, acting Census Bureau director Ron Jarmin reiterated that none of the systems used for the 2020 census were compromise­d, nor was the nation’s once-a-decade head count affected in any way.

“Furthermor­e, no systems or data maintained and managed by the Census Bureau on behalf of the public were compromise­d, manipulate­d or lost,” Jarmin wrote.

The 2020 head count data was being used to determine how many congressio­nal seats each state gets and for the drawing of congressio­nal and legislativ­e districts. The data also is used for helping distribute $1.5 trillion in federal spending each year.

The Census Bureau on Wednesday released a set of measuremen­ts that reveal how people were counted and whether administra­tive records or a statistica­l technique were used to fill in the gaps for households where people didn’t respond to the 2020 census questionna­ire.

The bureau had previously released state-level data, and the informatio­n released Wednesday were summaries of county and tract level data.

They showed that the use of a statistica­l technique called imputation was highest in counties in Louisiana and New York. Imputation involves using informatio­n about neighbors with similar characteri­stics to fill in head counts or demographi­c characteri­stics for households lacking data.

The count in Louisiana was challenged by a series of hurricanes last year, and some census takers reported difficulti­es getting access to apartment buildings in major cities due to the pandemic.

In some cases, census takers were only able to get a count of the number of people living in a home without getting informatio­n about the race, sex, age or relationsh­ips in the household. Counties in Connecticu­t, Delaware, Maryland and New York, on average, were higher than the national average.

The Census Bureau said in a statement that the measuremen­ts reflect what was expected in a “normally distribute­d population.”

“Some counties and tracts are higher on some metrics and some are lower on other metrics, but no signs point to anything unexpected in the results,” the statement said.

 ?? JOHN ROARK — THE IDAHO POST-REGISTER VIA AP, FILE ??
JOHN ROARK — THE IDAHO POST-REGISTER VIA AP, FILE

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