The News-Times

Census whiplashed by 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 door-knocking.

It was the fifth time in two months that they were given a new end date — this one Thursday — 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.”

The Trump administra­tion had argued that the head count needed to end immediatel­y to give the Census Bureau time to meet a congressio­nally mandated Dec. 31 deadline for completing the figures that will be used to apportion House seats.

A coalition of local government­s and advocacy groups had sued to keep the census going through October, saying that minorities and others would be missed if the census ended early.

By sticking to the Dec. 31 deadline, the Trump administra­tion would end up controllin­g the numbers used for the apportionm­ent, no matter who wins next month’s presidenti­al election. Opponents fear the administra­tion will depart from past practice and leave out of the count people who are in the U.S. illegally.

The nation’s highest court didn’t offer a reason for ending the census, though Justice Sonia Sotomayor said in a dissent that minorities and others “will disproport­ionately bear the burden of any inaccuraci­es.“

The end date for the 2020 census has been a moving target since the pandemic temporaril­y halted field operations last spring.

The Census Bureau pushed an endof-July deadline for concluding the count to the end of October because of the virus. But the Commerce Department, which oversees the agency, decided to move up the deadline to late September, then early October, and was thwarted both times by a federal judge in California.

The constantly fluctuatin­g deadline probably affected the quality of the data gathered, since census takers were more likely to rely on administra­tive records or neighbors instead of making an extra visit to a household if they were under the gun to end the count, Minnesota State Demographe­r Susan Brower said.

Many census takers have said they hadn’t been given work since the beginning of the month, with little explanatio­n, even though they had been planning to work through the end of October.

In recent weeks, “the census operation has been in a holding pattern,” Brower said. “They didn’t say, ‘Great! More time. Let’s go back and revisit some of those things we’ve already done.’ The attitude was more, ‘What’s done is done, and we will put our energy toward closing cases.’”

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