Apple Magazine

GROUPS: CENSUS PRIVACY TOOL COULD HURT VOTING RIGHTS GOALS

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The findings reinforce concerns that differenti­al privacy will lower the quality of the data used for redrawing congressio­nal and legislativ­e districts. They also suggest that the census figures won’t support efforts to protect the power of minority voters and comply with court rulings requiring districts to have equal population numbers.

“Our preliminar­y findings reveal serious concerns about the impact of differenti­al privacy as currently envisioned by the Bureau on our communitie­s’ ability to attain our fair share of political power,” said the report by the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educationa­l Fund, also known as MALDEF, and Asian Americans Advancing Justice’ AAJC.

The report is the latest warning about the Census Bureau’s introducti­on of deliberate errors to protect privacy into the 2020 census data that will be used for redistrict­ing later this year.

Differenti­al privacy adds mathematic­al “noise,” or errors, to the data to obscure any given individual’s identity while still providing statistica­lly valid informatio­n. Bureau officials said the change is needed to prevent data miners from matching individual­s to confidenti­al details that have been anonymized in the massive data release expected as early as August. It will be applied to race, age and other demographi­c informatio­n in geographic areas within each state.

Since it was first proposed three years ago, the methodolog­y has been criticized by redistrict­ing experts and demographe­rs who fear it will create inaccurate data.

Last month, the state of Alabama and Alabama politician­s sued the Census Bureau and the Commerce Department, which oversees the statistica­l agency, claiming differenti­al privacy appeared to erase the Black voting-age population­s in 60 communitie­s in Alabama and made 13,000 city blocks appear to have no adults living in them. A three-judge panel was named to hear the Alabama case, which will fasttrack it to the Supreme Court if there’s an appeal.

The Census Bureau says it is still formulatin­g the details, but bureau officials have previously described trying to find “the sweet spot” between data confidenti­ality and data accuracy. The bureau is continuing to improve the method “to ensure that the published data for the 2020 Census meet legislativ­e, programmat­ic,

and data user needs,” the statistica­l agency said in a recent newsletter.

Final decisions on the method will be made in June, and the Census Bureau plans to release one more set of test data before then.

Previously, the Census Bureau protected privacy by swapping data on the characteri­stics of households with other households in areas with very small population­s, such as neighborho­ods, where it would be easy to identify people based on gender, age, race or ethnic background.

Last week, a network of state agencies, universiti­es, libraries, and regional and local government­s from every state and territory urged the Census Bureau to keep some data unmanipula­ted when applying differenti­al privacy at the neighborho­od block level. Totals of the overall population, the voting-age population, occupied housing units and group quarters such as nursing homes and dorms should be unchanged since emergency response, disaster recovery, public safety and planning require accurate data at small geographic levels, the State Data Center said in a letter to acting Census Bureau director Ron Jarmin.

In their study, the civil rights groups looked at the impact differenti­al privacy would have on drawing congressio­nal and legislativ­e districts, as well as the ability to enforce the Voting Rights Act which protects the power of minority voters.

They found that the “noise” created jumps in population disparitie­s among congressio­nal districts in 30 of the 43 states that have more than one congressio­nal district. In one district in Virginia, the deliberate errors shifted between 18,000 to 19,000 people into another district, the report said.

The analysis also showed that differenti­al privacy produced data that was less accurate for determinin­g if a racial or ethnic minority group formed a majority in a particular community, potentiall­y diluting their local political power, the report said.

“If the proposed new methodolog­y fails to produce data that are accurate and/or reasonably fit for use, then the new methodolog­y should not be implemente­d as proposed” and other solutions to address privacy concerns should be used, the report said.

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