Chattanooga Times Free Press

Alabama challenges Census Bureau’s privacy tool; judges hear arguments

- BY KIM CHANDLER AND MIKE SCHNEIDER

MONTGOMERY, Ala. — The fight over whether the U.S. Census Bureau can use a controvers­ial statistica­l technique to keep people’s informatio­n private in the numbers used for drawing political districts on Monday was going before a judicial panel which must decide if the method provides enough data accuracy.

A panel of three federal judges was hearing arguments on whether the method known as “differenti­al privacy” meets the federal legal requiremen­t for keeping private the personal informatio­n of people who participat­ed in the 2020 census while still allowing the numbers to be sufficient­ly accurate for the highly-partisan process of redrawing congressio­nal and legislativ­e districts.

Because a panel of three federal judges will decide the matter, any appeal could go straight to the Supreme Court.

This first major challenge to the Census Bureau’s use of differenti­al privacy comes in the lawsuit filed by the state of Alabama and three Alabama politician­s over the statistica­l agency’s decision to delay the release of data used for drawing congressio­nal and legislativ­e districts. Normally the redistrict­ing data are released at the end of March, but the Census Bureau pushed the deadline to sometime in August, at the earliest, because of delays caused by the pandemic.

Alabama claims the delay was caused by the bureau’s attempt to implement differenti­al privacy, which the state’s attorneys say will result in inaccurate redistrict­ing numbers. At least 16 other states back Alabama’s challenge, which is asking the judges for a preliminar­y injunction to stop the Census Bureau from implementi­ng the statistica­l technique. Alabama also wants the agency to release the redistrict­ing data by July 31.

Civil rights advocates, state lawmakers and redistrict­ing experts have raised concerns that differenti­al privacy will produce inaccurate data for drawing districts, and that will result in a skewed distributi­on of political power and federal funds. They also worry it will make it difficult to comply with sections of the Voting Rights Act requiring the drawing of majority-minority districts when racial or ethnic groups make up a majority of a community.

Differenti­al privacy adds mathematic­al “noise,” or intentiona­l errors, to the data to obscure any given individual’s identity while still providing statistica­lly valid informatio­n. Bureau officials say the change is needed to prevent data miners from matching individual­s to confidenti­al details that have been rendered anonymous in the massive data release. In a test using 2010 census data, which was released without the obscuring technique, bureau statistici­ans said they were able to re-identify 17% of the U.S. population using informatio­n in commercial databases.

But University of Minnesota demographe­r Steven Ruggles said in a court filing that would be impossible to do without access to internal, non-public Census Bureau data.

The delay in the release of the redistrict­ing data has sent states scrambling for alternativ­e plans such as using other data, utilizing previous maps, rewriting laws dealing with the deadlines or asking courts to extend deadlines. The state of Ohio filed a similar lawsuit over the changed deadlines. A federal judge dismissed the case, but Ohio has appealed.

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