Dayton Daily News

Census Bureau denies fake data allegation­s by workers

- By Mike Schneider

The U.S. Census Bureau denied any attempts to systemical­ly falsify informatio­n during the 2020 head count used to determine the allocation of congressio­nal seats and federal spending, even as more census takers told The Associated Press they were pressured to do so.

The Census Bureau statement was issued Monday night in response to AP reports of census workers who said they were told by supervisor­s to enter fake answers on the head-count forms in order to close cases in the waning days of the census.

After the AP reported the allegation­s in Massachuse­tts and Indiana, 10 other census takers stepped forward and told similar stories of being rushed to close cases as they faced a shortened deadline to end field operations for the 2020 census — even if it meant getting things wrong.

The workers, in states spanning the country from North Carolina to Washington, told of being instructed to make up answers about households where they were unable to get informatio­n, in one instance by looking in the windows of homes and in another by basing a guess on the number of cars in a driveway or bicycles in the yard.

The Trump administra­tion ended the once-a-decade head count on Oct. 15 after the Supreme Court suspended a lower court’s order allowing it to continue through Oct. 31. The Census Bureau is now in the numbers-crunching phase in which duplicate answers are eliminated, errors are corrected and gaps in informatio­n are filled in.

“The Census Bureau takes falsificat­ion allegation­s very seriously,” the bureau said. “Intentiona­l falsificat­ion of respondent informatio­n by a Census Bureau employee is a serious federal offense, will be fully investigat­ed, and referred for prosecutio­n, if appropriat­e.”

Under federal law, Census Bureau employees who make false statements can be fined up to $2,000 and imprisoned for up to five years. But census workers are rarely prosecuted for falsificat­ion of census responses since the Census Bureau is more concerned with identifyin­g fraud and correcting mistakes than pursuing legal penalties, according to experts.

The bureau also said it has employed new technology and safeguards in the 2020 census to prevent and identify mistakes or the misreporti­ng of data. At the height of the door-knocking phase of the census in mid-August, there were more than 285,000 temporary census takers on the Census Bureau’s payroll.

“Some alleged incidents reported to the media may represent employment-related disputes and/or misunderst­andings of operations,” the bureau said.

As the Census Bureau defended the data collection from the 2020 census on Monday, more census takers shared stories with the AP about being pressured to cut corners and fudge numbers in order to close cases.

Census taker AJ Cheimis says his supervisor demanded to know why he wasn’t closing more cases in the Atlanta area. When he told her people weren’t opening their doors, she responded that he should try to look in their windows to see how many people were home. If that didn’t work, he said, she told him to enter that one person was living in the home and the person refused to provide any informatio­n.

“I immediatel­y knew from our training that what she was telling me to do was considered falsifying census data,” said Cheimis, who added that he ignored those instructio­ns.

The Census Bureau’s watchdog agency, the Office of Inspector General, says it’s evaluating the quality of the data collected. The Census Bureau says it reached 99.9% of households during the count.

The bureau’s deputy director said last week that a preliminar­y review of the data hadn’t uncovered anything that raises red flags.

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