Las Vegas Review-Journal

Neb. will give license files to Census Bureau

- By Mike Schneider and Grant Schulte The Associated Press

LINCOLN, Neb. — Nebraska is the first state to agree to share driver’s license records with the U.S. Census Bureau as the federal agency tries to comply with President Donald Trump’s order to count the number of U.S. citizens.

The Associated Press has learned that the Census Bureau and Rhonda Lahm, Nebraska’s motor vehicles director, signed a memorandum of understand­ing to share the records this month.

An AP survey last month showed that the majority of states hadn’t agreed to share their records with the bureau, which began requesting them in August.

The effort began after the Supreme Court rejected the Trump administra­tion’s plan to add a citizenshi­p question to the 2020 census, and the president ordered that citizenshi­p data be compiled through federal and state administra­tive records.

The move has alarmed civil rights groups, which see it as part of a move by the Trump administra­tion to reduce the political power of minorities. Last month the American Civil Liberties Union urged states to decline the bureau’s request.

The agency has promised to keep the records confidenti­al, and Nebraska officials concluded that sharing the records complied with state law.

Nebraska only issues driver’s licenses and identifica­tion cards to people who can prove they are living in the U.S. legally.

“This means the citizenshi­p status informatio­n being provided to the U.S. Census Bureau does not constitute any additional lawful status informatio­n on non-citizens not already held by the federal government,” Adam Eakin, a manager for the Nebraska agency, said in an email Wednesday.

The decision drew criticism from a coalition of nonprofit groups working to ensure all Nebraska residents get counted in the 2020 census. Coalition members worry that the effort to seek such informatio­n will discourage immigrants from participat­ing in the head count.

“Like the ill-fated citizenshi­p question, this threatens the likelihood of getting a complete count here in Nebraska,” said Heather Engdahl, director of Nebraska Counts. “An undercount in 2020 means millions lost in infrastruc­ture, health care, education and other important services for our state. The stakes are high, and we will make every effort to ensure all Nebraskans are counted.”

The Census Bureau didn’t respond to an email inquiry about the driver’s license records.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States