San Diego Union-Tribune

HOUSE COMMITTEE ISSUES SUBPOENA FOR OVERDUE CENSUS DOCUMENTS

Oversight panel chides commerce secretary for delay

- BY ADRIAN SAINZ Sainz writes for The Associated Press.

The congressio­nal committee that oversees the Census Bureau i ssued a subpoena Thursday to U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, seeking documents related to data irregulari­ties that threaten to upend a year-end deadline for submitting numbers used for divvying up congressio­nal seats.

Democrat Rep. Carolyn Maloney, chair of the House Committee on Oversight and Reform, has alleged that the administra­tion of Republican President Donald Trump is blocking the release of full, unredacted documents she requested about the data anomalies. Those irreg ularities arose during the number-crunching phase of the once-adecade Census count.

The anomalies will likely force a delay of several weeks past a Dec. 31 deadline for the Census Bureau to turn in the congressio­nal apportionm­ent numbers.

In a letter last week, Maloney wrote that the Commerce Department — which oversees the Census Bureau — missed a Nov. 24 deadline to g ive the documents to the committee. She threatened a subpoena if the documents weren’t handed over by Wednesday.

“Your approach to Congress’ oversight responsibi­lities has been abominable,” Maloney wrote Ross in another letter Thursday. “You have repeatedly withheld documents that should have been produced as a matter of course to your Depar tment’s oversight committee.”

The Commerce Department did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. Ross has until Dec. 21 to comply with the subpoena, Maloney said.

The Census Bureau said last week that the data ir

reg ularities affect only a tiny percentage of the records and are being resolved as quickly as possible. The timeline remains in f lux for turning in the appor tionment numbers used for deciding how many congressio­nal seats and Electoral College votes each state gets in future elections, the bureau said in a Dec. 2 statement.

The data anomalies represent less than sevententh­s of 1 percent of records, according to the bureau. But experts testifying at a House hearing on Dec. 3 said that even errors of

just tens of thousands of people out of the nation’s 330 million residents can affect which states get an extra congressio­nal seat or lose one.

The House committee has obtained three new internal agency documents showing the Census Bureau plans to deliver the apportionm­ent numbers to the president no earlier than Jan. 23, which would be shor tly after Trump leaves office and Presidente­lect Joe Biden takes over.

 ?? PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS AP FILE ?? The House Committee on Oversight and Reform has subpoenaed Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross seeking census-related documents.
PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS AP FILE The House Committee on Oversight and Reform has subpoenaed Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross seeking census-related documents.

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