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Undated: United States Census 2020
https://www.census.gov/2020census
Undated: 2020 Decennial Census ... This
information appears as published in the 2017 High Risk Report.
One of the most important functions of the U.S. Census Bureau (Bureau) is
conducting the decennial census of the U.S. population, which is mandated by the
Constitution and provides vital data for the nation. This information is used to
apportion the seats of the U.S. House of Representatives; realign the boundaries
of the legislative districts of each state; allocate billions of dollars in
federal financial assistance; and provide social, demographic, and economic
profiles of the nation's people to guide policy decisions at each level of
government.
https://www.gao.gov/highrisk/2020_decennial_census/why_did_study
Undated: 2020 United States Census
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020_United_States_Census
-- 2016 --
February 24: For 2020, Census Bureau plans
to trade paper responses for digital ones
The 2020 census could be the first in which most Americans are counted over the
internet. In fact, if all goes as planned, the Census Bureau won’t even send
paper questionnaires to most households.
The bureau’s goal is that 55% of the U.S. population will respond online using
computers, mobile phones or other devices. It will mark the first time (apart
from a
small share of households in 2000) that any Americans will file
their own census responses online. This shift toward online response is one of a
number of technological innovations planned for the 2020 census, according to
the agency’s recently released
operational plan. The plan reflects the results of testing so far, but it
could be changed based on future research, congressional reaction or other
developments.
http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2016/02/24/for-2020-census-bureau-plans-to-trade-paper-responses-for-digital-ones/
-- 2017 --
Undated: High Risk Series (including 2020
Decennial Census report)
https://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-17-317
April 9:
The first day of this month marked three years until Census Day: April 1, 2020.
Though it may sound like one of the driest bureaucratic responsibilities of the
federal government, the census has crucial implications for national
politics—and requires years of planning, hundreds of thousands of new employees
and even a marketing campaign to ensure the broadest possible snapshot of the
American population.
Already, Congress’ inability to agree on a full-year funding measure for fiscal
2017 has forced the Census Bureau to
cancel multiple field tests and delay opening three field offices. It also
had to cut back on new, less labor-intensive methods for verifying household
addresses, a critical undertaking that was supposed to make the 2020 census more
cost-effective and accurate.
And more broadly, the Trump administration’s hard-line rhetoric and executive
orders cracking down on undocumented immigrants may already be creating a major
new risk for the census, making members of minority and immigrant communities
less likely to respond.
https://www.politico.com/agenda/story/2017/04/trumps-threat-to-the-2020-census-000404
July 17:
And that is likely to happen if Republicans in Congress get their way. Under
cover of the non-stop Trump circus, they are quietly working behind the
scenes to ensure that the 2020 census fails – and fails to their advantage.
https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/features/why-republicans-want-the-2020-census-to-fail-w492666
October 8:
The census has never asked respondents their immigration status.
Under Trump in 2020, could it?
The 2020 Census could mark the first time the
survey asks whether a respondent is in this country legally or not. But could
that produce negative effects even for citizens?
“[The Constitution] requires a count of all ‘persons residing in the United
States, not just citizens or legal residents,” Andrew Reamer and Audrey Singer
wrote for the Brookings Institution. “The framers intended the census to be
an inclusive count and so avoided the term ‘citizen’ used elsewhere throughout
the Constitution.”
That in turn could produce second-order effects, such as decreased congressional
representation in states with higher numbers of undocumented immigrants — even
though the Constitution requires that non-citizen residents count toward
congressional apportionment. That’s mostly blue states
such as California, New York, New Jersey, and Illinois, although it includes
swing states like Florida and even red states like Texas.
https://govtrackinsider.com/the-census-has-never-asked-respondents-their-immigration-status-under-trump-in-2020-could-it-667ac4c26220
-- 2018 --
February 1: 2020 Census Will Ask White
People More About Their Ethnicities
The Census Bureau has not responded to NPR's questions about why this change is
being made to the "White" category for 2020. A similar write-in area will be
added under the "Black and African American" category.
The bureau has conducted
extensive research into how to collect more accurate data about race and
ethnicity in 2020. The data play a critical role in drawing legislative
districts, enforcing civil rights laws and analyzing health statistics.
Researchers at the bureau have recommended adding check boxes for the largest
ethnic groups and a write-in area for smaller groups under the racial categories
in a proposal that would radically overhaul the race and ethnicity questions on
the census.
https://www.npr.org/2018/02/01/582338628/-what-kind-of-white-2020-census-to-ask-white-people-about-origins
February 20: How the Trump administration’s
scheme to rig the census threatens American democracy
In his first year in office, Donald Trump and his administration have launched a
daunting number of direct and open attacks on long-respected American rights and
freedoms—threatening
immigrants, the
media,
health care,
transgender rights in the military, and much else. But there have been
other, indirect and behind-the-scenes attacks, too, which may be no less
damaging to the United States in the long term.
Perhaps the most critical of these is aimed at the census. Under Article I,
Section 2 of the Constitution, “the whole number of persons in each State” must
be counted “every … ten years.”
https://newrepublic.com/article/146910/who-counts-rig-census-threatens-american-democracy
March 13: For the 2020 census, the U.S.
Census Bureau is changing how it will ask black people to designate their race.
The change means many black people in the U.S. may have to take a closer look at
their family trees to answer what can be a thorny question: Where are you really
from? While many black immigrants can cite ties to a specific country, that
question is difficult, if not impossible, for many U.S.-born African-Americans
to answer.
The bureau has not responded to NPR's questions about why it is making this
change to both the "Black" category and the
"White" category," which will also include a new write-in area for origins.
But
researchers at the bureau have said they have been trying to respond to
requests for "more detailed, disaggregated data for our diverse American
experiences as German, Mexican, Korean, Jamaican, and myriad other identities."
(The bureau was considering an overhaul to all racial categories that would have
added check boxes for the largest ethnic groups and a write-in area for smaller
groups. But it would require the Trump administration's approval of an Obama-era
proposal to change the federal standards on race and ethnicity data ...)
https://www.npr.org/2018/03/13/593272215/for-the-first-time-2020-census-will-ask-black-americans-about-their-exact-origin
March 18: A Million Children Didn’t Show Up
In The 2010 Census. How Many Will Be Missing In 2020?
In today’s Washington, even the Census Bureau is a source of drama. The
department
has no director. Due to funding constraints, it has
abandoned pre-census research in West Virginia and Washington state that was
meant to check the integrity of parts of its survey process. It is weighing
whether to
add a question about citizenship to the decennial census;
community groups around the country have spent months imploring Congress and
the Census Bureau not to do so. They’re afraid that adding the question would
lower response rates and make the survey less reliable.
At stake: nearly $700 billion
in federal money and how we decide to
apportion congressional representation.
https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/a-million-children-didnt-show-up-in-the-2010-census-how-many-will-be-missing-in-2020/
March 19: Trump [re-election] campaign: Do
you want the next Census to include citizenship question?
The campaign sent the survey out to its list of supporters Monday.
The request has proven controversial.
While supporters say the question is a modest change, its opponents argue that
the question could be counterproductive to getting accurate counts. The Census
counts the total number of people in the country, not the total number of
citizens.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/onpolitics/2018/03/19/trump-campaign-do-you-want-next-census-include-citizenship-question/439758002/
March 27:
Democrats vow to fight Trump administration over census citizenship
question
Former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder called the addition of such a question
a "direct attack on our representative democracy."
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/politics-news/democrats-vow-fight-trump-administration-over-census-citizenship-question-n860341
July 3: Judge allows lawsuit against
citizenship question on Census to go forward, NY AG says
The lawsuit was brought by a coalition of states' attorneys general and cities
challenging
the Trump administration's decision in March to add a question about citizenship
to the next Census. A question about citizenship has not appeared on the Census
since the 1950s.
Critics say the question will penalize immigrants and threaten civil rights.
https://www.cnn.com/2018/07/03/politics/citizenship-question-census-new-york-court/index.html
July 26:
Citing Trump Attacks on Immigrants, Judge Allows Suit Over Census
Question
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/26/us/citizenship-question-census.html
September 17: The Justice Department, which
the Trump administration says needs
the controversial citizenship question added to the 2020 census, initially
did not want to make the request,
according to newly unredacted portions of a memo.
Plaintiffs in the six lawsuits around the country argue that including a
citizenship question risks harming the accuracy of the upcoming head count.
Census Bureau research suggests heightened sensitivity towards such a
question will discourage households with noncitizens from participating and lead
to an undercount — one that could shift power and funding away from states with
high populations of noncitizens, including immigrants who are living in the U.S.
illegally.
https://www.npr.org/2018/09/17/648887574/doj-didnt-want-to-request-census-question-during-fbis-comey-matter
October 5: Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg on
Friday rejected a request from the Department of Justice (DOJ) to temporarily
block an order requiring Commerce Secretary
Wilbur Ross and another official
to sit for a deposition in lawsuits challenging their decision to add a
citizenship question to the 2020 census.
The DOJ has also asked the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals to quash Ross’s
deposition. Ginsburg is letting that request, which is scheduled to be reviewed
on Oct. 9, play out first.
https://thehill.com/regulation/court-battles/410142-ruth-bader-ginsburg-denies-doj-request-to-block-ross-deposition-in
November 16: The Supreme Court agreed Friday
to take up an aspect of the legal battle over the Trump administration's plan to
put a question about citizenship on the 2020 census form.
Eighteen states, several of the nation's largest cities and immigrant rights
groups brought the lawsuit. They said adding the question would making
immigrants reluctant to respond to census takers, resulting in an undercount of
that segment of the population.
A federal district court judge in New York, Jesse Furman, is now holding a trial
to decide if the citizenship question can be included on the form.
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/supreme-court/supreme-court-agrees-referee-fight-over-census-citizenship-question-n937326
November
21: An appeals court on Wednesday denied the Trump administration’s
emergency request to delay a trial underway over a controversial citizenship
question the government wants to add to the 2020 census.
The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in New York said it
was denying the request for similar reasons to those laid out by a federal judge
the day before.
The trial, which began November 5, is one of several challenging the
government’s March decision to add the question. Administration officials said
it was necessary to enforce the Voters Rights Act. But opponents see it as a
partisan move that will depress response rates in Democrat-majority
jurisdictions with a high portion of immigrants, who they say will be scared to
complete the survey.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/social-issues/trump-administration-loses-appeal-to-delay-census-citizenship-trial/2018/11/21/c9b71f7a-edd5-11e8-8679-934a2b33be52_story.html?noredirect=on&utm_term=.adee33541719
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