JUDY WOODRUFF: The U.S. census is always a
daunting challenge, now made more complicated
by COVID.
Amna Nawaz explores the hurdles facing the
once-in-a-decade population count.
AMNA NAWAZ: The deadline for counting the
2020 census is fast approaching.
The Census Bureau announced that it's ending
door-to-door outreach efforts at the end of
September, a month earlier than planned. That's
sent local organizers into a scramble to reach
hard-to-count communities.
There are hundreds of billions of dollars
in federal funds at stake, and pivotal congressional
seats hang in the balance.
NPR's Hansi Lo Wang has been reporting on
the census, and he joins me now.
Hansi, welcome back to the "NewsHour."
Let's start with that timeline and help people
understand what it is behind it. What drove
that shortened timeline, moving it up from
the end of October to the end of September?
And what's the potential impact?
HANSI LO WANG, NPR: Well, this is a surprise
move by the Census Bureau, who -- and the
bureau's director, Steven Dillingham, has
said this was following a directive from the
commerce secretary, who oversees the Census
Bureau.
Essentially, the Trump administration has
taken the position that they want to cut short
counting for the 2020 census by a month in
order to meet a current legal deadline, which
is by the end of this year, December 31. The
latest state population counts are due to
the president. Those are the counts used to
redistribute seats in Congress.
What's interesting is that, recently, President
Trump issued a memo saying that he wants to
adjust those counts once he gets them as president.
He wants to exclude unauthorized immigrants
from those counts, even though the Constitution
says that those numbers should include every
person living in the country.
AMNA NAWAZ: So, let me ask you about this
new process the Census Bureau has had to undertake,
because a shortened timeline means they're
crunched to reach communities they have already
had trouble reaching during a pandemic.
We have already seen a lag in response rates
from a number of census officials we have
spoken to, as compared to 2010. I want to
play for you a little bit of sound from one
local official we talked to who is seeing
that kind of lag.
This is Michael Thurmond. He's the CEO of
DeKalb County, Georgia. He said it's a very
diverse area, a big Latinx, a big immigrant
community. He says he is worried about a severe
undercount. Take a listen to him.
MICHAEL THURMOND, CEO, DeKalb County, Georgia:
The best, clearest most -- example as to why
the census is so important, as to why every
resident must and should be counted is, look
no further than the CARES Act dollars that
are being distributed across this nation.
Undercount in the census results in underfunding
to fight one of the most challenging diseases
we face.
AMNA NAWAZ: Hansi, that concern we heard from
Mr. Thurmond, how unique is that?
HANSI LO WANG: You hear that a lot from a
lot of places around the country. We're in
the middle of an unpredictable pandemic, a
historic hurricane season.
We don't know what these next few weeks are
going to -- what's going to happen, and whether
or not Census Bureau workers, door-knockers,
who are already out there trying to reach
those households that have not participated
yet, what new challenges may be coming their
way?
Already, the census workers that I have been
talking to, they say they're having trouble
with the iPhones that they have been issued
to try to collect this information. They're
seeing delays in being trained and a lot of
pressure to go out in the field, while having
not feeling adequately trained in these situations.
There are a lot of challenges here, and this
shortened time frame really just exacerbates
all of them.
AMNA NAWAZ: Hansi, you mentioned something
else I want to ask you about. That was the
Trump administration's attempt to exclude
the undocumented population from some of those
counts for reapportionment purposes.
But we also heard a lot about their attempt
to add a citizenship question to the census.
That was eventually shot down by the Supreme
Court. But we asked census managers about
this around the country.
I want to play for you a little bit of sound
from Nestor Lopez. He's the census coordinator
for Hidalgo County, Texas. He says the effort
alone to try to add that citizenship question
is already having an impact. Take a listen.
NESTOR LOPEZ, Census Coordinator: Even today,
we still hear people asking, are they going
to ask me about my citizenship status, because
my family or the people living in my household,
we do have mixed status. So that fear often
just results in inaction.
AMNA NAWAZ: Hansi, have you heard from others
that the messaging alone, the attempt to add
that question could have some kind of chilling
effect?
HANSI LO WANG: I have.
And you also hear from community groups who
have spoken to some of the challengers of
the apportionment memo that President Trump
recently issued. All of this rhetoric and
all of this talk about who should be included,
who should not be included, even though, again,
supposed to be a count of every person living
in the country, there is a lot of concern
that there is a lot of mixed messaging going
around.
And, in fact, a lot of people still don't
know that the 2020 census does not include
a question about citizenship status. It also
does not include anything about a person's
immigration status, which is one reason why
people say, experts say, that President Trump's
call to exclude unauthorized immigrants from
the enforcement count, that it's not possible
and it's not legal, that there is no way to
do that in a legal way and in a practical
way, because there's no question on immigration
status.
So, the Census Bureau is collecting people's
information not knowing what people's immigration
status is. And so it's going to be really
hard to try to exclude certain populations.
AMNA NAWAZ: Hansi, there is this other concern
we have heard from a number of census officials
across the country, and that is that their
bureau is being politicized. Have you heard
something similar?
HANSI LO WANG: I have heard there's concerns.
And, recently, the Trump administration appointed
two new political appointees, a political
science professor who specializes in African
politics, a new senior adviser to this new
deputy director for policy. Both of them,
their qualifications are very unclear.
And you have the American Statistical Association,
other professional associations raising questions
about what qualifies these individuals to
take on top-level policy roles at a time when
the Census Bureau is trying to finish a once-a-decade
head count.
AMNA NAWAZ: Hansi, before we go, very briefly,
with all of these concerns, is there any way
that this will be now done right? Have we
reached a point of no return?
HANSI LO WANG: It's really hard to say at
this point.
There are a lot of factors against the 2020
census. But one thing to keep in mind here
is, the Constitution calls for a count once
a decade. And there is a chance that, whatever
numbers are collected, the data collected
over the next weeks may be the data we all
as a country have to live with for the next
10 years.
AMNA NAWAZ: That is NPR's Hansi Lo Wang, who
covers the Census Bureau, joining us tonight.
Thank you so much, Hansi.
HANSI LO WANG: You're welcome, Amna.
