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2020 United States census

The United States census of 2020 was the twenty-fourth decennial United States census. Census Day, the reference day used for the census, was April 1, 2020. Other than a pilot study during the 2000 census,[1] this was the first U.S. census to offer options to respond online or by phone, in addition to the paper response form used for previous censuses.[2] The census was taken during the COVID-19 pandemic, which affected its administration. The census recorded a resident population of 331,449,281 in the fifty states and the District of Columbia, an increase of 7.4 percent, or 22,703,743, over the preceding decade.[3] The growth rate was the second-lowest ever recorded, and the net increase was the sixth highest in history. This was the first census where the ten most populous states each surpassed 10 million residents as well as the first census where the ten most populous cities each surpassed 1 million residents.

Twenty-fourth census of the United States

← 2010 April 1, 2020 2030 →

Seal of the U.S. Census Bureau
General information
CountryUnited States
Topics
Census topics
  • People and population
  • Race and ethnicity
  • Families and living arrangements
  • Health
  • Education
  • Business and economy
  • Employment
  • Housing
  • Income and poverty
AuthorityU.S. Census Bureau
Websitewww.census.gov//
Results
Total population331,449,281 ( 7.4%)
Most populous ​stateCalifornia (39,538,223)
Least populous ​stateWyoming (576,851)

Background

 
2020 U.S. census yard sign in Columbus, Ohio

As required by the United States Constitution, the U.S. census has been conducted every 10 years since 1790. The 2010 United States census was the previous census completed. All persons in the U.S. age 18 years and older are legally obligated to answer census questions, and to do so truthfully (Title 13 of the United States Code).[4][5] Personally identifiable information is private and the Census Bureau itself will never release it. However, the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) could release the original census returns in 2092, if the 72-year rule is not changed before then.[6]

On census reference day, April 1, 2020, the resident United States population (50 states + Washington, D.C., excluding overseas territories, military members stationed abroad and civilian U.S. citizens living abroad) was projected to be 329.5 million,[7] a 6.7% increase from the 2010 census.

Purpose

Reapportionment

The results of the 2020 census determine the number of seats for each state in the House of Representatives, and hence also the number of electors for each state in the Electoral College, for elections from 2022 to 2030.

 
Allocation of districts following the 2020 census.

The Census Bureau announced the apportionment figures on April 26, 2021. Thirteen states saw changes in congressional seats:

This represented a smaller number of seats shifting than was forecast by independent analysts.[9]

Redistricting

State and local officials use census counts to redraw boundaries for districts like congressional districts (redistricting), state legislative districts, and school districts.

Federal funding distribution

Dozens of federal programs use census data to help direct funding to state and local areas. Census results help determine how more than $675 billion in federal funding is allocated to states and communities each year for roads, schools, hospitals (health clinics), emergency services, and more.[10]

Major design changes

The 2020 census was the first U.S. census to offer a full internet response option and the first to extensively use technology instead of paper to manage and conduct fieldwork.

Key design changes included:[2][11]

  • Three response options: internet, paper, and phone. Ultimately, every household that did not respond online was sent a paper form. Households in areas with low internet access received a paper form from the start.
  • Multiple languages: In addition to English, respondents were able to complete the census in twelve other languages online or by phone. In addition, language guides, language glossaries, and language identification cards were provided in fifty-nine non-English languages.
  • In-office address canvassing: In the 2010 and earlier censuses, census workers walked every street in the United States to verify addresses on the ground. The 2020 census used satellite imagery and GPS to identify areas where housing had changed and assigned workers to verify those addresses in person.
  • Digital case management: Census takers used secure iPhone 8 smartphones[12] to receive daily assignments, navigate to interviews, communicate with supervisors, and submit timesheets. Special software was designed to optimize assignments, streamline management, flag issues immediately, and reduce unnecessary follow-up visits.
  • Streamlined follow-up visits using existing data sources: The 2020 census used existing government and third-party data to identify vacant households, to predict the best time of day to visit a particular household, and to count and provide characteristics for the people in the household after multiple attempts using existing high-quality data from trusted sources.

Questions and data uses

 

As required by the Census Act,[13] the U.S. Census Bureau submitted a list of questions to Congress on March 29, 2018.[14] The U.S. census will not share any participant's information with any government agency, as it is prohibited by Title 13 United States code. It has been challenged, however the Supreme Court has always prevailed in reference to Title 13 to protect the confidentiality and privacy of information provided.[15] Based on those questions and a subsequent executive order, the 2020 census asked:[16][17]

  1. The number of people living or staying at the respondent's home on April 1, 2020.
    Used for the total count and to ensure everyone is counted once, only once, and in the right place according to where they live on Census Day.
  2. Whether the home is owned or rented.
    Used to produce statistics about homeownership and renters for economic indicators, housing programs and informing planning decisions.
  3. The sex of each person in the household.
    Used to produce statistics used to plan and fund government programs, enforce laws, regulations, and policies against discrimination.
  4. The age of each person in the household.
    Used to better understand the size and characteristics of different age groups. Agencies use these data to plan and fund government programs that support specific age groups, including children and older populations.
  5. The race of each person in the household.
    Used by federal agencies to monitor compliance with anti-discrimination provisions, such as those under the Voting Rights Act and Civil Rights Act.
  6. Whether a person in the household is of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin.
    Used by federal agencies to monitor compliance with anti-discrimination provisions, such as those under the Voting Rights Act and the Civil Rights Act.
  7. The relationship of each person in the household to each other.
    Used to plan and fund government programs that support families, including people raising children alone and other households who qualify for additional assistance.

Timeline

 
Average Annual Population Growth Rate in each county of the fifty states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico between 2010 and 2020 according to the U.S. Census Bureau
  • January–March 2019: The U.S. Census Bureau opens 39 area census offices.[18]
  • June–September 2019: The Census Bureau opens the remaining 209 area census offices. The offices support and manage the census takers who work all over the country to conduct the census.
  • August 2019: The Census Bureau conducts the in-field address canvassing operation. Census takers visit areas that have added or lost housing in recent years to ensure the Bureau's address list is up to date. The 2020 census will be the first modern census that did not verify every address, in person, on the ground. Instead, satellite imagery, U.S. Postal Service, and other current records will verify most addresses and will highlight areas where census workers need to verify in-person.
  • January 21, 2020: The Census Bureau begins counting the population in remote Alaska, with Toksook Bay being the first town to be enumerated.[19][20]
  • April 1, 2020: Census Day is observed nationwide. By this date, households will receive an invitation to participate in the 2020 census. There are three options for responding: online, by mail, or by phone.[21][22]
  • April 2020: Census takers begin following up with households around selected colleges and universities. Census takers also begin conducting quality check interviews (delayed).
  • May 2020: The Census Bureau begins following up with households who have not responded (NRFU [Nonresponse Followup] delayed to August 11 – October 31). In August 2020, the 3-month NRFU enumeration period was compressed to two 1/2 months, ending October 15, 2020.[23]
  • September 23–24: People experiencing homelessness counted by officials who visited shelters, at soup kitchens and mobile food vans, and non-sheltered, outdoor locations such as tent encampments.[24]
  • October 15: Self-response data collection ends with over 99.9% of households having self-responded or been counted by census takers.[24]
  • October 16, 2020: The count ends.[25]
  • December 31, 2020: The Census Bureau delivers apportionment counts to the U.S. president.[24][26] (This had been delayed to April 30, 2021).[27]
  • April 1, 2021: The Census Bureau sends redistricting counts to the states. This information is used to redraw legislative districts based on population changes.[24] (This had been delayed to no earlier than September 30, 2021).[27]
  • April 26, 2021: Population results were released for the country as a whole and each state.[28]
  • August 12, 2021: The Census Bureau began releasing data by race, ethnicity, sex, and age, as well as population numbers for counties, cities, towns and other smaller areas.[28]

Response rates

According to the Census Bureau, 60.0% of all U.S. households had submitted their census questionnaire by May 22, 2020—either online, by mail or by phone. Most U.S. households were mailed an invitation letter between March 12–20 to self-respond. They account for more than 95% of all U.S. households. Prior to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, the remaining 5% of U.S. households (mostly in rural areas) were supposed to be visited by census takers in April/May, dropping off invitation letters to owners. This was delayed, but most census offices restarted work again in mid-May. By July 14, 2020, the self-response rate was 62.1% or 91,800,000 households.[29] The self-response rate was 66.5% in 2010 and 67.4% in 2000.[30]

In an update published October 19, 2020, the Census Bureau stated 99.98% of addresses had been accounted for, with all but one state over a 99.9% rate. Paper responses postmarked on or before October 15 will be processed, as long as they arrived at the processing center by October 22.[31]

Marketing and partnerships

 

As in previous censuses, the 2020 census relied on a network of trusted voices nationwide to help raise awareness, answer questions, and encourage community members to participate.[32] Hundreds of local "complete count committees" are dedicating resources to the efforts nationwide.[33][34]

VMLY&R (formerly Young & Rubicam) secured the Integrated Communications Contract for the 2020 census campaign in August 2016.[35] As the contract's primary agency of record, VMLY&R created an integrated team for this project, Team Y&R, which includes subcontractors specializing in minority outreach, digital media, earned media and more.

In March 2019, the campaign unveiled the 2020 census tagline: "Shape your future. START HERE." The tagline was based on research that demonstrated which types of messages will reach and motivate all populations, including segments of the population who are historically hard to count.[36][37]

 

Implementation problems

The printing company Cenveo won the $61 million contract in October 2017 to produce census forms and reminders but went bankrupt less than four months later. The inspector general of the U.S. Government Publishing Office said the agency failed to check the company's financial status and improperly allowed the company to lower its bid after other bids were unsealed.[38]

The coronavirus pandemic caused delays to census field operations and counts of the homeless and people living in group quarters. As of April 1, 2020, Census Day, the Census Bureau still planned to complete the count by the end of the year.[39]

COVID-19 pandemic emergency

On March 18, 2020, the U.S. Census Bureau issued a press release by Director Steven D. Dillingham announcing that 2020 census field operations would be suspended for two weeks until April 1, 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[40] On March 27, 2020, the agency announced it would temporarily suspend in-person interviews for its on-going surveys.[41] The agency claimed that staffing adjustments at its call centers due to implementing health guidance had "led to increases in call wait times, affecting different languages at different times".[42] According to its own documentation, the U.S. Census Bureau continued to pay 2020 census employees even though field operations were supposed to be suspended.[43]

On March 28, 2020, the U.S. Census Bureau issued another press release announcing 2020 census field operations would be suspended for an additional two weeks, through April 15, 2020.[44] Census Bureau officials communicated to the media that on March 27, 2020, they learned an employee had tested positive for COVID-19 at the agency's National Processing Center in Jeffersonville, Indiana,[45] which the agency kept open during the suspension, claiming they would "transition to the minimum number of on-site staff necessary to continue operations".[46] The agency announced on April 10, 2020, that it took steps to make "more employees available to respond to requests" at the call centers.[47]

In a joint statement on April 13, 2020, U.S. Department of Commerce secretary Wilbur Ross and U.S. Census Bureau director Steven Dillingham announced further operational adjustments to the 2020 census due to COVID-19 health and safety concerns.[48] In the statement, it was explained that "steps [were] being taken to reactivate field offices beginning June 1, 2020", "in-person activities, including all interaction with the public, enumeration, office work and processing activities, [would] incorporate the most current guidance to promote the health and safety of staff and the public" including "personal protective equipment (PPE) and social distancing practices".[48] This release stated "in order to ensure the completeness and accuracy of the 2020 census, the Census Bureau is seeking statutory relief from Congress of 120 additional calendar days to deliver final apportionment counts"[48] due to the COVID-19 emergency, and that "under this plan, the Census Bureau would extend the window for field data collection and self-response to October 31, 2020, which will allow for apportionment counts to be delivered to the president by April 30, 2021, and redistricting data to be delivered to the states no later than September 30, 2021."[48]

On April 15, 2020, U.S. Census Bureau director Steven Dillingham wrote to Department of Commerce inspector general Peggy E. Gustafson responding to a March 12, 2020, memo sent by the Office of the Inspector General requesting information about the Census Bureau's plans to respond to the COVID-19 emergency by March 20, 2020.[49] The inspector general's memo asked how the Bureau would address staff and enumerator safety. Dillingham's April 15 letter:

"The Census Bureau is closely coordinating the acquisition of needed PPE materials for field and office staff through the Department of Commerce's Coronavirus Taskforce. Federal partners include the Department of Homeland Security and the Centers for Disease Control. We have generated and submitted estimates for equipment needs. On April 15, 2020, the Agency’s internal task force met and discussed our estimates for needed equipment, potential delivery dates, and budget implications. We continue to monitor the situation and make adjustments as necessary."[citation needed]

To ensure the completeness and accuracy of the 2020 census, the Census Bureau is seeking statutory relief from Congress of 120 additional calendar days to deliver final apportionment counts.

Under this plan, the Census Bureau would extend the window for field data collection and self-response to October 31, 2020, which will allow for apportionment counts to be delivered to the President by April 30, 2021, and redistricting data to be delivered to the states no later than September 30, 2021.

The Task Force and my senior leadership team continue to monitor and study the situation and to recommend operational and other changes to me and to the Secretary.

On April 24, 2020, Dillingham and other Census Bureau officials briefed the House Committee on Oversight and Reform on the agency's response to the COVID-19 emergency.[50] This briefing came after many requests from the committee since March 12, 2020,[51] including a last-minute cancellation on April 20, 2020.[52] In the briefing, Albert E. Fontenot Jr., the associate director for decennial census programs, explained that the bureau was planning a "phased start to many of our census operations" rather than beginning field operations nationwide on June 1, 2020, as previously announced and said operations would resume at different times in different areas of the country based on federal, state, and local public health guidance, as well as the availability of personal protective equipment, prioritizing reopening mail processing centers and census offices and said the bureau would notify Congress as it begins to restart operations.[50] However, the National Processing Center and Area Census Offices had remained open.[46][53]

Starting on May 4, 2020, the U.S. Census Bureau began publishing dates as it claimed to begin a "phased restart of some 2020 census field operations in select geographic areas" and said they had "ordered personal protective equipment (PPE) for all field staff, including those that work in a field office. These materials will be secured and provided to staff prior to restarting operations."[54] Publicly published procurement data shows that an award was signed on April 28, 2020, for non-medical, reusable face masks for area census offices in a $5,001,393.60 contract awarded to Industries for the Blind and Visually Impaired, Inc.[55] Around that time, two contracts for hand sanitizer were awarded to Travis Association for the Blind, one signed on May 9, 2020, in a $57,390.00 contract[56] and the other signed on May 13, 2020, in a $557,251.20 contract,[57] with both contracts listing the place of principal performance as Jeffersonville, Indiana.[56][57] The agency decided that face shields were necessary to protect employees from COVID-19 exposure, but provided them only to personnel at the headquarters and national processing centers.[58] An OSHA complaint was made from Oklahoma City on May 1, 2020, complaining that employees were not able to practice social distancing and were not provided with adequate personal protective equipment such as gloves and masks,[59] showing the office was open prior to the Census Bureau's published office restart date of May 4, 2020.[54][60]

Additional "restart" dates starting May 18 were published on May 15, 2020, for other geographic areas in eleven states.[61] An OSHA complaint was recorded that same day from St. Louis, that desks remained close together with no physical dividers, improper sanitation practices were being used, and no remote work for high-risk employees.[59] The published restart date for the St. Louis Area Census Office was May 11, 2020.[60]

On May 21, 2020, procurement information for two contracts was entered into the Federal Procurement Data System. One contract was for $1,502,928.00 awarded to Industries for the Blind and Visually Impaired, Inc. for hand sanitizer,[62] and a contract for $7,053,569.85 for four-ounce (118 ml) hand sanitizers awarded to NewView Oklahoma, Inc.[63] both with the place of principal performance listed as Jeffersonville, Indiana.

May 22, 2020, saw two additional contracts, one was a disinfectant wipes contract for $3,137,533.00 awarded to Industries for the Blind and Visually Impaired, Inc.[64] and the other was a contract for $2,107,000.00 awarded to NewView Oklahoma for blue nitrile gloves, both with a place of principal performance listed as Jeffersonville, Indiana.

A press release on May 22, 2020 announced May 25 "restart" dates for ten more states.[65] An OSHA complaint was made from Concord, California, on April 3, 2020, that there were at least two confirmed cases of COVID-19 unrecorded on OSHA 300 logs and that employees were working in close quarters with no disinfection of shared equipment such as headsets, laptops, and tablets.[59] The published restart date for the Concord, California, Area Census Office was May 25, 2020.[65]

Offices were reopened in the areas of "American Samoa, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, Guam and the U.S. Virgin Islands in preparation for resuming operations for the 2020 Island Areas Censuses" on May 22, 2020.[66]

On May 29, 2020, a press release was published announcing "restart" of operations in seven additional states and the Washington, D.C., area starting from the week of June 1.[67] An OSHA complaint was made from Austin, Texas, on May 27, 2020, complaining that CDC guidelines were not being followed, that employees were unable to practice social distancing, and that employees experiencing flu-like symptoms and positive COVID-19 test results continued to come to work,[59] showing the office was open prior to the Census Bureau's published office restart date of June 1, 2020.[67]

In a June 5, 2020, press release, the U.S. Census Bureau announced additional area census offices (ACOs) would "restart" on June 8, saying that with "these additions, field activities have restarted in 247 of 248 area census offices stateside, all ACOs in Puerto Rico and the island areas, and 98.9% of the nation's update leave workload will have resumed."[68] The June 5 press release was reissued on June 9, 2020, which included the addition of a June 11 "restart" at the Window Rock, Arizona, Area Census Office.[69] Days later, the Navajo Nation began reinstating lockdown restrictions and curfews due to a surge in new cases.[70][71]

A June 12, 2020, press release shared that the update leave (UL) operation had resumed, as well as fingerprinting of selected applicants.[72] The agency announced that the update enumerate (UE) operation would restart on June 14 "in remote parts of northern Maine and southeast Alaska" where employees update the Census Bureau's address list and interview households for the 2020 census, claiming "all census takers have been trained on social distancing protocols, and will be issued personal protective equipment (PPE) and will follow local guidelines for their use."[72] The June 12 press release also shared that the communications campaign had been adapted due to the pandemic and would continue through October, "the end of 2020 census data collection operations", with additional paid media planned for July, August and September,[72] though a July 15 list of media vendors showed only plans through the end of July.[73]

On August 3, 2020, the Census Bureau announced that field collection would end on September 30, rather than October 31 as planned in April.[74][75] In a leaked internal document, Census Bureau career officials determined that starting Nonresponse Followup Operations in this Replan would put the health and safety of employees at risk, stating, "These ACOs will have to deploy staff regardless of the COVID-19 risk in those areas to open on these dates."[76] On September 8, 2020, Mark H. Zabarsky, Principal Assistant Inspector General for Audit and Evaluation published an alert on behalf of the Department of Commerce Office of Inspector General, which stated that the number of COVID-19 related safety issues raised by hotline complaints tripled between July 1 and August 21.[77]

State rankings

 
A map showing the population change of the 50 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico by percentage.
Population and population change in the United States by state
Rank State Population as of
2010 census[78]
Population as of
2020 census[79]
Change Percent
change
1   California 37,253,956 39,538,223 2,284,267   6.1%  
2   Texas 25,145,561 29,145,505 3,999,944   15.9%  
3   Florida 18,801,310 21,538,187 2,736,877   14.6%  
4   New York 19,378,102 20,201,249 823,147   4.3%  
5   Pennsylvania 12,702,379 13,002,700 300,321   2.4%  
6   Illinois 12,830,632 12,812,508 −18,124   −0.1% 
7   Ohio 11,536,504 11,799,448 262,944   2.3%  
8   Georgia 9,687,653 10,711,908 1,024,255   10.6%  
9   North Carolina 9,535,483 10,439,388 903,905   9.5%  
10   Michigan 9,883,640 10,077,331 193,691   2.0%  
11   New Jersey 8,791,894 9,288,994 497,100   5.7%  
12   Virginia 8,001,024 8,631,393 630,369   7.9%  
13   Washington 6,724,540 7,705,281 980,741   14.6%  
14   Arizona 6,392,017 7,151,502 759,485   11.9%  
15   Massachusetts 6,547,629 7,029,917 482,288   7.4%  
16   Tennessee 6,346,105 6,910,840 564,735   8.9%  
17   Indiana 6,483,802 6,785,528 301,726   4.6%  
18   Maryland 5,773,552 6,177,224 403,672   7.0%  
19   Missouri 5,988,927 6,154,913 165,986   2.8%  
20   Wisconsin 5,686,986 5,893,718 206,732   3.6%  
21   Colorado 5,029,196 5,773,714 744,518   14.8%  
22   Minnesota 5,303,925 5,706,494 402,569   7.6%  
23   South Carolina 4,625,364 5,118,425 493,061   10.7%  
24   Alabama 4,779,736 5,024,279 244,543   5.1%  
25   Louisiana 4,533,372 4,657,757 124,385   2.7%  
26   Kentucky 4,339,367 4,505,836 166,469   3.8%  
27   Oregon 3,831,074 4,237,256 406,182   10.6%  
28   Oklahoma 3,751,351 3,959,353 208,002   5.5%  
29   Connecticut 3,574,097 3,605,944 31,847   0.9%  
30   Utah 2,763,885 3,271,616 507,731   18.4%  
31   Iowa 3,046,355 3,190,369 144,014   4.7%  
32   Nevada 2,700,551 3,104,614 404,063   15.0%  
33   Arkansas 2,915,918 3,011,524 95,606   3.3%  
34   Mississippi 2,967,297 2,961,279 −6,018   −0.2%  
35   Kansas 2,853,118 2,937,880 84,762   3.0%  
36   New Mexico 2,059,179 2,117,522 58,343   2.8%  
37   Nebraska 1,826,341 1,961,504 135,163   7.4%  
38   Idaho 1,567,582 1,839,106 271,524   17.3%  
39   West Virginia 1,852,994 1,793,716 −59,278   −3.2%  
40   Hawaii 1,360,301 1,455,271 94,970   7.0%  
41   New Hampshire 1,316,470 1,377,529 61,059   4.6%  
42   Maine 1,328,361 1,362,359 33,998   2.6%  
43   Rhode Island 1,052,567 1,097,379 44,812   4.3%  
44   Montana 989,415 1,084,225 94,810   9.6%  
45   Delaware 897,934 989,948 92,014   10.3% 
46   South Dakota 814,180 886,667 72,487   8.9%  
47   North Dakota 672,591 779,094 106,503   15.8%  
48   Alaska 710,231 733,391 23,160   3.3%  
  District of Columbia 601,723 689,545 87,822   14.6%  
49   Vermont 625,741 643,077 17,336   2.8%  
50   Wyoming 563,626 576,851 13,225   2.4%  
    United States 308,745,538 331,449,281 22,703,743   7.4%  

City rankings

Rank City State Population Land area
(square miles)
Population density
(per square mile)
Region
1 New York New York 8,804,190 301.5 29,201.3 Northeast
2 Los Angeles California 3,898,747 468.7 8,318.2 West
3 Chicago Illinois 2,746,388 227.3 12,082.7 Midwest
4 Houston Texas 2,354,580 637.5 3,613.2 Southern
5 Philadelphia Pennsylvania 1,593,724 161 9,898.9 Northeast
6 Phoenix Arizona 1,471,941 518.3 2,839.9 West

Citizenship question debate

The U.S. decennial census is used to determine federal funds, grants, and support to states. The Census Bureau had included a citizenship question until 1950 when it was removed, though it continued to include a question asking about place of birth.[80] In a January 2018 memo, an initial evaluation by Census Bureau officials advised against such a question, saying that compiling citizenship data from existing administrative records is more accurate and far less expensive. However, Wilbur Ross, secretary of the United States Department of Commerce which oversees the Census Bureau, decided the administrative approach alone would not be sufficient.[81] The Census Bureau announced in March 2018 its plan to add a question related to citizenship for the 2020 census: "Is this person a citizen of the United States?".[82][83][84] For the 2020 census, Ross told Congress the citizenship numbers were necessary to enforce the Voting Rights Act's protection against voting discrimination.[83] Ross was accused by Democrats in Congress of lying that the citizenship question was requested by the Justice Department and approved by him.[85][86]

Upon the bureau's announcement, several state and city officials criticized the decision, reiterating the concern about discouraging participation from immigrants, resulting in undercounting, and questioning the motives of Secretary Ross in adding the question. Three simultaneous separate federal lawsuits came out of this discovery, occurring at the district courts of New York, Maryland, and California.[87] During the controversy over the census question, the Census Bureau ran a test census in June 2019 on about 480,000 households to determine what effects adding the census question would have on participation, and to prepare the bureau, its staffing, and its counting measurements, to handle the potential lack of responses due to the citizenship question.[88]

During these trials, documents released in May 2019 showed that the late Thomas B. Hofeller, an architect of Republican gerrymandering, had found that adding the census question could help to gerrymander maps that "would be advantageous to Republicans and non-Hispanic whites".[89] Hofeller later wrote the DOJ letter which justified the policy by claiming it was needed to enforce the 1965 Voting Rights Act.[89] Following this discovery, the United States House Committee on Oversight and Reform issued subpoenas for the Department of Justice to provide materials related to the census question and to question both Commerce secretary Wilbur Ross and United States Attorney General William Barr, seeking action to judge if they are in contempt. The Trump administration on June 12, 2019, asserted executive privilege over portions of the requested documents.[90] As a result, the House committee subsequently voted along party lines to hold both Ross and Barr in contempt that day.[91] The full House voted to hold Ross and Barr in contempt on July 17, 2019, in a 230–198 vote along party lines. Despite this passage, the measure will likely not have any effect on Ross and Barr unless the Justice Department takes legal actions against Ross or Barr.[needs update][92]

New York District Court and subsequent Supreme Court case

A lawsuit, led by New York state's attorney general Barbara Underwood and joined by seventeen other states, fifteen cities and other civil rights groups, was filed in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. During the discovery phase of the trial, new information came to light that Ross had had previous discussions with Steve Bannon before March 2018 with the intent to add the citizenship question, contradicting statements he had made to Congress in March. This led district judge Jesse M. Furman in September 2018 to ask that Ross clear a day in his schedule to give a deposition to the court related to the addition of the census question prior to the planned start of the trial in November.[93]

The Trump administration filed a writ of mandamus to the United States Supreme Court, requesting that they postpone the trial, and also to defer any involvement with Ross until the start of the trial. The Supreme Court issued an order that allowed the trial United States Census Bureau v. State of New York to go forward, but agreed to postpone Ross's deposition until after the start of the trial.[94] The Supreme Court also agreed to treat the writ of mandamus as a writ of petition, and granted certiorari to review the question raised by the government of whether a district court can request deposition of a high-ranking executive branch official on a matter related to a trial before evidence has been presented.[95]

Judge Furman ruled in January 2019 that the addition of the citizenship question to the census was unlawful, saying "the decision to add a citizenship question to the 2020 census – even if it did not violate the Constitution itself – was unlawful for a multitude of independent reasons and must be set aside."[96] The Justice Department filed a petition for writ of certiorari before judgment to have the case directly heard by the Supreme Court and bypass the normal appeal which would have been heard by the Second Circuit, given the pending deadline of June 2019 to publish the census forms. The Supreme Court accepted the petition related to Furman's ruling on February 15, 2019, a separate matter from the question of Ross's deposition, and the case's oral arguments were heard on April 23, 2019.[97][98]

The Supreme Court issued its decision on June 27, 2019, rejecting the Trump administration's stated rationale for including the question.[99] While the Court majority agreed that the question was allowable under the Enumeration Act, they also agreed with the ability of the District Court to ask Commerce for further explanation for the question under the Administrative Procedures Act (APA). They also agreed that the answers Commerce had provided at the time appeared to be "contrived" and pretextual, leaving open the possibility that Commerce could offer a better rationale.[100] The case was remanded back to the District Court, to allow Commerce to provide a better explanation for the rationale of the question to the District Court, who would deem if that was sufficient before allowing the question on the census. The question would be allowed on the census only if these steps can be completed before the self-imposed form printing deadline.[101] On July 7, the DOJ announced that it was replacing its entire legal team dealing with that question, but on July 9, Furman rejected the DOJ action, saying reasons must be given for the withdrawal of each attorney and that the administration had been insisting for months the question needed to be settled by July 1.[102]

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has taken steps to introduce the Hofeller evidence into the New York case but it will not be heard until late 2019 after the census forms are to be published.[103] [needs update]

California District Court case

The second suit over the census question came in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California under Judge Richard Seeborg, raised by the state of California and several cities within it. In March 2019, Seeborg similarly found as Furman had in New York that the addition of the census question was unconstitutional and issued an injunction to block its use.[87][104] The government appealed to the Ninth Circuit before the Supreme Court remanded the case.[105][106]

Maryland District Court case

A similar question related to the intent of the question was raised by several immigrants-rights groups in the United States District Court for the District of Maryland. The case was overseen by Judge George J. Hazel in the District of Maryland. Hazel had found for the pro-immigration groups in April 2019, ruling that the addition of an immigration question to the census was unconstitutional.[87] The government issued its appeal to the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals.

The new Hofeller evidence was presented to Hazel as the case was being heard on appeal during June 2019 at the Fourth Circuit. Hazel said the new evidence "raises a substantial issue".[107] On June 25, 2019, the Fourth Circuit remanded the case back to Hazel's District Court with the newly provided evidence, and to review if the additional evidence showed discriminatory intent. Should Hazel find such intent, it would be possible for him to place an injunction on the addition of the census question during a new discovery phase, regardless of the Supreme Court decision in Department of Commerce v. New York. This action would effectively render the question moot since the census forms would need to be published at this point without the citizenship question to meet the mailing deadlines.[103]

Subsequent actions

President Trump, after the Supreme Court decision in Department of Commerce was announced, stated his intent to find a way to delay the census as long as possible so the judicial matter could be resolved.[108] On July 2, 2019, the Department of Justice (DOJ) announced that the citizenship question would not be included in the census, and the Commerce Department began printing census forms without a citizenship question.[109] However, the next day, Trump insisted his administration was "absolutely moving forward" with the citizenship question, and the Justice Department confirmed in court that it had been instructed to find a legal way to include it in the census.[110][111]

In response to an order from Judge Hazel, the Justice Department affirmed on July 5, 2019, that it will be seeking a route to add the citizenship question to the census, though at the time did not know which route it would take. Hazel had ordered this response as, if the department was intending to add the question, he could begin determining a schedule in coordination with Judge Furman in the New York court for further proceedings and discovery in both the New York and the Maryland lawsuits.[111][112] On July 7, the DOJ announced its intention to replace its entire legal team on the case,[113] but Furman allowed the DOJ to dismiss only two of its eleven attorneys, writing in the July 9 rejection that the DOJ had "provide[d] no reasons, let alone 'satisfactory reasons', for the substitution of counsel".[106][114] Furman pointed out that the case had already run past the DOJ's own previously requested deadline of July 1 and replacing counsel would cause further delays.[115][106]

Separate from the events in the courts, Trump has said he also considered using an executive order to place the citizenship question on the census.[116] However, on July 11 he issued Executive Order 13880 directing the Department of Commerce to obtain citizenship data from other federal agencies rather than via the census.[117] He added that "we are not backing down in our effort to determine the citizenship status of the United States population" and that data from other federal agencies would be "far more accurate" than a census question.[118] A spokesperson for the Department of Justice said that although the DOJ had agreed with Ross's plan to include the question, "Today's executive order represents an alternative path to collecting the best citizenship data now available, which is vital for informed policymaking and numerous other reasons. Accordingly, the department will promptly inform the courts that the government will not include a citizenship question on the 2020 decennial census."[118] Besides federal agencies, the Department of Commerce is obtaining citizenship data from state records.[119]

Joe Biden, on his first day of his presidency on January 20, 2021, issued an executive order that revoked both Trump's July 11 executive order and Trump's July 21 memo, as to have the census follow the standard practice of including the counts of undocumented immigrants within the final numbers.[120][121] Other actions ordered by the Trump administration on the census, including a directive for the Census Bureau to use government records to produce block-level citizenship data, a March 2018 order by Ross for the Bureau to start compiling government records on citizenship, and a July 2019 regulatory filing regarding producing citizen voting age population data "that states may use in redistricting" have yet to be addressed.[122]

Apportionment challenges

Alabama lawsuit

While the census question was in litigation, the state of Alabama and one of its congressional representatives, Mo Brooks, filed a lawsuit against the Department of Commerce and the Census Bureau in May 2018 in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama, asserting that the framers of the Constitution never intended for illegal immigrants to be included in the census count or apportionment base. The state believed it would lose a congressional seat to other states that have had increased numbers of immigrants in the last decade.[123] The Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund sought to intervene on behalf of Latino voters, as well as the city of San Jose, California, and Santa Clara County, California, and King County, Washington, arguing that eliminating of illegal immigrants would affect federal funding for their cities and counties. The motion was granted by the end of 2018.[123]

As the census question case continued, the Census Bureau spoke of other means to obtain immigration data, and Barr, referencing the Alabama suit, said that "for example, there is a current dispute over whether illegal aliens can be included for apportionment purposes. Depending on the resolution of that dispute, this data may be relevant to those considerations. We will be studying this issue."[124] Spurred by Barr's comments that the government would not defend itself in the case, a coalition of fifteen states and other groups also moved to intervene, which was granted by September 2019.[125]

July 2020 memo

On July 21, 2020, President Trump signed a memo to the Department of Commerce, "Memorandum on Excluding Illegal Aliens from the Apportionment Base Following the 2020 Census" with instructions not to include illegal immigrants in the census totals for purposes of apportionment. The memo said the Constitution does not define which "persons" must be included in the apportionment base, and past censuses have excluded some legal immigrants in the country temporarily, justifying the change.[126] Law and census experts said this was an invalid interpretation as past case law has supported inclusion of "whole persons" including illegal immigrants, and the ACLU immediately said they planned to file a lawsuit against the administration over the memo.[127] Common Cause, the city of Atlanta, and other groups and individuals filed the first suit seeking an injunction to prevent the government from executing on the memo a week after it was signed in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia.[128]

On September 10, 2020, a three-judge panel of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York unanimously rejected the order, ruling that it was so obviously illegal a lawsuit challenging it was unnecessary.[129] Eight days later, the Trump administration filed notice that it would appeal the decision directly to the Supreme Court, bypassing the circuit court appeals process.[130] The Supreme Court accepted the petition on October 16, 2020, and scheduled expedited oral arguments in the case on November 30, 2020.[131] The Court ruled in a per curiam decision on December 18, 2020, that the case was premature due to lack of standing and ripeness but did not rule on any of the constitutional challenges at the time. The decision vacated the District Court's ruling and remanded the case to the District Court to be dismissed.[132]

Early completion of count

The Trump administration sought to complete the census count earlier than originally scheduled. In September 2020, federal district court judge Lucy Koh issued a preliminary injunction against the plan to end counting on September 30 rather than the scheduled October 31, saying the Commerce Department "never articulated a satisfactory explanation". She also blocked a plan to deliver the count results to the White House by December 31, rather than the original April 2021 delivery date when Trump might be out of office.[133] On the next business day, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross announced the count would end October 5, as the administration appealed Koh's decision to the 9th circuit. Koh ordered the government to produce documents to show the Commerce Department's reasoning.[134] The appeals court upheld Koh's ruling,[135] and the Census Bureau announced on October 2 that the count would continue until October 31.[136] Also on October 2, Koh threatened to hold Ross in contempt for repeated violations of her order.[137]

The 9th circuit decision was appealed to the Supreme Court. On October 13, in a 7–1 ruling, the court issued an unsigned order granting the request to end the count early.[138] Justice Sonia Sotomayor was the lone dissenter, saying that "meeting the deadline at the expense of the accuracy of the census is not a cost worth paying, especially when the Government has failed to show why it could not bear the lesser cost of expending more resources to meet the deadline or continuing its prior efforts to seek an extension from Congress." The count ultimately ended at 5:59 a.m. Eastern Time on October 16, 2020.[25]

Biden changes

As one of his first acts in office, President Joe Biden signed Executive Order 13986 on January 20, 2021, to discontinue citizenship tabulations at the city-block level using 2020 census data with administrative records. He also revoked a Trump directive that would have excluded those in the country illegally from the figures used for apportioning congressional seats among the states.[139]

Differential privacy

Researchers widely criticized the Census Bureau for intentionally making block-level data inaccurate by using differential privacy.[140][141][142][143] In order to purportedly prevent identification of individuals' age, gender, race, household relationships, or homeownership, "disclosure avoidance noise" was added to the data, shifting individuals between blocks, towns, or other units. This can result in substantial discrepancies in minority populations and the sizes of small places.[144] For example, Monowi, Nebraska, known for being the country's smallest incorporated municipality, was incorrectly reported to have two residents instead of one.[145] Redistricting data would also be corrupted, making equal-size districts and majority-minority districts more difficult.[141]

Accuracy

On March 10, 2022, the Census Bureau released estimates of total overcount and undercount by demographic characteristic.[146] The results found that the total Hispanic population had likely been undercounted by 4.99%, the Black population by 3.3% and Some other race by 4.34%.[146] Asians were estimated to have been overcounted by 2.62%, Non-Hispanic Whites by 1.64%, and Pacific Islanders by 1.28%.[146] Native Americans were estimated to have been undercounted by 0.91%; however, those living on reservations were undercounted by 5.64%, while those living elsewhere were overcounted by 3.06%.[146] Additional data released on May 19, 2022, found that six states (Arkansas, Florida, Illinois, Mississippi, Tennessee, and Texas) had significant undercounts and eight states (Delaware, Hawaii, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New York, Ohio, Rhode Island, and Utah) had significant overcounts of their populations.[147]

See also

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Further reading

  • Hillygus, D. Sunshine; Lopez, Jesse (2020). "Easy as 1, 2, 3? Challenges of the 2020 Census and Implications for Political Science". Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy. 1 (2): 289–317. doi:10.1561/113.00000007. S2CID 225755498.

External links

2020, united, states, census, united, states, census, 2020, twenty, fourth, decennial, united, states, census, census, reference, used, census, april, 2020, other, than, pilot, study, during, 2000, census, this, first, census, offer, options, respond, online, . The United States census of 2020 was the twenty fourth decennial United States census Census Day the reference day used for the census was April 1 2020 Other than a pilot study during the 2000 census 1 this was the first U S census to offer options to respond online or by phone in addition to the paper response form used for previous censuses 2 The census was taken during the COVID 19 pandemic which affected its administration The census recorded a resident population of 331 449 281 in the fifty states and the District of Columbia an increase of 7 4 percent or 22 703 743 over the preceding decade 3 The growth rate was the second lowest ever recorded and the net increase was the sixth highest in history This was the first census where the ten most populous states each surpassed 10 million residents as well as the first census where the ten most populous cities each surpassed 1 million residents Twenty fourth census of the United States 2010 April 1 2020 2030 Seal of the U S Census BureauGeneral informationCountryUnited StatesTopicsCensus topics People and populationRace and ethnicityFamilies and living arrangementsHealthEducationBusiness and economyEmploymentHousingIncome and povertyAuthorityU S Census BureauWebsitewww wbr census wbr gov wbr ResultsTotal population331 449 281 7 4 Most populous wbr stateCalifornia 39 538 223 Least populous wbr stateWyoming 576 851 Contents 1 Background 2 Purpose 2 1 Reapportionment 2 2 Redistricting 2 3 Federal funding distribution 3 Major design changes 4 Questions and data uses 5 Timeline 6 Response rates 7 Marketing and partnerships 8 Implementation problems 9 COVID 19 pandemic emergency 10 State rankings 11 City rankings 12 Citizenship question debate 12 1 New York District Court and subsequent Supreme Court case 12 2 California District Court case 12 3 Maryland District Court case 12 4 Subsequent actions 13 Apportionment challenges 13 1 Alabama lawsuit 13 2 July 2020 memo 13 3 Early completion of count 14 Biden changes 15 Differential privacy 16 Accuracy 17 See also 18 References 19 Further reading 20 External linksBackground Edit 2020 U S census yard sign in Columbus Ohio As required by the United States Constitution the U S census has been conducted every 10 years since 1790 The 2010 United States census was the previous census completed All persons in the U S age 18 years and older are legally obligated to answer census questions and to do so truthfully Title 13 of the United States Code 4 5 Personally identifiable information is private and the Census Bureau itself will never release it However the National Archives and Records Administration NARA could release the original census returns in 2092 if the 72 year rule is not changed before then 6 On census reference day April 1 2020 the resident United States population 50 states Washington D C excluding overseas territories military members stationed abroad and civilian U S citizens living abroad was projected to be 329 5 million 7 a 6 7 increase from the 2010 census Purpose EditReapportionment Edit See also United States congressional apportionmentThe results of the 2020 census determine the number of seats for each state in the House of Representatives and hence also the number of electors for each state in the Electoral College for elections from 2022 to 2030 Allocation of districts following the 2020 census The Census Bureau announced the apportionment figures on April 26 2021 Thirteen states saw changes in congressional seats California New York Illinois Michigan Ohio Pennsylvania and West Virginia lost one seat 8 Colorado Florida Montana North Carolina and Oregon gained one seat Texas gained two seats This represented a smaller number of seats shifting than was forecast by independent analysts 9 Redistricting Edit See also 2020 United States redistricting cycle State and local officials use census counts to redraw boundaries for districts like congressional districts redistricting state legislative districts and school districts Federal funding distribution Edit Dozens of federal programs use census data to help direct funding to state and local areas Census results help determine how more than 675 billion in federal funding is allocated to states and communities each year for roads schools hospitals health clinics emergency services and more 10 Major design changes EditThe 2020 census was the first U S census to offer a full internet response option and the first to extensively use technology instead of paper to manage and conduct fieldwork Key design changes included 2 11 Three response options internet paper and phone Ultimately every household that did not respond online was sent a paper form Households in areas with low internet access received a paper form from the start Multiple languages In addition to English respondents were able to complete the census in twelve other languages online or by phone In addition language guides language glossaries and language identification cards were provided in fifty nine non English languages In office address canvassing In the 2010 and earlier censuses census workers walked every street in the United States to verify addresses on the ground The 2020 census used satellite imagery and GPS to identify areas where housing had changed and assigned workers to verify those addresses in person Digital case management Census takers used secure iPhone 8 smartphones 12 to receive daily assignments navigate to interviews communicate with supervisors and submit timesheets Special software was designed to optimize assignments streamline management flag issues immediately and reduce unnecessary follow up visits Streamlined follow up visits using existing data sources The 2020 census used existing government and third party data to identify vacant households to predict the best time of day to visit a particular household and to count and provide characteristics for the people in the household after multiple attempts using existing high quality data from trusted sources Questions and data uses Edit As required by the Census Act 13 the U S Census Bureau submitted a list of questions to Congress on March 29 2018 14 The U S census will not share any participant s information with any government agency as it is prohibited by Title 13 United States code It has been challenged however the Supreme Court has always prevailed in reference to Title 13 to protect the confidentiality and privacy of information provided 15 Based on those questions and a subsequent executive order the 2020 census asked 16 17 The number of people living or staying at the respondent s home on April 1 2020 Used for the total count and to ensure everyone is counted once only once and in the right place according to where they live on Census Day Whether the home is owned or rented Used to produce statistics about homeownership and renters for economic indicators housing programs and informing planning decisions The sex of each person in the household Used to produce statistics used to plan and fund government programs enforce laws regulations and policies against discrimination The age of each person in the household Used to better understand the size and characteristics of different age groups Agencies use these data to plan and fund government programs that support specific age groups including children and older populations The race of each person in the household Used by federal agencies to monitor compliance with anti discrimination provisions such as those under the Voting Rights Act and Civil Rights Act Whether a person in the household is of Hispanic Latino or Spanish origin Used by federal agencies to monitor compliance with anti discrimination provisions such as those under the Voting Rights Act and the Civil Rights Act The relationship of each person in the household to each other Used to plan and fund government programs that support families including people raising children alone and other households who qualify for additional assistance Timeline Edit Average Annual Population Growth Rate in each county of the fifty states the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico between 2010 and 2020 according to the U S Census Bureau January March 2019 The U S Census Bureau opens 39 area census offices 18 June September 2019 The Census Bureau opens the remaining 209 area census offices The offices support and manage the census takers who work all over the country to conduct the census August 2019 The Census Bureau conducts the in field address canvassing operation Census takers visit areas that have added or lost housing in recent years to ensure the Bureau s address list is up to date The 2020 census will be the first modern census that did not verify every address in person on the ground Instead satellite imagery U S Postal Service and other current records will verify most addresses and will highlight areas where census workers need to verify in person January 21 2020 The Census Bureau begins counting the population in remote Alaska with Toksook Bay being the first town to be enumerated 19 20 April 1 2020 Census Day is observed nationwide By this date households will receive an invitation to participate in the 2020 census There are three options for responding online by mail or by phone 21 22 April 2020 Census takers begin following up with households around selected colleges and universities Census takers also begin conducting quality check interviews delayed May 2020 The Census Bureau begins following up with households who have not responded NRFU Nonresponse Followup delayed to August 11 October 31 In August 2020 the 3 month NRFU enumeration period was compressed to two 1 2 months ending October 15 2020 23 September 23 24 People experiencing homelessness counted by officials who visited shelters at soup kitchens and mobile food vans and non sheltered outdoor locations such as tent encampments 24 October 15 Self response data collection ends with over 99 9 of households having self responded or been counted by census takers 24 October 16 2020 The count ends 25 December 31 2020 The Census Bureau delivers apportionment counts to the U S president 24 26 This had been delayed to April 30 2021 27 April 1 2021 The Census Bureau sends redistricting counts to the states This information is used to redraw legislative districts based on population changes 24 This had been delayed to no earlier than September 30 2021 27 April 26 2021 Population results were released for the country as a whole and each state 28 August 12 2021 The Census Bureau began releasing data by race ethnicity sex and age as well as population numbers for counties cities towns and other smaller areas 28 Response rates EditAccording to the Census Bureau 60 0 of all U S households had submitted their census questionnaire by May 22 2020 either online by mail or by phone Most U S households were mailed an invitation letter between March 12 20 to self respond They account for more than 95 of all U S households Prior to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic the remaining 5 of U S households mostly in rural areas were supposed to be visited by census takers in April May dropping off invitation letters to owners This was delayed but most census offices restarted work again in mid May By July 14 2020 the self response rate was 62 1 or 91 800 000 households 29 The self response rate was 66 5 in 2010 and 67 4 in 2000 30 In an update published October 19 2020 the Census Bureau stated 99 98 of addresses had been accounted for with all but one state over a 99 9 rate Paper responses postmarked on or before October 15 will be processed as long as they arrived at the processing center by October 22 31 Marketing and partnerships Edit As in previous censuses the 2020 census relied on a network of trusted voices nationwide to help raise awareness answer questions and encourage community members to participate 32 Hundreds of local complete count committees are dedicating resources to the efforts nationwide 33 34 VMLY amp R formerly Young amp Rubicam secured the Integrated Communications Contract for the 2020 census campaign in August 2016 35 As the contract s primary agency of record VMLY amp R created an integrated team for this project Team Y amp R which includes subcontractors specializing in minority outreach digital media earned media and more In March 2019 the campaign unveiled the 2020 census tagline Shape your future START HERE The tagline was based on research that demonstrated which types of messages will reach and motivate all populations including segments of the population who are historically hard to count 36 37 Implementation problems EditThe printing company Cenveo won the 61 million contract in October 2017 to produce census forms and reminders but went bankrupt less than four months later The inspector general of the U S Government Publishing Office said the agency failed to check the company s financial status and improperly allowed the company to lower its bid after other bids were unsealed 38 The coronavirus pandemic caused delays to census field operations and counts of the homeless and people living in group quarters As of April 1 2020 update Census Day the Census Bureau still planned to complete the count by the end of the year 39 COVID 19 pandemic emergency EditOn March 18 2020 the U S Census Bureau issued a press release by Director Steven D Dillingham announcing that 2020 census field operations would be suspended for two weeks until April 1 2020 due to the COVID 19 pandemic 40 On March 27 2020 the agency announced it would temporarily suspend in person interviews for its on going surveys 41 The agency claimed that staffing adjustments at its call centers due to implementing health guidance had led to increases in call wait times affecting different languages at different times 42 According to its own documentation the U S Census Bureau continued to pay 2020 census employees even though field operations were supposed to be suspended 43 On March 28 2020 the U S Census Bureau issued another press release announcing 2020 census field operations would be suspended for an additional two weeks through April 15 2020 44 Census Bureau officials communicated to the media that on March 27 2020 they learned an employee had tested positive for COVID 19 at the agency s National Processing Center in Jeffersonville Indiana 45 which the agency kept open during the suspension claiming they would transition to the minimum number of on site staff necessary to continue operations 46 The agency announced on April 10 2020 that it took steps to make more employees available to respond to requests at the call centers 47 In a joint statement on April 13 2020 U S Department of Commerce secretary Wilbur Ross and U S Census Bureau director Steven Dillingham announced further operational adjustments to the 2020 census due to COVID 19 health and safety concerns 48 In the statement it was explained that steps were being taken to reactivate field offices beginning June 1 2020 in person activities including all interaction with the public enumeration office work and processing activities would incorporate the most current guidance to promote the health and safety of staff and the public including personal protective equipment PPE and social distancing practices 48 This release stated in order to ensure the completeness and accuracy of the 2020 census the Census Bureau is seeking statutory relief from Congress of 120 additional calendar days to deliver final apportionment counts 48 due to the COVID 19 emergency and that under this plan the Census Bureau would extend the window for field data collection and self response to October 31 2020 which will allow for apportionment counts to be delivered to the president by April 30 2021 and redistricting data to be delivered to the states no later than September 30 2021 48 On April 15 2020 U S Census Bureau director Steven Dillingham wrote to Department of Commerce inspector general Peggy E Gustafson responding to a March 12 2020 memo sent by the Office of the Inspector General requesting information about the Census Bureau s plans to respond to the COVID 19 emergency by March 20 2020 49 The inspector general s memo asked how the Bureau would address staff and enumerator safety Dillingham s April 15 letter The Census Bureau is closely coordinating the acquisition of needed PPE materials for field and office staff through the Department of Commerce s Coronavirus Taskforce Federal partners include the Department of Homeland Security and the Centers for Disease Control We have generated and submitted estimates for equipment needs On April 15 2020 the Agency s internal task force met and discussed our estimates for needed equipment potential delivery dates and budget implications We continue to monitor the situation and make adjustments as necessary citation needed To ensure the completeness and accuracy of the 2020 census the Census Bureau is seeking statutory relief from Congress of 120 additional calendar days to deliver final apportionment counts Under this plan the Census Bureau would extend the window for field data collection and self response to October 31 2020 which will allow for apportionment counts to be delivered to the President by April 30 2021 and redistricting data to be delivered to the states no later than September 30 2021 The Task Force and my senior leadership team continue to monitor and study the situation and to recommend operational and other changes to me and to the Secretary On April 24 2020 Dillingham and other Census Bureau officials briefed the House Committee on Oversight and Reform on the agency s response to the COVID 19 emergency 50 This briefing came after many requests from the committee since March 12 2020 51 including a last minute cancellation on April 20 2020 52 In the briefing Albert E Fontenot Jr the associate director for decennial census programs explained that the bureau was planning a phased start to many of our census operations rather than beginning field operations nationwide on June 1 2020 as previously announced and said operations would resume at different times in different areas of the country based on federal state and local public health guidance as well as the availability of personal protective equipment prioritizing reopening mail processing centers and census offices and said the bureau would notify Congress as it begins to restart operations 50 However the National Processing Center and Area Census Offices had remained open 46 53 Starting on May 4 2020 the U S Census Bureau began publishing dates as it claimed to begin a phased restart of some 2020 census field operations in select geographic areas and said they had ordered personal protective equipment PPE for all field staff including those that work in a field office These materials will be secured and provided to staff prior to restarting operations 54 Publicly published procurement data shows that an award was signed on April 28 2020 for non medical reusable face masks for area census offices in a 5 001 393 60 contract awarded to Industries for the Blind and Visually Impaired Inc 55 Around that time two contracts for hand sanitizer were awarded to Travis Association for the Blind one signed on May 9 2020 in a 57 390 00 contract 56 and the other signed on May 13 2020 in a 557 251 20 contract 57 with both contracts listing the place of principal performance as Jeffersonville Indiana 56 57 The agency decided that face shields were necessary to protect employees from COVID 19 exposure but provided them only to personnel at the headquarters and national processing centers 58 An OSHA complaint was made from Oklahoma City on May 1 2020 complaining that employees were not able to practice social distancing and were not provided with adequate personal protective equipment such as gloves and masks 59 showing the office was open prior to the Census Bureau s published office restart date of May 4 2020 54 60 Additional restart dates starting May 18 were published on May 15 2020 for other geographic areas in eleven states 61 An OSHA complaint was recorded that same day from St Louis that desks remained close together with no physical dividers improper sanitation practices were being used and no remote work for high risk employees 59 The published restart date for the St Louis Area Census Office was May 11 2020 60 On May 21 2020 procurement information for two contracts was entered into the Federal Procurement Data System One contract was for 1 502 928 00 awarded to Industries for the Blind and Visually Impaired Inc for hand sanitizer 62 and a contract for 7 053 569 85 for four ounce 118 ml hand sanitizers awarded to NewView Oklahoma Inc 63 both with the place of principal performance listed as Jeffersonville Indiana May 22 2020 saw two additional contracts one was a disinfectant wipes contract for 3 137 533 00 awarded to Industries for the Blind and Visually Impaired Inc 64 and the other was a contract for 2 107 000 00 awarded to NewView Oklahoma for blue nitrile gloves both with a place of principal performance listed as Jeffersonville Indiana A press release on May 22 2020 announced May 25 restart dates for ten more states 65 An OSHA complaint was made from Concord California on April 3 2020 that there were at least two confirmed cases of COVID 19 unrecorded on OSHA 300 logs and that employees were working in close quarters with no disinfection of shared equipment such as headsets laptops and tablets 59 The published restart date for the Concord California Area Census Office was May 25 2020 65 Offices were reopened in the areas of American Samoa the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands Guam and the U S Virgin Islands in preparation for resuming operations for the 2020 Island Areas Censuses on May 22 2020 66 On May 29 2020 a press release was published announcing restart of operations in seven additional states and the Washington D C area starting from the week of June 1 67 An OSHA complaint was made from Austin Texas on May 27 2020 complaining that CDC guidelines were not being followed that employees were unable to practice social distancing and that employees experiencing flu like symptoms and positive COVID 19 test results continued to come to work 59 showing the office was open prior to the Census Bureau s published office restart date of June 1 2020 67 In a June 5 2020 press release the U S Census Bureau announced additional area census offices ACOs would restart on June 8 saying that with these additions field activities have restarted in 247 of 248 area census offices stateside all ACOs in Puerto Rico and the island areas and 98 9 of the nation s update leave workload will have resumed 68 The June 5 press release was reissued on June 9 2020 which included the addition of a June 11 restart at the Window Rock Arizona Area Census Office 69 Days later the Navajo Nation began reinstating lockdown restrictions and curfews due to a surge in new cases 70 71 A June 12 2020 press release shared that the update leave UL operation had resumed as well as fingerprinting of selected applicants 72 The agency announced that the update enumerate UE operation would restart on June 14 in remote parts of northern Maine and southeast Alaska where employees update the Census Bureau s address list and interview households for the 2020 census claiming all census takers have been trained on social distancing protocols and will be issued personal protective equipment PPE and will follow local guidelines for their use 72 The June 12 press release also shared that the communications campaign had been adapted due to the pandemic and would continue through October the end of 2020 census data collection operations with additional paid media planned for July August and September 72 though a July 15 list of media vendors showed only plans through the end of July 73 On August 3 2020 the Census Bureau announced that field collection would end on September 30 rather than October 31 as planned in April 74 75 In a leaked internal document Census Bureau career officials determined that starting Nonresponse Followup Operations in this Replan would put the health and safety of employees at risk stating These ACOs will have to deploy staff regardless of the COVID 19 risk in those areas to open on these dates 76 On September 8 2020 Mark H Zabarsky Principal Assistant Inspector General for Audit and Evaluation published an alert on behalf of the Department of Commerce Office of Inspector General which stated that the number of COVID 19 related safety issues raised by hotline complaints tripled between July 1 and August 21 77 State rankings Edit A map showing the population change of the 50 states the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico by percentage Population and population change in the United States by state Rank State Population as of2010 census 78 Population as of2020 census 79 Change Percentchange1 California 37 253 956 39 538 223 2 284 267 6 1 2 Texas 25 145 561 29 145 505 3 999 944 15 9 3 Florida 18 801 310 21 538 187 2 736 877 14 6 4 New York 19 378 102 20 201 249 823 147 4 3 5 Pennsylvania 12 702 379 13 002 700 300 321 2 4 6 Illinois 12 830 632 12 812 508 18 124 0 1 7 Ohio 11 536 504 11 799 448 262 944 2 3 8 Georgia 9 687 653 10 711 908 1 024 255 10 6 9 North Carolina 9 535 483 10 439 388 903 905 9 5 10 Michigan 9 883 640 10 077 331 193 691 2 0 11 New Jersey 8 791 894 9 288 994 497 100 5 7 12 Virginia 8 001 024 8 631 393 630 369 7 9 13 Washington 6 724 540 7 705 281 980 741 14 6 14 Arizona 6 392 017 7 151 502 759 485 11 9 15 Massachusetts 6 547 629 7 029 917 482 288 7 4 16 Tennessee 6 346 105 6 910 840 564 735 8 9 17 Indiana 6 483 802 6 785 528 301 726 4 6 18 Maryland 5 773 552 6 177 224 403 672 7 0 19 Missouri 5 988 927 6 154 913 165 986 2 8 20 Wisconsin 5 686 986 5 893 718 206 732 3 6 21 Colorado 5 029 196 5 773 714 744 518 14 8 22 Minnesota 5 303 925 5 706 494 402 569 7 6 23 South Carolina 4 625 364 5 118 425 493 061 10 7 24 Alabama 4 779 736 5 024 279 244 543 5 1 25 Louisiana 4 533 372 4 657 757 124 385 2 7 26 Kentucky 4 339 367 4 505 836 166 469 3 8 27 Oregon 3 831 074 4 237 256 406 182 10 6 28 Oklahoma 3 751 351 3 959 353 208 002 5 5 29 Connecticut 3 574 097 3 605 944 31 847 0 9 30 Utah 2 763 885 3 271 616 507 731 18 4 31 Iowa 3 046 355 3 190 369 144 014 4 7 32 Nevada 2 700 551 3 104 614 404 063 15 0 33 Arkansas 2 915 918 3 011 524 95 606 3 3 34 Mississippi 2 967 297 2 961 279 6 018 0 2 35 Kansas 2 853 118 2 937 880 84 762 3 0 36 New Mexico 2 059 179 2 117 522 58 343 2 8 37 Nebraska 1 826 341 1 961 504 135 163 7 4 38 Idaho 1 567 582 1 839 106 271 524 17 3 39 West Virginia 1 852 994 1 793 716 59 278 3 2 40 Hawaii 1 360 301 1 455 271 94 970 7 0 41 New Hampshire 1 316 470 1 377 529 61 059 4 6 42 Maine 1 328 361 1 362 359 33 998 2 6 43 Rhode Island 1 052 567 1 097 379 44 812 4 3 44 Montana 989 415 1 084 225 94 810 9 6 45 Delaware 897 934 989 948 92 014 10 3 46 South Dakota 814 180 886 667 72 487 8 9 47 North Dakota 672 591 779 094 106 503 15 8 48 Alaska 710 231 733 391 23 160 3 3 District of Columbia 601 723 689 545 87 822 14 6 49 Vermont 625 741 643 077 17 336 2 8 50 Wyoming 563 626 576 851 13 225 2 4 United States 308 745 538 331 449 281 22 703 743 7 4 City rankings EditSee also List of United States cities by population Rank City State Population Land area square miles Population density per square mile Region1 New York New York 8 804 190 301 5 29 201 3 Northeast2 Los Angeles California 3 898 747 468 7 8 318 2 West3 Chicago Illinois 2 746 388 227 3 12 082 7 Midwest4 Houston Texas 2 354 580 637 5 3 613 2 Southern5 Philadelphia Pennsylvania 1 593 724 161 9 898 9 Northeast6 Phoenix Arizona 1 471 941 518 3 2 839 9 WestCitizenship question debate EditThe U S decennial census is used to determine federal funds grants and support to states The Census Bureau had included a citizenship question until 1950 when it was removed though it continued to include a question asking about place of birth 80 In a January 2018 memo an initial evaluation by Census Bureau officials advised against such a question saying that compiling citizenship data from existing administrative records is more accurate and far less expensive However Wilbur Ross secretary of the United States Department of Commerce which oversees the Census Bureau decided the administrative approach alone would not be sufficient 81 The Census Bureau announced in March 2018 its plan to add a question related to citizenship for the 2020 census Is this person a citizen of the United States 82 83 84 For the 2020 census Ross told Congress the citizenship numbers were necessary to enforce the Voting Rights Act s protection against voting discrimination 83 Ross was accused by Democrats in Congress of lying that the citizenship question was requested by the Justice Department and approved by him 85 86 Upon the bureau s announcement several state and city officials criticized the decision reiterating the concern about discouraging participation from immigrants resulting in undercounting and questioning the motives of Secretary Ross in adding the question Three simultaneous separate federal lawsuits came out of this discovery occurring at the district courts of New York Maryland and California 87 During the controversy over the census question the Census Bureau ran a test census in June 2019 on about 480 000 households to determine what effects adding the census question would have on participation and to prepare the bureau its staffing and its counting measurements to handle the potential lack of responses due to the citizenship question 88 During these trials documents released in May 2019 showed that the late Thomas B Hofeller an architect of Republican gerrymandering had found that adding the census question could help to gerrymander maps that would be advantageous to Republicans and non Hispanic whites 89 Hofeller later wrote the DOJ letter which justified the policy by claiming it was needed to enforce the 1965 Voting Rights Act 89 Following this discovery the United States House Committee on Oversight and Reform issued subpoenas for the Department of Justice to provide materials related to the census question and to question both Commerce secretary Wilbur Ross and United States Attorney General William Barr seeking action to judge if they are in contempt The Trump administration on June 12 2019 asserted executive privilege over portions of the requested documents 90 As a result the House committee subsequently voted along party lines to hold both Ross and Barr in contempt that day 91 The full House voted to hold Ross and Barr in contempt on July 17 2019 in a 230 198 vote along party lines Despite this passage the measure will likely not have any effect on Ross and Barr unless the Justice Department takes legal actions against Ross or Barr needs update 92 New York District Court and subsequent Supreme Court case Edit See also Department of Commerce v New York A lawsuit led by New York state s attorney general Barbara Underwood and joined by seventeen other states fifteen cities and other civil rights groups was filed in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York During the discovery phase of the trial new information came to light that Ross had had previous discussions with Steve Bannon before March 2018 with the intent to add the citizenship question contradicting statements he had made to Congress in March This led district judge Jesse M Furman in September 2018 to ask that Ross clear a day in his schedule to give a deposition to the court related to the addition of the census question prior to the planned start of the trial in November 93 The Trump administration filed a writ of mandamus to the United States Supreme Court requesting that they postpone the trial and also to defer any involvement with Ross until the start of the trial The Supreme Court issued an order that allowed the trial United States Census Bureau v State of New York to go forward but agreed to postpone Ross s deposition until after the start of the trial 94 The Supreme Court also agreed to treat the writ of mandamus as a writ of petition and granted certiorari to review the question raised by the government of whether a district court can request deposition of a high ranking executive branch official on a matter related to a trial before evidence has been presented 95 Judge Furman ruled in January 2019 that the addition of the citizenship question to the census was unlawful saying the decision to add a citizenship question to the 2020 census even if it did not violate the Constitution itself was unlawful for a multitude of independent reasons and must be set aside 96 The Justice Department filed a petition for writ of certiorari before judgment to have the case directly heard by the Supreme Court and bypass the normal appeal which would have been heard by the Second Circuit given the pending deadline of June 2019 to publish the census forms The Supreme Court accepted the petition related to Furman s ruling on February 15 2019 a separate matter from the question of Ross s deposition and the case s oral arguments were heard on April 23 2019 97 98 The Supreme Court issued its decision on June 27 2019 rejecting the Trump administration s stated rationale for including the question 99 While the Court majority agreed that the question was allowable under the Enumeration Act they also agreed with the ability of the District Court to ask Commerce for further explanation for the question under the Administrative Procedures Act APA They also agreed that the answers Commerce had provided at the time appeared to be contrived and pretextual leaving open the possibility that Commerce could offer a better rationale 100 The case was remanded back to the District Court to allow Commerce to provide a better explanation for the rationale of the question to the District Court who would deem if that was sufficient before allowing the question on the census The question would be allowed on the census only if these steps can be completed before the self imposed form printing deadline 101 On July 7 the DOJ announced that it was replacing its entire legal team dealing with that question but on July 9 Furman rejected the DOJ action saying reasons must be given for the withdrawal of each attorney and that the administration had been insisting for months the question needed to be settled by July 1 102 The American Civil Liberties Union ACLU has taken steps to introduce the Hofeller evidence into the New York case but it will not be heard until late 2019 after the census forms are to be published 103 needs update California District Court case Edit The second suit over the census question came in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California under Judge Richard Seeborg raised by the state of California and several cities within it In March 2019 Seeborg similarly found as Furman had in New York that the addition of the census question was unconstitutional and issued an injunction to block its use 87 104 The government appealed to the Ninth Circuit before the Supreme Court remanded the case 105 106 Maryland District Court case Edit A similar question related to the intent of the question was raised by several immigrants rights groups in the United States District Court for the District of Maryland The case was overseen by Judge George J Hazel in the District of Maryland Hazel had found for the pro immigration groups in April 2019 ruling that the addition of an immigration question to the census was unconstitutional 87 The government issued its appeal to the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals The new Hofeller evidence was presented to Hazel as the case was being heard on appeal during June 2019 at the Fourth Circuit Hazel said the new evidence raises a substantial issue 107 On June 25 2019 the Fourth Circuit remanded the case back to Hazel s District Court with the newly provided evidence and to review if the additional evidence showed discriminatory intent Should Hazel find such intent it would be possible for him to place an injunction on the addition of the census question during a new discovery phase regardless of the Supreme Court decision in Department of Commerce v New York This action would effectively render the question moot since the census forms would need to be published at this point without the citizenship question to meet the mailing deadlines 103 Subsequent actions Edit President Trump after the Supreme Court decision in Department of Commerce was announced stated his intent to find a way to delay the census as long as possible so the judicial matter could be resolved 108 On July 2 2019 the Department of Justice DOJ announced that the citizenship question would not be included in the census and the Commerce Department began printing census forms without a citizenship question 109 However the next day Trump insisted his administration was absolutely moving forward with the citizenship question and the Justice Department confirmed in court that it had been instructed to find a legal way to include it in the census 110 111 In response to an order from Judge Hazel the Justice Department affirmed on July 5 2019 that it will be seeking a route to add the citizenship question to the census though at the time did not know which route it would take Hazel had ordered this response as if the department was intending to add the question he could begin determining a schedule in coordination with Judge Furman in the New York court for further proceedings and discovery in both the New York and the Maryland lawsuits 111 112 On July 7 the DOJ announced its intention to replace its entire legal team on the case 113 but Furman allowed the DOJ to dismiss only two of its eleven attorneys writing in the July 9 rejection that the DOJ had provide d no reasons let alone satisfactory reasons for the substitution of counsel 106 114 Furman pointed out that the case had already run past the DOJ s own previously requested deadline of July 1 and replacing counsel would cause further delays 115 106 Separate from the events in the courts Trump has said he also considered using an executive order to place the citizenship question on the census 116 However on July 11 he issued Executive Order 13880 directing the Department of Commerce to obtain citizenship data from other federal agencies rather than via the census 117 He added that we are not backing down in our effort to determine the citizenship status of the United States population and that data from other federal agencies would be far more accurate than a census question 118 A spokesperson for the Department of Justice said that although the DOJ had agreed with Ross s plan to include the question Today s executive order represents an alternative path to collecting the best citizenship data now available which is vital for informed policymaking and numerous other reasons Accordingly the department will promptly inform the courts that the government will not include a citizenship question on the 2020 decennial census 118 Besides federal agencies the Department of Commerce is obtaining citizenship data from state records 119 Joe Biden on his first day of his presidency on January 20 2021 issued an executive order that revoked both Trump s July 11 executive order and Trump s July 21 memo as to have the census follow the standard practice of including the counts of undocumented immigrants within the final numbers 120 121 Other actions ordered by the Trump administration on the census including a directive for the Census Bureau to use government records to produce block level citizenship data a March 2018 order by Ross for the Bureau to start compiling government records on citizenship and a July 2019 regulatory filing regarding producing citizen voting age population data that states may use in redistricting have yet to be addressed 122 Apportionment challenges EditAlabama lawsuit Edit While the census question was in litigation the state of Alabama and one of its congressional representatives Mo Brooks filed a lawsuit against the Department of Commerce and the Census Bureau in May 2018 in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama asserting that the framers of the Constitution never intended for illegal immigrants to be included in the census count or apportionment base The state believed it would lose a congressional seat to other states that have had increased numbers of immigrants in the last decade 123 The Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund sought to intervene on behalf of Latino voters as well as the city of San Jose California and Santa Clara County California and King County Washington arguing that eliminating of illegal immigrants would affect federal funding for their cities and counties The motion was granted by the end of 2018 123 As the census question case continued the Census Bureau spoke of other means to obtain immigration data and Barr referencing the Alabama suit said that for example there is a current dispute over whether illegal aliens can be included for apportionment purposes Depending on the resolution of that dispute this data may be relevant to those considerations We will be studying this issue 124 Spurred by Barr s comments that the government would not defend itself in the case a coalition of fifteen states and other groups also moved to intervene which was granted by September 2019 125 July 2020 memo Edit Main article Trump v New York On July 21 2020 President Trump signed a memo to the Department of Commerce Memorandum on Excluding Illegal Aliens from the Apportionment Base Following the 2020 Census with instructions not to include illegal immigrants in the census totals for purposes of apportionment The memo said the Constitution does not define which persons must be included in the apportionment base and past censuses have excluded some legal immigrants in the country temporarily justifying the change 126 Law and census experts said this was an invalid interpretation as past case law has supported inclusion of whole persons including illegal immigrants and the ACLU immediately said they planned to file a lawsuit against the administration over the memo 127 Common Cause the city of Atlanta and other groups and individuals filed the first suit seeking an injunction to prevent the government from executing on the memo a week after it was signed in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia 128 On September 10 2020 a three judge panel of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York unanimously rejected the order ruling that it was so obviously illegal a lawsuit challenging it was unnecessary 129 Eight days later the Trump administration filed notice that it would appeal the decision directly to the Supreme Court bypassing the circuit court appeals process 130 The Supreme Court accepted the petition on October 16 2020 and scheduled expedited oral arguments in the case on November 30 2020 131 The Court ruled in a per curiam decision on December 18 2020 that the case was premature due to lack of standing and ripeness but did not rule on any of the constitutional challenges at the time The decision vacated the District Court s ruling and remanded the case to the District Court to be dismissed 132 Early completion of count Edit The Trump administration sought to complete the census count earlier than originally scheduled In September 2020 federal district court judge Lucy Koh issued a preliminary injunction against the plan to end counting on September 30 rather than the scheduled October 31 saying the Commerce Department never articulated a satisfactory explanation She also blocked a plan to deliver the count results to the White House by December 31 rather than the original April 2021 delivery date when Trump might be out of office 133 On the next business day Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross announced the count would end October 5 as the administration appealed Koh s decision to the 9th circuit Koh ordered the government to produce documents to show the Commerce Department s reasoning 134 The appeals court upheld Koh s ruling 135 and the Census Bureau announced on October 2 that the count would continue until October 31 136 Also on October 2 Koh threatened to hold Ross in contempt for repeated violations of her order 137 The 9th circuit decision was appealed to the Supreme Court On October 13 in a 7 1 ruling the court issued an unsigned order granting the request to end the count early 138 Justice Sonia Sotomayor was the lone dissenter saying that meeting the deadline at the expense of the accuracy of the census is not a cost worth paying especially when the Government has failed to show why it could not bear the lesser cost of expending more resources to meet the deadline or continuing its prior efforts to seek an extension from Congress The count ultimately ended at 5 59 a m Eastern Time on October 16 2020 25 Biden changes EditAs one of his first acts in office President Joe Biden signed Executive Order 13986 on January 20 2021 to discontinue citizenship tabulations at the city block level using 2020 census data with administrative records He also revoked a Trump directive that would have excluded those in the country illegally from the figures used for apportioning congressional seats among the states 139 Differential privacy EditResearchers widely criticized the Census Bureau for intentionally making block level data inaccurate by using differential privacy 140 141 142 143 In order to purportedly prevent identification of individuals age gender race household relationships or homeownership disclosure avoidance noise was added to the data shifting individuals between blocks towns or other units This can result in substantial discrepancies in minority populations and the sizes of small places 144 For example Monowi Nebraska known for being the country s smallest incorporated municipality was incorrectly reported to have two residents instead of one 145 Redistricting data would also be corrupted making equal size districts and majority minority districts more difficult 141 Accuracy EditOn March 10 2022 the Census Bureau released estimates of total overcount and undercount by demographic characteristic 146 The results found that the total Hispanic population had likely been undercounted by 4 99 the Black population by 3 3 and Some other race by 4 34 146 Asians were estimated to have been overcounted by 2 62 Non Hispanic Whites by 1 64 and Pacific Islanders by 1 28 146 Native Americans were estimated to have been undercounted by 0 91 however those living on reservations were undercounted by 5 64 while those living elsewhere were overcounted by 3 06 146 Additional data released on May 19 2022 found that six states Arkansas Florida Illinois Mississippi Tennessee and Texas had significant undercounts and eight states Delaware Hawaii Massachusetts Minnesota New York Ohio Rhode Island and Utah had significant overcounts of their populations 147 See also EditRace and ethnicity in the United States censusReferences Edit Morrison Sara March 12 2020 The 2020 census is online Here s how to do it Vox Archived from the original on March 26 2020 Retrieved March 25 2020 While the 2020 census has been billed in some places as the first ever American census with online submissions including on the census s own website this is not quite true The 2000 census also had an online response option but it was not publicized Perhaps as a result only 63 000 households ended up filling out the 2000 census online The low response rate was intentional allowing it to serve as a test run for the 2010 census Despite the Census Bureau declaring it to be an operational success the 2010 census did not have an online submission option at all Now in 2020 the plan is for the 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Associated Press Archived from the original on November 3 2018 Retrieved November 16 2018 via CBS News Hurley Lawrence November 16 2018 Supreme Court to hear census citizenship question dispute Reuters Archived from the original on November 16 2018 Retrieved November 16 2018 Hartfield Elizabeth Wallace Gregory January 15 2019 Federal judge strikes down effort to add citizenship question to Census CNN Archived from the original on January 15 2019 Retrieved January 15 2019 Supreme Court will rule on Trump administration s effort to add question on citizenship to 2020 Census www msn com Retrieved February 15 2019 dead link Supreme Court hears arguments on 2020 census citizenship question www cbsnews com Archived from the original on May 29 2019 Retrieved May 29 2019 Liptak Adam June 27 2019 Supreme Court Leaves Census Question on Citizenship in Doubt The New York Times Archived from the original on June 27 2019 Liptak Adam June 27 2019 Supreme Court Leaves Census Question on Citizenship in Doubt The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on June 27 2019 Retrieved June 27 2019 Supreme Court orders further fact finding on controversial 2020 census citizenship question USA Today June 27 2019 Archived from the original on June 27 2019 Retrieved June 27 2019 Thomsen Jacqueline July 9 2019 Judge rejects Justice Dept request to pull lawyers from census case The Hill Archived from the original on July 9 2019 Retrieved July 9 2019 a b Thomsen Jacqueline June 25 2019 Appeals court sends census case to lower court to review discrimination claims The Hill Archived from the original on June 26 2019 Retrieved June 25 2019 Lo Wang Hanso March 6 2019 Second Judge Blocks Trump Administration s Census Citizenship Question Plans NPR Archived from the original on July 2 2019 Retrieved July 3 2019 California v Ross Brennan Center for Justice Archived from the original on December 12 2019 Retrieved November 19 2019 a b c Polantz Katelyn July 9 2019 Federal judge says DOJ can t swap out its legal team in census case CNN Archived from the original on July 9 2019 Retrieved July 9 2019 Lo Wong Hansi June 19 2019 Judge s Order Sets Up Potential New Block Against Census Citizenship Question NPR Archived from the original on June 20 2019 Retrieved June 20 2019 Wu Nicolas Wolf Richard June 27 2019 Trump says he asked lawyers if census could be delayed after Supreme Court decision on citizenship question USA Today Archived from the original on June 27 2019 Retrieved June 27 2019 Marimow Ann E Bahrampour Tara July 2 2019 2020 Census will not include citizenship question DOJ confirms The Washington Post Archived from the original on July 2 2019 Retrieved July 2 2019 Wang Hansi Lo Kelly Amita July 3 2019 DOJ Still Looking To Add Census Citizenship Question Official Tells Court NPR org Archived from the original on July 3 2019 Retrieved July 3 2019 a b Wines Michael Haberman Maggie Rappeport Alan July 3 2019 Justice Department Reverses Course on Citizenship 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away from census citizenship question direct agencies to hand over citizenship information to Commerce No July 11 2019 CNN Archived from the original on July 11 2019 Retrieved July 11 2019 a b Re Gregg July 11 2019 Trump not backing down in effort to count citizens amid census fight announces executive order Fox News Archived from the original on July 11 2019 Retrieved July 11 2019 Wang Hansi Lo July 14 2020 South Dakota Is Sharing Driver s License Info To Help Find Out Who s A Citizen NPR News Archived from the original on July 14 2020 Retrieved July 14 2020 Lo Wang Hansi January 20 2021 Biden Ends Trump Census Policy Ensuring All Persons Living In U S Are Counted NPR Archived from the original on January 20 2021 Retrieved January 21 2021 Executive Order on Ensuring a Lawful and Accurate Enumeration and Apportionment Pursuant to the Decennial Census The White House January 21 2021 Archived from the original on March 23 2022 Retrieved January 21 2021 Twitter thread Archived January 21 2021 at the Wayback Machine Hansi Lo Wang NPR News a b Lo Wang Hansi July 12 2018 Latino Voters Move To Defend Census Immigrant Count In Lawsuit By Alabama NPR Archived from the original on July 22 2020 Retrieved July 21 2020 Lo Wang Hansi August 14 2019 Do Trump Officials Plan To Break Centuries Of Precedent In Divvying Up Congress NPR Archived from the original on July 20 2020 Retrieved July 21 2020 Lo Wang Hansi September 6 2019 15 States Say Unauthorized Immigrants Should Continue To Count For Seats In Congress NPR Archived from the original on February 9 2021 Retrieved July 21 2020 Clark Dartunorro July 21 2020 Trump signs memo aimed at omitting undocumented immigrants from census apportionment count NBC News Archived from the original on July 21 2020 Retrieved July 21 2020 Alper Alexandra Brown Nick July 21 2020 Trump orders voting districts to exclude people in U S illegally Reuters Archived from the original on July 21 2020 Retrieved July 21 2020 Lo Wang Hansi July 24 2020 Trump Sued For Attempt To Omit Unauthorized Immigrants From A Key Census Count NPR Archived from the original on July 24 2020 Retrieved July 24 2020 Wines Michael September 10 2020 Federal Court Rejects Trump s Order to Exclude Undocumented From Census The New York Times Archived from the original on September 12 2020 Retrieved September 12 2020 Trump Admin Will Leapfrog Circuit Court Review Appeal District Court s Census Decision Directly to Supreme Court September 18 2020 Archived from the original on September 19 2020 Retrieved September 19 2020 Barnes Robert October 16 2020 Supreme Court will review Trump plan to exclude undocumented immigrants from calculations for congressional seats The Washington Post Archived from the original on October 17 2020 Retrieved October 16 2020 Sherman Mark December 18 2020 High court rules challenge to Trump census plan is premature Associated Press Archived from the original on December 18 2020 Retrieved December 18 2020 Wines Michael September 25 2020 Ruling Against Shortening Count Adds to Questions Raised About Census The New York Times Archived from the original on September 28 2020 Retrieved September 27 2020 Gregory Wallace September 28 2020 Census Bureau says operations will conclude by October 5 CNN Archived from the original on September 29 2020 Retrieved September 28 2020 Wang Hansi Lo September 30 2020 Appeals Court Rejects Push To End Census Early By Trump Administration NPR Archived from the original on October 3 2020 Retrieved October 3 2020 Census Bureau Statement on Oct 1 Court Ruling Press release United States Census Bureau October 2 2020 Archived from the original on January 8 2022 Retrieved March 10 2022 This Must Stop Federal Judge Threatens to Hold Wilbur Ross in Contempt if Defiance of Court Order Happens Again October 2 2020 Archived from the original on October 8 2020 Retrieved October 2 2020 de Vogue Ariane October 13 2020 Supreme Court grants Trump administration s request to halt census count while appeal plays out CNN Archived from the original on February 9 2021 Retrieved October 13 2020 Citizenship data is latest rollback of Trump census efforts AP NEWS January 23 2021 Archived from the original on January 22 2022 Retrieved January 23 2021 Harvard researchers recommend Census not use privacy tool AP NEWS June 2 2021 Archived from the original on October 14 2021 Retrieved August 24 2021 a b Hing Geoff The census has a new process to protect your privacy It also risks a less accurate count The Arizona Republic Archived from the original on November 10 2021 Retrieved August 24 2021 Overberg Paul August 2 2021 Census Data Change to Protect Privacy Rattles Researchers Minority Groups The Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Archived from the original on October 20 2021 Retrieved August 24 2021 Ruggles Steven Fitch Catherine Magnuson Diana Schroeder Jonathan May 1 2019 Differential Privacy and Census Data Implications for Social and Economic Research AEA Papers and Proceedings 109 403 408 doi 10 1257 pandp 20191107 ISSN 2574 0768 S2CID 181581245 Archived from the original on August 24 2021 Retrieved August 24 2021 New system to protect census data may compromise accuracy some experts say Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Archived from the original on June 2 2021 Retrieved August 24 2021 Salter Peter Second resident of Nebraska s one person town just a figment of Census Bureau s imagination JournalStar com Archived from the original on November 10 2021 Retrieved August 24 2021 a b c d Jensen Eric Kennel Timothy March 10 2022 Detailed Coverage Estimates for the 2020 Census Released Today United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on June 1 2022 Retrieved June 20 2022 2020 Census Undercounts in Six States Overcounts in Eight United States Census Bureau May 19 2022 Archived from the original on June 9 2022 Retrieved June 20 2022 Further reading EditHillygus D Sunshine Lopez Jesse 2020 Easy as 1 2 3 Challenges of the 2020 Census and Implications for Political Science Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy 1 2 289 317 doi 10 1561 113 00000007 S2CID 225755498 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to 2020 United States Census 2020 census from the United States Census Bureau Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2020 United States census amp oldid 1132400217, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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