After a series of court battles, the Census Bureau on Friday announced that counting will continue through October 31.
The COVID-19 pandemic interrupted the planned roll out of the 2020 Census. In March, the Census Bureau suspended field operations for several months and shifted timelines to accommodate the delays. Typically, most Census activities would conclude by July 31; however, to accommodate operational changes, the Bureau pushed many deadlines into September.
The final piece of counting for the 2020 Census is the Nonresponse Follow-Up (NRFU), normally scheduled from May 13 through July 31. With the adjustments for COVID-19, these dates were initially pushed to August 11 and October 31 respectively. In August, the Trump Administration announced that the NRFU would conclude on September 30.
A lawsuit filed in federal court ruled in favor of the plaintiffs, suspending the September 30 deadline. The Census Bureau in turn announced that the deadline for NRFU would be extended to October 5. A Ninth Circuit Court ruling upheld the lower court’s decision to suspend the September deadline and maintain the October 31 cutoff. On Friday, October 2, the Census Bureau announced that they would continue counting through October 31 in line with the court’s decision.
An ongoing concern created by the date change is the statutory deadline of December 31, when the Census Bureau is required to deliver the census apportionment data to Congress. For a time, officials considered moving the delivery date to April 30, 2021. However, in July, the Trump Administration directed that the original requirement of December 31 be followed. Officials in the Department of Commerce’s inspector general’s office warn that rushing the count could produce serious errors
in the final data.
Redistricting data has a statutory deadline of March 30, 2021; however, the Bureau is developing a plan for a new deadline.
As of September 29, the Census Bureau has enumerated 99.8% of Washington households. Cities should continue