Judge Orders Trump Administration To Stop 'Winding Down' 2020 Census Field Work
By Gregory Wallace, CNN and KDKA-TV News Staff
(CNN) -- A federal judge on Saturday ordered the Trump administration to temporarily stop "winding down or altering any Census field operations." The order applies nationwide.
The temporary restraining order is the first court order this fall impacting how the final weeks of counting will unfold. Several other lawsuits are pending in courts across the country.
The City of Pittsburgh announced it was taking legal action against the Trump administration on Monday, September 1, over the census changes.
"Pittsburgh and other cities are faced with being undercounted this fall due to these Trump Administration moves, and we are doing all we can to fight for the full representation our residents deserve," Mayor Bill Peduto said.
New York Attorney General Letitia James announced on September 1 that she filed an amicus brief in National Urban League v. Ross along with a coalition of other attorney generals, several cities, including Pittsburgh, counties and the U.S. Conference of Mayors.
This new order announced Saturday is in effect until a hearing on September 17.
Groups protesting the move said the practice risked undercounting minority groups, including both legal and undocumented immigrants.
Judge Lucy Koh, who sits in California, noted in the temporary restraining order the concern from the groups suing the government "that each day that the Census does not conduct its field operations to reach and count hard to reach populations increases the inaccuracy of the Census count and thus increases their irreparable harm."
The Census Bureau sent a message to its field operations leadership late Saturday informing them of the order from the federal judge to continue Census field work.
"The Census Bureau and the Commerce Department are obligated to comply with the Court's Order and are taking immediate steps to do so," the message sent to the field leadership staff read. "Enumeration will continue."
At a hearing Friday, a government attorney argued the administration was only winding down operations in places where more than 85% to 90% of households were considered complete.
The Census Bureau, however, can mark as complete a household that has not responded to repeated mailings or several door knocks -- and critics say additional attempts to contact the household could make a difference.
In August, the Trump administration announced it would truncate the 2020 Census schedule after originally planning to extend it due to the coronavirus pandemic.
This story has been updated with additional developments.
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