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Census Bureau delays release of some of census' most detailed data until 2024

FILE - Rows of homes in suburban Salt Lake City are pictured on April 13, 2019. The U.S. Census Bureau said Wednesday, May 31, 2023, that it would once again delay the release, and narrow the scope, of some of the most detailed data from the 2020 census this time until 2024. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer, File) (Rick Bowmer, Copyright 2019 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

The U.S. Census Bureau said Wednesday that it would delay the release, and narrow the scope, of some of the most detailed data from the 2020 census — until next year.

Detailed numbers dealing with household types — such as if the household is a family — broken down by race and ethnicity, and whether homes are owned or rented, won't be released until September 2024, more than four years after the data's collection in the once-a-decade head count of every U.S. resident, the Census Bureau said.

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Also being delayed until September 2024 is the release of numbers on household and family sizes. This data set will also be much more limited than anticipated. It will only be released for the entire United States and individual U.S. states because a controversial new privacy method implemented by the Census Bureau couldn't guarantee individuals wouldn't be identified at smaller geographies.

“It is a pretty severe delay and cutback in granularity," demographer Steven Ruggles, who directs the world's largest population database at the University of Minnesota and has been critical of the need for the new privacy method, said in an email. “What a mess!”

The delays complicate planning for government budget-makers, city planners and researchers, since the detailed data are used for estimating future growth, locating schools or firehouses, and additional research.

“Many users of these data are likely to be state and local planners and officials, who need to know about micro level trends and patterns for planning, grants and program proposals,” Kenneth Johnson, a senior demographer at the University of New Hampshire, said in an email.

The data sets' release were first postponed two years ago because of delays caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and implementing the new privacy method, which adds intentional errors to data to obscure individuals' identity. The errors are most noticeable at the smallest geographies, such as census blocks with fewer than 1,000 residents.

The data sets “are very important products for people and organizations interested in very specific segments of the population, especially when it comes to representation, allocating resources and providing services,” said Jan Vink, a demographer at Cornell University. But some of the detailed data sets are hard to produce within the new privacy method's framework, he said.

So far, the Census Bureau has released data from the 2020 census in three rounds. Those include state population figures, used to determine how many congressional seats a state gets; redistricting numbers, used to draw political districts; and last week's release of demographic and housing data.

The next data release from the 2020 census is scheduled for this September, with counts of 370 detailed racial and ethnic groups.

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Follow Mike Schneider on Twitter at @MikeSchneiderAP


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