Somebody Call A Tow Truck!
by Terri Ann Lowenthal
In my last blog post, I lamented a looming “collision” as U.S. House appropriators kept
driving the wrong way –downhill and backwards – on the up ramp to the 2020 census,
slashing the Census Bureau’s FY2014 budget request by $120+ million, which would leave the
agency with $44.5 million less than its inadequate FY2013 budget. Without early investment
in census research, testing and development, Congress could be spending a fortune to pull
the 2020 headcount out of a ditch in a few short years.
Fortunately, the Senate has dispatched the highway patrol!
Last week, the Senate Appropriations Committee approved its version of the FY2014
Commerce, Justice, and Science spending bill (S. 1329), allocating thefull amount the
Obama Administration requested for the Census Bureau: $982.5 million. Sure, the committee
once again dipped into the agency’s Working Capital Fund to get to that level, but the $10
million grab is small compared to previous raids on the WCF, and I will not look a gift
horse in the mouth today. (See my Feb. 27, 2012, post for a quick tutorial on the WCF.)
I think Senate lawmakers are starting to grasp the long-range picture. The committee’s
explanatory report (Senate Rpt. 113-78) says the budget request “suggests that the Census
Bureau intends to reduce the 2020 Census costs to 2010 Census levels by finding ways to
reduce door-to-door operations, using the Internet to solicit responses, and using
scalable technology, such as elastic agency-wide IT systems that can expand for the 2020
Census and then return to normal operations tempo.” The committee wistfully mentions the
possibility of spending less than the 2000 census, without adjusting for inflation, but we
can forgive this momentary lapse in sanity, although it clearly yearns for yesteryear with
later references to spending “less than the 2010 census” in 2020. Nevertheless, Senators
seem to understand that the bureau can’t get from point A to point B, and accomplish the
significant reforms Congress is seeking, without an investment in the groundwork that
needs to be done.
House appropriators, on the other hand, want to have their cake and eat it, too. Their
$153.5 million allocation for 2020 Census planning — $91 million belowthe president’s
request — “underscores the Committee’s views that research and testing efforts are vital
to ensuring that the 2020 Census is the most accurate and cost effective decennial yet.”
We just don’t want to pay for those efforts. The committee asked for a schedule of all
work “critical to the success of the 2020 Decennial Census,” including the cost of each
activity “to better account for the cost effects of possible schedule slippage.” And then
we’ll take you to task for falling behind schedule, even though we haven’t given you
enough money to stay on track. The funding chiefs also want the agency to create shared
and reusable IT services (“as a way to economize”!), continue developing a mobile
computing infrastructure, implement a comprehensive information security program in
accordance with in-depth GAO recommendations, and consult with the National Institute of
Standards and Technology to ensure compliance with security standards. And please figure
out how to do all of this vital work even though we cut your requested budget by nearly 40
percent. If the House has its way, Congress is going to need a super-size tow truck! (The
House Commerce funding bill allocates $225 million for the American Community Survey — the
most cost effective test-bed available for the 2020 census — $17 million less than the
administration’s request.)
Will lawmakers beat the fiscal year clock to enact a final Commerce spending bill by
midnight on September 30? Let’s consider: the House will be in session 17 more days until
the FY2013 coach turns into a pumpkin; the Senate will be in session 26 days. Ummm… I
think I see a temporary spending resolution in my crystal ball, which could leave the
Census Bureau spinning its wheels in a ditch for a while longer (at the paltry current
year funding levels), while the House and Senate try to come to grips collectively with
the concept of ramping up for the nation’s largest peacetime undertaking.
Note: The House FY2014 Commerce, Justice, and Science Appropriations bill and report
numbers are not available as of this writing, but both documents are available on the
House Appropriations Committee website.
Ed C
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