Pausing Door-To-Door Counting: Census Suspends Field Operations For Two Weeks To Protect Employees
Concerns have been raised about how to protect the safety of people who have to go door to door and about the ability to count everyone as required by the U.S. Constitution. News is also on health concerns of U.S. postal workers.
The New York Times:
Census Suspends Field Operations Amid Coronavirus Fears
Only days into the start of the 2020 census, the Census Bureau said Wednesday that it is suspending its field operations for two weeks while it searches for ways to protect its workers from exposure to the coronavirus. The immediate impact of the suspension, beyond a delay in a scheduled count of the nation’s homeless and a break in training census-takers, was not clear. But experts who had been briefed on the move said the bureau was racing to adjust to government warnings about the scope and consequences of the virus’s spread, which seemed to grow more dire by the day. (Wines, 3/18)
WBUR:
Coronavirus Forces Bureau To Suspend Census Field Operations Until April 1
As the country continues to bunker down in response to the spread of COVID-19, the bureau's director, Steven Dillingham, says it is making the change "to help protect the health and safety of the American public, Census Bureau employees, and everyone going through the hiring process for temporary census taker positions." For the next couple of weeks, the bureau is also reducing the number of on-site workers at its two centers in Phoenix and Jeffersonville, Ind., for processing paper census forms, the bureau says in a separate statement on its website. (Wang, 3/18)
ProPublica:
Letter Carriers Say The Postal Service Pressured Them To Deliver Mail Despite Coronavirus Symptoms — And Often Without Hand Sanitizer
Postal carriers say they are being pressed into service against medical advice and with insufficient protection against the novel coronavirus. Two mail carriers told ProPublica they have been pressured to stay on their routes despite showing symptoms of COVID-19. One of the workers, in Denver, says he had to keep delivering mail for days while he awaited a doctor’s note. He says the route includes many locations where there are elderly and immunocompromised residents. (Jameel, 3/18)