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Census, Congress spar on funds

By Wade-Hahn Chan
Published on April 14, 2008

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The Commerce Department’s plan to minimize the use of handheld computers in the 2010 census will cost billions, and Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez plans to pay for it, in part, by taking money from other Commerce programs.

However, Gutierrez’s plan hit a roadblock when he and Census Director Stephen Murdock presented it to the House Appropriations Committee’s Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies Subcommitttee. The panel’s members balked at the idea of allowing administration officials to unilaterally change the allocation of funds set by Congress.

Gutierrez said his plan would reduce the targeted programs to a level of funding in the administration’s original budget request, which drew objections from some lawmakers on the subcommittee.

The actions of Commerce officials suggest they are engaging in gamesmanship, said Alan Balutis, a former Commerce chief information officer.  Officials appear to be repudiating the budgets established by Congress and putting the onus on lawmakers to agree to their funding plan or risk compromising the census, he said.

Some of the specific programs that Gutierrez proposed scaling back, including the National Institute of Standards and Technology’s Technology Innovation Program, have been on the chopping block many times before, Balutis said.

Since the Reagan administration, Commerce officials have sought to scale back those programs despite objections from  Congress. “Eventually, we just said, ‘We’re sending up our Don Quixote list,’ just tilting at the windmills,” said Balutis, who is now director at Cisco Systems’ Internet Business Solutions Group.

Balutis identified two other programs that Commerce has targeted: the National Telecommunications and Information Administration’s Public Telecommunications Facilities Program and the Economic Development Administration’s Economic Development Assistance Programs.  Those programs are grant-giving initiatives that normally do not get awarded until the end of the fiscal year, Balutis said. Funding for three of the programs that Commerce has targeted did not appear in the president’s budget request, which made them natural targets for reprogramming, he added.

The department has decided to use handheld computers only for preliminary address canvassing. Follow-up interviews, in which Census employees go to addresses that did not return census forms, will now be done with old-fashioned paper forms instead of handheld computers.

Gutierrez and Murdock told the subcommittee that the bulk of the additional money they need is for hiring and training new employees, printing paper forms, buying fuel and postage, and using data centers. The total cost increase is expected to be $2.2 billion to $3 billion. The department needs some of that money soon, and it plans to spread the total cost across four fiscal years, ending in 2011. The total cost to conduct the census would rise to $14.5 billion with the added costs.


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