TITLE: Legal Authority for American Community Survey, B-289852, April 4, 2002
BNUMBER: B-289852
DATE: April 4, 2002
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Legal Authority for American Community Survey, B-289852, April 4, 2002
Legal Authority for American Community Survey, B-289852, April 4, 2002
B-289852
April 4, 2002
The Honorable Bob Barr
Vice Chairman
Committee on Government Reform
House of Representatives
Subject: Legal Authority for American Community Survey
Dear Mr. Vice Chairman:
This responds to your letter regarding the legal authority of the
U.S. Census Bureau (Bureau) to conduct the American Community Survey (ACS),
a monthly survey of a sample of households that, beginning in 2003, is
intended to replace the long form questionnaire for the decennial census in
2010. You asked us to provide (1) the legal authority under which the
Bureau is conducting the ACS, including any legislative history concerning
the development and implementation of ACS, (2) the Bureau's legal authority
to require recipients to respond to the ACS, and (3) information on any
other federal government questionnaires or surveys that require similar
specific, detailed personal information be provided to the government.
In order to respond to your questions, we examined various legislative
materials such as public laws, committee reports and hearings, and the
Congressional Record for references to the ACS, requested and received
comments from the Department of Commerce (Commerce), and met informally with
Commerce and Bureau officials to discuss these issues. We also searched an
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) database for surveys that require
specific detailed personal information. As discussed in detail below, we
find that the Bureau has the authority under 13 U.S.C. sect.sect. 141 and 193 to
conduct the ACS. Although there is little legislative action tracking this
Bureau initiative, the Bureau clearly has authority to require responses
from the public to this survey. See 13 U.S.C. sect. 221. The Bureau must still
receive clearance for the ACS through the Paperwork Reduction Act process.
Finally, we found no other government surveys that respondents are required
to respond to that ask specific, detailed personal information similar to
that required by the ACS.
BACKGROUND
According to Commerce, the ACS, which is designed to replace the long form
portion for future decennial censuses, tracks the questions asked in the
long form questionnaire from the 2000 Census. The long form questionnaire
asked a sample of persons and households for information on population
topics, such as ancestry, veteran status, disability, labor force status,
and income, and housing topics, such as value of home or rent paid, size and
age of structure, plumbing and kitchen facilities, and expenses for
utilities, mortgage, and taxes.
The Bureau began conducting supplementary surveys of selected counties under
its authority at 13 U.S.C. sect. 182 in 1996 using the ACS methodology to test
the operational feasibility of collecting long form type data in a different
methodology from that of the decennial census. Beginning in 2003, the
Bureau plans to expand the ACS nationwide in a yearly sample of three
million households (250,000 each month) as part of its decennial census in
order to move from a once-every-ten years activity to continuous data
collection and data dissemination. By starting in 2003, data will be
available for areas and population groups of 65,000 or more beginning in
2004 and for small areas and population groups of less than 20,000 people
beginning in 2008.[1] According to Bureau officials, this will provide
information on a timelier basis than is now currently available. For
example, the most current long form information available from the Bureau is
from the 1990 Census, since the 2000 Census data will not be available until
this summer.
According to Commerce, the ACS information will provide more current data to
a number of federal agencies including the Department of Health and Human
Services, the Department of Education, and the Food and Nutrition Service of
the Department of Agriculture.
DISCUSSION
Article I of the United States Constitution requires an enumeration of the
population every ten years "in such Manner as they [Congress] shall by Law
direct." U.S. Const. art. I, sect. 2, cl. 3. To implement this Constitutional
requirement, Congress enacted 13 U.S.C. sect. 141, which requires "a decennial
census of population as of the first day of April of such year . . . in such
form and content as he [the Secretary of Commerce] may determine . . . . In
connection with any such census, the Secretary is authorized to obtain such
other census information as necessary." Section 141 also authorizes the
decennial census to include the use of sampling procedures and special
surveys.[2] The uses of census data have grown significantly beyond
congressional apportionment of representatives in Congress into many other
areas such as managing federal agencies, allocating federal aid and
assistance, assisting local governments, and helping businesses.[3] The
courts have generally viewed the authority of Commerce and the Bureau to
gather census information broadly.[4] In a recent court decision, Morales
v. Evans,[5] the court held that the questions and the long form from the
2000 census are constitutional.
In Morales, the court first reviewed both the short form and the long form
questions from the 2000 Census and traced the origin of each question from
prior censuses. The court noted the authority of the Bureau to collect more
than headcount information, and then specifically addressed whether such
collection violated the plaintiffs rights under the Fifth Amendment (due
process), First Amendment (protection against compelled speech), and Fourth
Amendment (unreasonable and illegal search). In each instance the court
found the collection of information related to governmental purposes and
there was no basis for holding such collection unconstitutional.
While Census clearly has authority to conduct the ACS, we found no public
laws, committee reports, or other congressional actions in which Congress
has required the Bureau to develop and implement the ACS. Two oversight
hearings were held in 2000 and 2001 concerning the ACS,[6] and Congress has
provided funding over the past several years for this program under the
caption of "continuous measurement."[7] Commerce states that testing of the
ACS has been part of the President's budget since 1996 and a pilot program
has been funded since that time. Commerce also points out that it has
regularly kept Congress informed of the development and intended
implementation of the ACS in the annual budget justification that
accompanies the President's budget. It is clear that Census was not
reacting to congressional direction in developing the ACS but acting on its
own initiative to address the costs associated with the collection of data
in the decennial census and the timeliness of that data.
On the basis of the statutory authority cited above and the discretion
recognized by the courts, we conclude that Commerce and the Bureau have the
legal authority to conduct the ACS under 13 U.S.C. sect.sect. 141 and 193. This
finding does not address the question of whether the data should be
collected, but only whether there is sufficient legal authority to conduct
this annual survey.[8]
With regard to the question of whether the Bureau may require recipients to
respond to the ACS, Bureau officials stated that the ACS is conducted under
sections 141 and 193, cited above, and that because responses to Census
Bureau censuses and surveys are required under 13 U.S.C. sect. 221, responses to
the ACS are mandatory. Section 221 subjects recipients of a survey to
monetary penalties for failure to answer questions on any survey conducted
by the Bureau under certain authorities found in Chapter 5 of Title 13 of
the United States Code. These authorities include censuses of manufacturers
and other businesses under section 131, the decennial census of population
under section 141, and interim current data for collection of population
data between each census under section 181. Section 225 permits application
of penal provisions in certain cases. For example, the provision for
imprisonment does not apply to the interim current data surveys under
section 181, although it does apply to the decennial census. 13 U.S.C. sect.
225(b). We note that the courts have held that there is a sufficient
governmental interest to require the collection of census data and to assess
penalties for the failure to comply.[9] We conclude therefore that the
Bureau may require responses to the ACS survey.
With regard to providing statutory references for each question on the
survey which is "required by federal law to manage or evaluate government
programs," Commerce noted that each federal agency submits to the
Interagency Committee for the ACS, led by OMB, its legal justifications for
agency-specific topics and questions, and the questionnaire content is
reviewed by the Interagency Committee. Commerce has provided an extensive
table of statutory authorities to justify each question, but the response
from Commerce notes that additional information may be added or corrected by
the agencies as Commerce prepares its submission of the ACS questionnaire
under the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) clearance process.[10] Since this
process for development of the ACS questionnaire is still underway, we
cannot state as a matter of law whether the requisite statutory authority
supports each question. However, Commerce and the Bureau will be required
under the provisions of 44 U.S.C. sect.sect. 3506 and 3507 to demonstrate that this
collection of information is necessary, is not duplicative, and is
understandable to those who are to respond.
Finally, to determine what other federal government surveys require
specific, detailed personal information, we used information provided by
federal agencies on Form 83-I, the Paperwork Reduction Act submission to
OMB.[11] Agencies requesting clearance to collect information are required
to report on this form the various characteristics of the collection
including the following: who the collection affects-e.g., individuals or
households, businesses, or the federal government; whether responses to the
collection are voluntary, required to obtain or retain benefits, or
mandatory; and the purpose of the collection--e.g., program evaluation,
general purpose statistics, regulatory, or compliance.
Using information provided by OMB, we found no other government surveys that
respondents are required to fill out that request specific, detailed
personal information similar to that required by the ACS. The only
information collections that met the conditions of being required or
mandatory and affecting individuals or households for statistical or
research purposes were those related to the 2000 decennial censuses,
including the ACS.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, the Bureau has authority under 13 U.S.C. sect.sect.
141 and 193 to conduct the American Community Survey. The Bureau also has
authority to require responses from the public to this survey.
We trust that this responds to your request. Should you have any questions,
please contact Ms. Susan A. Poling at (202) 512-2667. We are sending an
identical letter to The Honorable Dan Burton Chairman, Committee on
Government Reform.
Sincerely yours,
Anthony H. Gamboa
General Counsel
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[1] "What is the American Community Survey?", www.census.gov/acs, visited on
March 18, 2002.
[2] The authority of Commerce and the Bureau to gather census information
has been viewed broadly by the courts except in one particular area--how
data is gathered for purposes of the enumeration for the apportionment of
seats in the U.S. House of Representatives. See Department of Commerce v.
United States House of Representatives, 525 U.S. 316 (1999), which held that
sampling may not be used in the enumeration for apportionment purposes.
[3] See Decennial Census, Overview of Historical Census Issues,
GAO/GGD-98-103 (1998); Douglas A. Kysar, Kids & Cul-De-Sacs: Census 2000 and
the Reproduction of Consumer Culture, 87 Cornell L. Rev. 853, March 2002
(book review).
[4] Wisconsin v. City of New York, 517 U.S. 1, 17 (1996).
[5]116 F. Supp. 2d 801 (S.D. Tex. 2000), aff'd 275 F.3d 45 (5th Cir. 2001),
cert. denied, 122 S. Ct. 1079 (Mem) (2002).
[6] The American Community Survey--A Replacement for the Census Long Form? :
Hearing before the Subcomm. on the Census of the House Committee on
Government Reform, 106th Cong. (2000); The Census Bureau's Proposed American
Community Survey: Hearing before the Subcomm. on the Census of the House
Committee on Government Reform, 107th Cong. (2001).
[7] See, e.g., H. Rep. No. 105-207, at 66-67 (1997). See also Fiscal Year
2003 Budget Appendix, pp. 213-214 (2002).
[8] 13 U.S.C. sect. 141(f) directs Commerce to report to Congress three years in
advance of the decennial census on the subjects to be covered and two years
in advance on the questions to be asked in the decennial census. Commerce
and Bureau officials indicated to us that they intend to initiate the ACS in
October 2002 if funding is available, even though they will not have time to
provide the information contemplated by subsection 141(f).
[9] See Morales, discussed above; United States v. Rickenbacker, 309 F.2d
462 (2nd Cir. 1972), cert. denied, 371 U.S. 962 (1963); United States v.
Little, 317 F. Supp. 1308 (D.Del. 1970).
[10] See the request for comments on the proposed collection of information
under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, Public Law 104-13, 67 Fed. Reg.
2186, Jan. 16, 2002.
[11] The key requirements under the Paperwork Reduction Act are set forth in
Appendix II of Information Resources Management: Comprehensive Strategic
Plan Needed to Address Mounting Challenges, GAO-02-292, February 2002.