In turnaround, Census limits Arab data-sharing with Homeland Security
Monday, August 30, 2004 at 02:21PM
TheSpook
The U.S. Census Bureau says it is ending a practice of routinely
turning over detailed information about Arabs or other minorities to
anti-terrorism officials without high-level approval.The Census Bureau
revealed Aug. 13 that it had been reporting demographic data about Arab
Americans to a Homeland Security agency. The bureau said it only was
providing population numbers and not names, addresses or other private
details.Responding to requests over the past two years from the Bureau
of Customs and Border Protection, the Census Bureau said it had
provided files that included a count of U.S. residents of Arab descent
in certain ZIP codes. It said names and street addresses were not
included. The release drew sharp criticism from some advocacy groups,
which said it undermined the public's trust. Census Director Louis
Kincannon said data requests from law enforcement and intelligence
agencies now must be approved by one of eight associate directors, the
second highest-ranking officials in the Census Bureau. He said the
policy will not keep police from getting similar numbers in the future,
mainly because much of it is already available on the bureau's Web
site.But he said it lets officials keep tabs on who requests
information and how it is used.This month, 23 civil rights groups
signed a letter calling the release "a troubling reminder of one of our
nations darkest days when the sharing of similar information resulted
in the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II." [more ]
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