Friday, April 19, 2024
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Bay Area political events: Police records, neoliberal meetup

Panelists include John Temple, investigative reporting program director at UC Berkeley's Graduate School of Journalism; David Snyder, attorney and director of the First Amendment Coalition; and civil rights attorney Daniel Sheehan, who worked on the Pentagon Papers case. Sponsored by the Community Water Center, Sierra Club California, and the David Brower Center. Sponsored by YR Media and the Commonwealth Club’s Inforum. $30 for non-Commonwealth Club members, $10 for students. Sponsored by St. Andrew’s Society of San Francisco. 7 p.m., 1088 Green St., San Francisco. 7 p.m., 2969 Mission St., San Francisco. 10 a.m., starting and ending at the Women’s Building, 3543 18th St., San Francisco. 7 p.m., Evans Hall, UC Berkeley. $30 for non-Commonwealth Club members, $10 for students.

NAACP suing for records on 2020 Census preparation

The NAACP announced Thursday it would sue the Commerce Department, claiming it is withholding records about its preparations for the 2020 Census. The organization says the Commerce Department failed to respond to a Freedom of Information Act request before the deadline and is suing for immediate access to records. The NAACP wants to know about the U.S. Census Bureau’s plans for the 2020 Census, including records on hiring practices, digitization and the bureau’s efforts to reach out to “hard-to-count” populations. The complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court for Connecticut, alleges the Census faces “serious obstacles” heading into its 2020 population count. “These include hiring and personnel gaps, exacerbated by a federal hiring freeze imposed in January 2017; an unprecedented move to digitize the census, with unknown vulnerabilities to cyberattack and disparate impacts on communities with less access to broadband internet services; a lack of senior leadership; and budgetary shortfalls at a time when the Bureau’s funding should be substantially increasing,” the complaint reads. “The Census Bureau routinely undercounts communities of color, young children, home renters, low-income persons, and rural residents,” NAACP general counsel Bradford M. Berry said in a statement. Thompson had led the bureau since 2013.