You mentioned the word “constitutional”. Obviously there must have been some thought at that time that data was so valuable that it related to the country.
In terms of our survey now and the long-form census change, what's our response rate right now? What types of results are we getting? Because that would be the only thing. This seems like a very crude element to try to keep the numbers up for reporting, but now we've moved to a voluntary process and we're eliminating—it shouldn't be used anyway—another motivating factor for people to reply to the census. We do have some people, as you've noted, who are actually going to the courts over this. It's hard to believe that's the best use of your time, but I guess some civil libertarians, perhaps, and some others might have some objection to this.
What's our return rate? Have we looked at any analysis as to whether or not this will diminish the return rate, or are there other strategies to include that?