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Date and Location

October 1, 2025
12:00 PM - 1:00 PM ET
Online

Contact

617 495 6311
How Federal Data Manipulation and Removal Threaten Journalism and Public Trust

Federal datasets are one of the pillars of democracy. They underpin everything from health research and economic forecasting to climate science, disaster response, and watchdog journalism. Yet today, these essential resources face unprecedented threats: data removals, political interference, staff and contract cuts, and the quiet erosion of statistical capacity.


This panel brings together a powerhouse group of experts: a former federal statistical agency commissioner with inside knowledge of how government data is created and protected; a leading demographer recognized internationally for tracking disaster recovery and climate impacts; and a senior national data leader who has driven innovation in public-interest data across federal, local, and nonprofit sectors. Together, they will unpack the high stakes of the current moment.


Attendees will learn: 

  • Why federal data matters for every beat, from health to the economy.
  • How political manipulation and removals of data are reshaping public understanding and news coverage.
  • Which protective measures keep some datasets resilient, and why others disappear without warning.
  • Why private-sector substitutes can’t fill the gap left by weakened federal systems.
  • Concrete strategies and resources journalists can use now to verify, preserve, and report on vulnerable datasets.


Panelists:


Denice Ross served as the U.S. Chief Data Scientist in the Biden administration, where she led the charge to use disaggregated data to drive better outcomes for all Americans. She collaborates with other federal data watchers to monitor the status of federal data at DataIndex.US and tell the story about how everyday Americans benefit from federal data at EssentialData.US.


Allison Plyer is Chief Demographer at The Data Center in New Orleans, and co-chair of the Census Quality Reinforcement task force. Dr. Plyer is past Chair of the U.S. Census Bureau’s Scientific Advisory Committee (CSAC). She served on CSAC from 2015-2021 and as Chair from 2018-2021. Dr. Plyer is co-author of Pathways to Prosperity, developed in collaboration with the National Conference on Citizenship, which details both the impacts of climate change and the potential for federal investments to target the inequities these impacts create and compound.


Erica Groshen is Senior Economics Advisor at the Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations and Research Fellow at the Upjohn Institute for Employment Research. From 2013 to 2017, she served as the 14th Commissioner of the US Bureau of Labor Statistics, the principal federal agency responsible for measuring labor market activity, working conditions, and inflation. Before that, she was Vice President in the Research and Statistics Group of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Her research has centered on jobless recoveries, wage rigidity and dispersion, and the role of employers in the labor market.  


Moderator:


Naseem Miller is the senior editor for health at The Journalist’s Resource. She joined JR in 2021 after working as a health reporter in local newspapers and national medical trade publications for two decades. Immediately before joining JR, she was a senior health reporter at the Orlando Sentinel, where she was part of the team that was named a 2016 Pulitzer Prize finalist for its coverage of the Pulse nightclub mass shooting.

Speakers and Presenters

Allison Plyer, Chief Demographer;
Denice Ross, Former U.S. Chief Data Scientist;
Erica Groshen, Senior Economics Advisor

Organizer

Additional Organizers

The Journalist's Resource