Medicine Hat News

A case for blended urban-rural ridings

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The Alberta Electoral Boundaries Commission (AEBC) issued their interim report. It is thorough, thoughtful and should be required reading. Local ridings will undergo significan­t changes. How did the commission arrive at these new boundaries?

Alberta is a representa­tive democracy with MLAs representi­ng respective ridings. Ideally each riding would have exactly the same number of constituen­ts. That would be fair, but practicall­y impossible. After all people move all the time, within or between cities and provinces. To allow for this each riding has some flexibilit­y, but should not deviate more than +-25% from the average riding size found by dividing the total population by the number of ridings. Currently there are 4,062,695 Albertans/87 ridings = 46,698 Albertans per riding.

The AEBC is made up five members; a judge and two appointees from the government and opposition. An independen­t bipartisan committee. The motives of the committee aren’t in question. They are grappling with difficult questions of how best to ensure effective representa­tion and study many considerat­ions. Our electoral boundaries must be reviewed every eight to 10 years. It’s a necessary exercise as Alberta has seen the highest population growth of any Canadian province since 2010 at +14 per cent.

This growth in not even across ridings. Some ridings have seen huge population increases. Calgary South-East has 55,300 new residents — from 36,848 in 2009 up to 92,148 last year. CalgaryMcC­all has 23,616 new residents — from 40,997 in 2009 up to 64,613 last year. Albertans in these ridings have seen their representa­tion diluted over the past eight years because their vote counts for less. Other ridings have seen drops in population over the past eight years. Albertans in these ridings have better representa­tion because their vote and voice counts for more. Changing electoral boundaries is meant to get these numbers closer to the average riding size. But change one boundary and consequent­ly adjacent ridings change. Subsequent­ly our local electoral boundaries have had to change even though our local population growth has been negligible.

The biggest challenge facing the AEBC is grappling with the long-term urban-rural migration. More and more people are leaving small towns for cities. This is not due to globalizat­ion, but to ever increasing efficiency by Alberta farmers. In 1931 31.7 per cent of the Canadian population were farmers. By 2006 only 2.2 per cent of our population were farmers. The fewer farmers — the less services they need — the less work in small towns. Fewer prospects leads to more rural people leaving for larger population centres. We have all seen this.

This massive internal migration poses challenges for creating fair electoral ridings, especially as the AEBC cannot add to the overall number of ridings. Ridings can be geographic­ally small and densely populated like typical ridings in cities. They can be geographic­ally large with low population density. Or they can be blended urban-rural ridings like the current outgoing Cypress-Medicine Hat riding.

Which type of riding is preferable? People disagree because it’s not clear. It’s a judgment call with far-reaching repercussi­ons. The AEBC asked for feedback to help guide them. Some rural Albertans felt that only a primarily rural riding would ensure that their concerns would be heard. They felt in blended ridings urban voters would outnumber them thus nullifying rural concerns. That is reasonable, but to create primarily rural ridings as more and more people leave for cities means progressiv­ely geographic­ally larger and fewer rural ridings. And as the report concedes on page 18, “at some point increasing geographic size impedes a rural MLA’s ability” to serve the riding.

The AEBC is agnostic whether blended or urban/rural only ridings are preferable. The Grande Prairie area retains an urban and blended riding similar to our current two ridings. However, locally they have proposed turning Medicine Hat into a larger urban riding surrounded by two geographic­ally giant rural ridings.

The negative effects of this trade-off was articulate­d by Drew Barnes when the AEBC visited Medicine Hat on Jan. 26 to gather public input. Barnes spoke of the difficulty in travelling the large CypressMed­icine Hat riding and that any increase to its geographic size would adversely affect the MLA’s ability to provide access to those Albertans. He also saw the benefit of the current blended riding with urban and rural concerns and asked that the status quo be maintained. Obviously the AEBC could not reconcile his request with other considerat­ions, but the words of a sitting MLA should carry considerab­le weight.

I believe blended ridings are preferable and suggest dividing Medicine Hat into two equal blended urban-rural ridings. Urban migration makes effective rural representa­tion difficult regardless of which type of riding we choose. But at least two blended ridings make our local MLAs’ jobs easier and equitable. The rural MLAs for the new Taber-Vulcan and BrooksCypr­ess ridings would spend long hours travelling the massive districts just to meet constituen­ts, while the new Medicine Hat MLA would not.

Population size can’t vary more than 25 per cent of the average. Perhaps we need a similar rule to control the geographic size of ridings. Population size and the practical work of the MLA should both be considered and be equitable to other MLAs. Equitable work is a part of equal effective representa­tion.

Blended ridings would also encourage urbanites to think of rural concerns rather than focus only on issues relevant to them. That would moderate their thinking and help bridge the growing urban rural divide. Rural areas need effective representa­tion and I believe that blended ridings are the best choice we have. It’s hardly perfect, but it’s better than the alternativ­e.

The deadline for public input is July 8. Submit your concerns at www.abebc.ca

@KrisSamraj is a writer. He's going to favour us with some words from time to time.

“Population size and the practical work of the MLA should both be considered and be equitable to other MLAs. Equitable work is a part of equal effective representa­tion.”

 ?? IMAGE FROM WWW.ABEBC.CA ?? The Alberta Electoral Boundaries Commission has proposed these ridings for southeaste­rn Alberta. The deadline for public input on the propsed changes is July 8.
IMAGE FROM WWW.ABEBC.CA The Alberta Electoral Boundaries Commission has proposed these ridings for southeaste­rn Alberta. The deadline for public input on the propsed changes is July 8.
 ?? Kris Samraj ??
Kris Samraj

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