Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Initiative to divide state in three parts faces hurdles

- By Kathleen Ronayne

California­ns will face a choice this November of whether to divide the nation’s most populous state into three, an effort that would radically shake up not only the West Coast, but the entire nation.

The “Cal 3” initiative is driven by venture capitalist Tim Draper, who has tried and failed in the past to place an effort to break up California on the ballot, including a bid in 2016 to create six separate states. Backers of the measure argue California has become “ungovernab­le” because of its economic and geographic diversity as well as its population approachin­g 40 million people.

Election officials say this year’s effort gathered the roughly 365,000 signatures it needed to land on the general election ballot. It will be officially certified later this month. Even if it wins passage from voters, the measure would face significan­t hurdles.

The split

California would break into three states — Northern California, California and Southern California. The measure aims to create states with relatively equal population­s and economic strengths.

The new Northern California would include 40 counties, including Sacramento, San Jose and San Francisco as well as the state’s wine country and rural northern areas.

Keeping the name California would be a group of six counties centered around Los Angeles, with a total population of 12.3 million people.

Southern California, meanwhile, would include Orange and San Diego Counties as well what’s now known as California’s Central Valley and Inland Empire.

National reach

It’s not just California that would feel the effects of such a change.

Turning one state into three would create four new U.S. senators, a move that would significan­tly boost California­ns’ influence in Washington. The number of representa­tives in the U.S. House could change slightly based on each state’s population breakdown. Three separate California­s would also shake up the Electoral College, which picks the president.

Although California as it exists today is heavily Democratic, one of the new California­s might not be. The newly proposed Southern California includes traditiona­lly Republican areas such as Orange County. Democratic voters currently edge out Republican­s in the 12 counties, but not by much. That could potentiall­y boost the GOP’s West Coast representa­tion in Congress.

Who’s behind it

Draper is a Silicon Valley venture capitalist known for investing in companies such as Skype, Tesla and Hotmail and has poured millions of dollars into efforts to break up California.

Draper argues that California has become “nearly ungovernab­le” because of its diverse economies and population. He and backers also argue that voters outside of large urban areas such as Los Angeles are underserve­d in Sacramento because so many state lawmakers come from major cities.

“Breaking the states into three smaller, more manageable states means those states will be more responsibl­e and more responsive,” said Peggy Grande, a Cal 3 spokeswoma­n.

Who decides

Passing at the ballot box is just the first hurdle. That would require support from a simple majority of voters.

The Legislatur­e and governor would then need to ask Congress for the ultimate OK — likely a tall order. If Congress gave a green light, it would then be up the Legislatur­e to determine exactly how the split would happen, including how the state’s debts would be divided. Each of the three states would determine their own governance structure.

Lawmakers would only have 12 months after congressio­nal approval to set the new rules; otherwise the state’s debts would automatica­lly split between the three new ones.

Beyond those difficulti­es, lawsuits would surely follow.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I—THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this July 15, 2014 file photo, Heather Ditty, elections manager for the Sacramento County Registrar of Voters, makes a quick inspection of some of the petitions turned in by Silicon Valley venture capitalist Tim Draper, left, that would place a...
RICH PEDRONCELL­I—THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this July 15, 2014 file photo, Heather Ditty, elections manager for the Sacramento County Registrar of Voters, makes a quick inspection of some of the petitions turned in by Silicon Valley venture capitalist Tim Draper, left, that would place a...

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