Imperial Valley Press

State may push cities and counties to draw “fairer” district maps

- BY BEN CHRISTOPHE­R

Rhonda Shader is tired of looking at maps of Placentia.

First as a councilmem­ber and now as the mayor, Shader has seen the 7 square miles of her north Orange County town sliced and diced at least a dozen ways to satisfy the demands of good governance groups who accuse the city’s leaders of gerrymande­ring and discrimina­tion.

“We’ve really made an effort to stay out of court because quite honestly our city can’t afford it,” said Shader.

Easier said than done. In 2016, the city agreed to ditch its at-large election system and adopt a new map with five distinct districts. That came after the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educationa­l Fund threatened to sue the city, arguing that the old system, with each council member representi­ng the entire city, made it all but impossible for Placentia’s minority Latino community to elect a representa­tive of their choosing.

When the city adopted a new map in 2018 — one of eleven proposals — the Legal Defense Fund threatened to sue again, arguing that the designated-Latino district was short on Latinos voters.

Now the city is considerin­g its third map. Placentia is one of hundreds of California cities and counties that have been forced, either by court order or the threat of legal action, to redraw their electoral maps over the last decade. In Kern County, Palmdale, Torrance, Menlo Park and Martinez, to name a few, litigants have accused local leaders of abusing the districtin­g process to disempower minority groups, protect incumbents, or tilt the scales in favor of one party.

“When the lines aren’t drawn fairly, it can block a community out of having representa­tion for a whole decade. On top of that, when people feel the election process is rigged, it undermines trust in democracy,” said Nicolas Heidorn, policy and legal director with California’s Common Cause, a government transparen­cy group.

They may soon have extra help from the state of California: Legislator­s are considerin­g two bills that would place new districtin­g rules on local government­s.

Already California’s congressio­nal and state legislativ­e districts are drawn by a bipartisan commission, which supporters say represents a national gold standard in fair, transparen­t political map design. Its intent is to prevent gerrymande­ring — a technique of map manipulati­on named for Elbridge Gerry, who as Massachuse­tts governor in 1812 permitted his party to draw districts to their advantage, including one shaped like a salamander. An editorial cartoonist at the time lampooned it as a “Gerrymande­r.”

Now, despite a recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling that gives lawmakers across the country the greenlight to gerrymande­r as much as they like, these two bills could push the state even further in the other direction.

• AB 849 would saet up rules restrictin­g how cities and counties draw their council and supervisor­y maps. Among other things, the bill by Democratic Assemblyma­n Rob Bonta from Oakland would require each district to “respect the geographic integrity of local neighborho­ods and communitie­s of interest.”

• SB 139, by Santa Monica Sen. Ben Allen, would require most counties over 250,000 people to create independen­t redistrict­ing commission­s. These could either be modeled on California’s Citizens Redistrict­ing Commission, with virtually equal seating for Democrats, Republican­s and political independen­ts, or they could be made to reflect the partisan makeup of the county itself — as long as no one political party controls more than a majority of the seats. Of the 12 slots, a single party would only be allowed to have six, with the rest made up of political independen­ts. Exceptions are made for San Francisco, San Diego, Los Angeles and Santa Barbara counties, which already have their own commission­s.

In the wake of a recent ruling from the U.S. Supreme Court, advocates say it’s more important than ever that the state take the lead on this issue.

In an opinion issued in late June, Chief Justice John Roberts ruled that the county’s highest court did not have the authority to second-guess district lines just because they artificial­ly inflate the electoral prospects of one party over another. But, he reminded opponents of partisan gerrymande­ring, “the avenue for reform establishe­d by the Framers, and used by Congress in the past, remains open.”

In other words, states that are tired of gerrymande­ring are invited to do something about it at the state level.

“These bills are basically taking up the challenge that was laid down in that opinion,” said Heidorn with Common Cause, the co-sponsor of both bills. So far, no high-profile Democratic lawmakers have argued that the state should abandon its high-minded position on nonpartisa­n districtin­g in response to the Court’s ruling. That might be because California’s independen­t districtin­g system was approved by voters in two separate ballot measures and that, with Democrats holding supermajor­ities in both chambers of the state Legislatur­e along with 46 of the state’s 53 congressio­nal seats, there isn’t that much room for electoral improvemen­t.

If both bills were to become law, they would go into effect next year, just in time for the next round of mapmaking after the 2020 Census. For the hundreds of cities that have, like Placentia, been forced to adopt by-district city councils over the last decade, this will be their first experience with redistrict­ing.

“As a general matter, it is wise to ensure that the first redistrict­ing process that these local government­s experience go as smoothly and transparen­tly as possible,“said Thomas Saenz, president of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educationa­l Fund. Saenz said the Fund withdrew its support of SB 139 last week, after the bill was amended to allow counties to establish committees with equal partisan representa­tion.

“We don’t think that complies with the U.S. Constituti­on,” he said. “If particular counties did that, we would look at whether there is a legal avenue to challenge that choice.”

The Fund is officially neutral on both bills.

So far, most of the opposition has come from county and city government groups, who are worried they will be saddled with the costs of implementi­ng these reforms. But others have raised philosophi­cal objections — arguing that while extreme gerrymande­ring results from partisan warfare at the state and national level, such partisansh­ip is largely absent in cities and counties where offices are technicall­y nonpartisa­n.

“This is what folks mostly up in Sacramento are clueless about,” said Doug Johnson, president of the National Demographi­cs Corporatio­n, which consults with cities on political mapmaking and who has drawn many electoral maps that could be invalidate­d by these laws. “They’re so used to Sacramento politics and the Sacramento gerrymande­ring and the nonstop partisansh­ip of Sacramento, they miss that local government in California is a whole different world.”

Courts have not always seen things that way.

Last year, a federal district judge found that the Kern County Supervisor­s’ map split the Latino-dominated portion of the county across multiple seats, depriving Latinos “of an equal opportunit­y to elect representa­tives of their choice.” The county was ordered back to the drawing board.

Under Allen’s bill, Kern’s next map would likely be drawn by an independen­t commission.

Placentia faced a similar charge when it approved its 2018 district map, which cut the city into columns running north to south, splitting the Latino neighborho­od between the first and second district. But Shader said that configurat­ion was designed to promote collaborat­ion at City Hall. “Everybody has a piece of the north, everybody has a piece of the south,” she said. Instead of a system in which each council member is loyal to one neighborho­od or community, that original map “helps everybody work together,” she said.

“I feel like they’re trying to control our process,” she said of Bonta’s bill. “We know our communitie­s.”

Kevin Shenkman has heard this argument before. By his count, the Malibu-based lawyer has forced over 70 California cities to redraw their maps, beginning with his first suit against Palmdale in 2012.

“That’s just another way of saying we don’t want to have to pay attention to the poor neighborho­od,” he said. “Does that make making decisions more difficult? Sure. But it also makes those decisions better because you’ve got every viewpoint at the table.”

Shenkman said that he is concerned that Bonta’s bill doesn’t go far enough to prevent elected city officials from drawing districts simply to protect their own seats. But splitting neighborho­ods — even for the sake of unity — would be out.

Yet the idea of the state imposing its will on localities rubs some lawmakers the wrong way — including one with a record against gerrymande­ring.

Sen. John Moorlach, a Republican from Costa Mesa, sat on the Orange County Board of Supervisor­s in 2011, when a proposed district map grouped together the largely Republican Vietnamese community while splitting up the majority Democratic Latino voters. Moorlach cast the lone “no” vote, telling a reporter, “I just wanted to stay with my principles. I’m opposed to gerrymande­ring.”

Even so, he opposes SB 139. Moorlach said he supported two bills in 2016 that gave cities, counties, school and other special districts the option to appoint redistrict­ing commission­s.

“I appreciate­d that spirit,” he said. “But I get a little nervous about requiremen­ts — you shall versus you may.”

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