Lake County Record-Bee

Data delay weighs on redistrict­ing commission plans

- Dan Walters

The California constituti­on commands that by Aug. 15, the state’s independen­t redistrict­ing commission “shall approve four final maps that separately set forth the district boundary lines for the congressio­nal, senatorial, assembly, and State Board of Equalizati­on districts.”

It’s not going to happen.

The commission needs data from the 2020 census to do its work and last July, the state Supreme Court granted the Legislatur­e’s emergency petition for a four-month extension of the deadline to Dec. 15, citing pandemic-caused delays in completing the census.

A Dec. 15 deadline would be cutting it very close to have new maps available when candidates start filing paperwork for the 2022 elections early next year. However, the Dec. 15 deadline may not stand either.

Last Friday, the Census Bureau announced that it will not release the all-important numbers until Sept. 30, five months later than its original March 31 release date and two months later than its revised July 31 date on which the Supreme Court’s extension was based.

A Sept. 30 release would give the 14-member redistrict­ing commission just 2 1/2 months to meet the Dec. 15 deadline, perhaps an impossibil­ity.

The raw data must be digested by UC-Berkeley’s Statewide Database before preliminar­y maps can be devised. They then must be aired at public hearings, followed by final district-by-district — and often neighborho­od-by-neighborho­od — commission decisions on 120 legislativ­e districts, four Board of Equalizati­on districts and an unknown number of congressio­nal districts.

Unknown? California has 52 congressio­nal seats now, but its relatively slow population growth over the last decade, a full percentage point below the national rate, means the state will likely lose one, and perhaps two of those seats.

The latest delay in census data could require the Supreme Court to push back the commission’s Dec. 15 deadline even more, but that could collide with the Feb. 14, 2022, opening of candidate filing for the affected offices.

We may not know when the Citizens Redistrict­ing Commission will do its job, but we do know it won’t be an easy one.

California is the nation’s most complex state and its first experience with commission-drawn maps, after the 2010 census, was marked by fierce jousting among seemingly countless ethnic, geographic, partisan and sexual orientatio­n interest groups because the stakes are so heavy.

The new maps will strongly affect who wields political power in the state for the next decade, and while Democrats will continue to be the dominant party, no matter how they are drawn, the party has no shortage of internal cultural and ideologica­l power struggles.

The dramatic decline in California’s population growth to well under 1% a year will reduce its share of congressio­nal seats and variations within the state will affect the maps in both geographic and demographi­c terms.

Coastal metropolit­an areas have been growing more slowly than inland counties. Comparing 2010 census data with the latest pre-census population estimates from the state Department of Finance reveals that collective­ly the state’s three most populous counties — Los Angeles, San Diego and Orange — have grown more slowly than the state as a whole.

Meanwhile, the fourth and fifth most populous counties, Riverside and San Bernardino, have grown markedly faster than their coastal neighbors and thus should gain legislativ­e and congressio­nal seats.

A similar phenomenon is evident in Northern California as well, with the nine-county San Francisco Bay Area growing more slowly than inland counties to the east, such as Sacramento and San Joaquin.

These trends will be reflected in the new maps, whenever they finally emerge from what has become a very uncertain and messy process.

A Oept. 30 release would give the 14-memter redistrict­ing commission just21/2 months to meet the Aec. 15 deadline, perhaps an impossitil­ity.

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