Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Activists want more public input on N.Y. political maps

- By Marina Villeneuve

ALBANY, N.Y. — Community activists and lawmakers traveled to a rural courthouse Friday in western New York to weigh in on the shape of the state’s political district maps and to ask a judge for more opportunit­ies for the public to be heard.

The state judge overseeing the redrawing of New York’s congressio­nal and state Senate districts scheduled just one public hearing on the matter before the maps are due to be finalized May 20.

Anyone who wanted to speak publicly on the issue could file something with the court in writing or appear in person Friday in Judge Patrick McAllister’s

courtroom in Bath, about 60 miles south of Rochester.

The court is working on a tight timeline to get the maps done after the state’s highest court ruled that previous versions drawn by the Democrat-controlled legislatur­e were unconstitu­tional.

Jonathan Cervas, a postdoctor­al fellow at Carnegie Mellon University’s Institute for Politics and Strategy, faces a May 16 deadline to release his first draft of the replacemen­t maps.

“We urge you to have more hearings, particular­ly after the map is released,” Esmeralda Simmons, special pro bono counsel to the Center for Law and Social Justice at Medgar Evers College, said at Friday’s hearing. “We want you to know that New Yorkers deserve to be heard, and they are gonna wanna be heard.”

Last week, McAllister declined requests that he let people testify at the hearing remotely, saying that his court lacked the capability to allow large numbers of people to do so.

The judge said the court will be reviewing records from hearings held by the state’s independen­t redistrict­ing commission last fall.

That commission’s effort to redraw political district boundaries — something required every 10 years — collapsed because of partisan gridlock.

The Legislatur­e then passed its own maps without any public input or hearings like the one held by the judge Friday.

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