Los Angeles Times

Inmates’ residences an issue for census

Prisoners are counted where they are held, boosting rural clout.

- By Kurtis Lee and Sandhya Kambhampat­i Lee reported from Cañon City and Kambhampat­i from Los Angeles.

CAÑON CITY, Colo. — Jhil Marquantte lived behind the sandstone walls of the Colorado Territoria­l Correction­al Facility in a 6-by-9-foot cell.

Marquantte, 46, spent years here in this mountain town, but always behind bars — locked inside Territoria­l, and most of the halfdozen other state prisons that dot this rural stretch of Colorado. If you asked him about home, he’d tell you it was two hours north in Denver where he grew up and his family still resides — and where he long dreamed of returning after serving his sentence.

“My prison cell was not a home,” said Marquantte, who was paroled in 2018 after serving 26 years for murder and returned to the Denver area. “A prison should not be a home for any other person.”

Marquantte’s concern cuts to the core of a long-percolatin­g criminal justice question surroundin­g the 2020 U.S. census: Should prisoners be counted as residents of the community where they’re incarcerat­ed or of their home when they were arrested and where they generally return to upon release?

With the census officially due to begin Wednesday, the debate has become increasing­ly timely. After the tally is completed, states will use the numbers to redraw legislativ­e and congressio­nal districts, a once-per-decade procedure with broad implicatio­ns for whether communitie­s of color have an equitable opportunit­y at electing candidates who represent their interests and will fight for their concerns. And, in turn, the outcome of redistrict­ing has a ripple effect on what programs — housing, education, healthcare — are funded over the next 10 years.

“Counting people who are incarcerat­ed where they have been imprisoned leads to a big distortion,” said Justin Levitt, a professor at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles. “The people incarcerat­ed in a prison facility are often vastly demographi­cally and socioecono­mically different from the profile of local residents, with vastly different needs.”

The U.S. Census Bureau counts inmates as residents of the counties where they’re imprisoned — a practice that officials say is meant to provide the most accurate and fair way of capturing a moment-in-time count. Still, in recent years, a wave of states have passed laws requiring post-count adjustment­s during legislativ­e redistrict­ing to avoid what critics refer to as prison gerrymande­ring.

Advocates contend that regions where prisons are located — often rural, predominan­tly white areas — have unfairly inflated their numbers, and thus their political clout, by being able to count inmates such as Marquantte, who is black. Many of the inmates are Latino or black men from more densely populated areas.

It is unjust, advocates say, to count prisoners — who in most states can’t vote while incarcerat­ed and often long beyond — as residents of communitie­s whose demographi­cs and needs so drasticall­y differ from their home communitie­s.

“This siphoning of black urban political power into white, rural communitie­s is the modern-day version of the Three-Fifths Compromise, and violates the principle of one person, one vote,” said Marc Morial, president of the National Urban League, a civil rights group.

A handful of states, including California, have addressed prison gerrymande­ring and, in recent weeks, lawmakers in 20 other states, including Illinois and Virginia, have introduced bills to deal with the practice.

New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy recently signed a law requiring that, for redistrict­ing purposes, the state must adjust data in order to count incarcerat­ed people according to their last known address before their imprisonme­nt. In Colorado — where a fierce rural-urban divide shapes many policy discussion­s, including gun control — the Legislatur­e recently passed a similar bill that the governor has signed into law.

The NAACP in February sued Pennsylvan­ia, arguing that the state was “artificial­ly and arbitraril­y” inflating the political power of the predominan­tly white voters in rural counties where some of the state’s largest correction­al facilities are located. In turn, the lawsuit contends, the state was diluting the power of black and Latino voters in more urban parts of the state. The suit is pending, as is a similar suit filed by the NAACP in Connecticu­t two years ago.

In Illinois, where 60% of state inmates are from Chicago or elsewhere in Cook County, 90% are counted as residents of another county, according to the Prison Gerrymande­ring Project, an extension of the Prison Policy Initiative, a nonprofit that focuses on criminal justice reform.

In Colorado, which, like many other states, disproport­ionately incarcerat­es black and Latino men, many of those inmates are imprisoned in either the rural eastern plains or the southern foothills of the Rocky Mountains, such as here in Cañon City.

The state’s legislativ­e districts are divvied up so that each contains roughly 77,000 constituen­ts and, in rural communitie­s with prisons, such as the Cañon Cityarea, nearly 10% of some districts are made up of prisoners. (Fremont County, where Cañon City is located, is home to roughly a dozen state and federal lockups, housing more than 7,500 inmates — one of the biggest per capita prison population­s in the country.)

While the average state prison sentence is about three years, according to correction­s data, redistrict­ing shapes political representa­tion for a decade.

State Rep. James Coleman, a Denver Democrat, says he supported the antigerrym­andering legislatio­n because it only makes sense to count inmates in the communitie­s where they had lived.

“When people get out and they’re voting,” Coleman said, “their district needs fair and accurate representa­tion.”

In New Jersey, then-Gov. Chris Christie, a Republican, vetoed a similar measure in 2017. “Prisoners are consuming services and resources at the prison,” Christie said, in explaining his veto, “and may have only fleeting, dated or tenuous ties to their prior residence.”

In Colorado, state Sen. Dennis Hisey, a Republican from the Cañon City area, says he considers prison inmates his constituen­ts.

“They’re a part of rural Colorado,” Hisey said on a recent afternoon while walking the perimeter of Territoria­l, where silhouette­s of guards inside towers overlookin­g the prison can be seen from the street. “They are essentiall­y residents.”

Hisey views the measure passed by Democrats, who control both chambers of the Colorado Legislatur­e, as little more than “a liberal power grab.”

While the measure doesn’t overtly focus on the allocation of money, Hisey believes funding will inevitably be affected somehow in the years ahead. “This will dilute the voice of rural Colorado,” he said.

That’s a sensitive subject here.

In 2013, the Colorado Legislatur­e passed background checks and limits on ammunition magazines for guns, a move that some rural Coloradans viewed as an infringeme­nt on their 2nd Amendment rights.

Then came crackdowns on oil and gas drilling, a big source of employment in some rural parts of the state. It started to feel like the cities mattered more than the small towns, Hisey said, and the gerrymande­ring bill only made things worse.

Cañon City Councilman Brandon Smith owns a barbershop on Main Street from which the towers of Territoria­l are visible. Many of his clients are prison guards, he said, and inside the shop he has a spot where, after getting a fresh cut, one can take a gimmicky mug shot. “The way I see it,” he said, “where you sleep a majority of the time is where you live.”

But to Marquantte, that amounts to oversimpli­fication.

“Cañon City was never my home,” he said. “I never attended a political town hall, never knew my representa­tive. My home is the Denver area and it’s where my voice is heard.”

Marquantte, a native of Denver, wound up in prison, sentenced to 60 years for a shooting that left a man dead in the summer of 1992.

During his high school years, he acknowledg­ed, he fell in with a circle of drug dealers and gang members.

Since his parole two years ago, he has lived in Aurora, a Denver suburb, and works full time as a property manager. On a recent afternoon, Marquantte — who serves on the board of a local recidivism support group — traveled to the state Capitol in Denver to testify in favor of the anti-gerrymande­ring legislatio­n.

“Inside of a prison the guys have no voice,” he said.

Marquantte said that he often lay in his cell thinking about what he would do with his life once released. He is now proud, he said, of the man he has become.

This was the first time he testified before a legislativ­e committee, he said. And as he sat down before the legislator­s, he wanted them to know that, when he got out in 2018, he did something he’d never done before: He voted.

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? COLORADO state Rep. James Coleman supported anti-gerrymande­ring legislatio­n in the interest of fairness.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times COLORADO state Rep. James Coleman supported anti-gerrymande­ring legislatio­n in the interest of fairness.

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