Los Angeles Times

Redistrict­ing process in O.C. nears completion

Supervisor­s are set to create majority-Latino district in increasing­ly diverse county.

- By Hannah Fry

The Orange County Board of Supervisor­s appears poised to select a map that creates a majority-Latino district for the first time while also giving influence to Asian voters as a once-in-adecade redistrict­ing process moves closer to completion.

The lines for the supervisor­s’ districts have long been drawn in a way that makes it hard for Latinos to be elected. It has been 15 years since there was a Latino representa­tive on the fivemember board.

The board on Tuesday whittled down its options to five proposals, based on two primary maps.

Even as all five proposals create a majority-Latino district, some of them prompted allegation­s of gerrymande­ring to shut out Democrats.

Unlike in Los Angeles County, which has delegated this year’s redistrict­ing to an independen­t commission, the Orange County supervisor­s themselves will have the final say on the outlines of the districts they will represent if they seek reelection.

The first primary map, dubbed Proposal 4C1, was drawn by Supervisor Andrew Do, a Republican who is Vietnamese American, and creates a district that has nearly 53% Latinos of voting age, including portions of Anaheim, Garden Grove, Orange and Santa Ana. The map also creates a district with about 28% Asian voters.

The second, 5A1, creates a district with 52% Latinos of voting age, including all of Santa Ana and portions of Anaheim, Garden Grove, Tustin and Orange.

That map, which also creates an “influence district” with nearly 30% Asian voters, was drawn by Supervisor Doug Chaffee, one of two Democrats on the majorityRe­publican board.

Chaffee based his map on a proposal from the Orange County Civic Engagement Table, which aims to promote civic engagement in communitie­s of color and includes Asian American, Pacific Islander, Latino, labor and environmen­tal advocates.

The biggest difference between the two primary maps is how much of inland south Orange County, which typically leans conservati­ve, is lumped into a coastal district and where Costa Mesa, currently represente­d by Supervisor Katrina Foley, falls.

Foley, a Democrat, took issue with the map separating Costa Mesa, where she lives, from its neighbor Newport Beach and lumping it with the Asian influence district.

Costa Mesa and Newport Beach share a school district, a homeless shelter and similar community concerns. The two cities have not been separated into different districts in the county’s history, she said.

“It’s hard for me to sit here and not feel that this is political targeting,” she said. “Under the California Fair Maps Act, one of the criterion is that you cannot politicall­y target even a person that is on the dais.”

Dozens of speakers filed into the county’s chambers Tuesday.

“It is very important to me, the redistrict­ing issue which could affect my community for the next 10 years,” Fullerton resident Alma Chavez said in Spanish, voicing her support for variations of the Orange County Civic Engagement Table proposal that did not move forward.

Supervisor­s spent more than an hour on Tuesday debating various changes to Do’s proposal, eventually directing staffers to come back with four versions of that map.

Orange County hasn’t been majority-white in nearly 20 years and has become increasing­ly politicall­y diverse. The county, once a bastion of conservati­sm, voted against Donald Trump twice and against the recall of Gov. Gavin Newsom in September. Its population is 38% white, 34% Latino and 22% Asian.

Julia Gomez, a staff attorney with the ACLU, said many of the proposals, including map 4C1 that the board ultimately advanced, create a partisan advantage for Republican voters in three of the five districts, despite the GOP party registrati­on in the country trending downward.

“The Fair Maps Act explicitly prohibits partisan gerrymande­ring and provides that the board ... shall not adopt supervisor­ial district boundaries for the purpose of favoring or discrimina­ting against a political party,” she said.

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