Miami Herald

Dade commission­ers approve a redistrict­ing map without debate, but with changes

- BY DOUGLAS HANKS dhanks@miamiheral­d.com Douglas Hanks: 305-376-3605, @doug_hanks

SEVEN COMMISSION­ERS ARE FACING ELECTIONS IN 2022 AND 2024 IN THE NEWLY APPROVED DISTRICTS, WITH THE OTHER SIX DEPARTING DUE TO TERM LIMITS.

Miami-Dade County commission­ers on Wednesday redrew the boundaries of the districts that they represent, tweaking the electorate­s that will decide whether some get a second term in the coming years.

After quick endorsemen­ts of last-minute changes to some boundaries, commission­ers approved a new map for the 13 districts that elect board members every two years. There was no debate about the boundaries, with only four commission­ers asking to absorb Census tracts from neighborin­g districts — changes that were agreed to by the adjoining commission­ers.

One commission­er, District 8’s Danielle Cohen Higgins, voted against the final map. She is one of seven commission­ers facing elections in 2022 and 2024 in the newly approved districts, with the remaining six departing due to term limits.

The map came from a citizens advisory board led by a former commission­er, Dennis Moss. It approved the proposed map unanimousl­y on Nov. 10 based on a consultant’s initial proposal. Under county policy, the map was drawn to keep all incumbents remaining in their districts.

The changes moved an area south of Southwest 40th Street from District 6 to District 7; an area north of Southwest 168th Street from District 11 to District 9; an area south of Southwest 26th Street from District 10 to District 11; and an area south of Northwest 171st Street from District 1 to District 2.

A two-thirds vote on the 13-seat commission was needed to approve the new boundaries, which are based on population figures from the 2020 Census. The county’s redrawing of district boundaries ahead of the 2022 elections for the six commission seats not up for election last year overlaps with a nationwide redistrict­ing process for local, state and federal offices.

Miami-Dade hired a redistrict­ing firm that proposed new boundaries to adjust for population shifts over the last 10 years. Districts 8 and 9 in the south saw significan­t population growth, requiring shifting of voters out of those areas and into places in the northern parts that didn’t grow as quickly.

To see if redistrict­ing would alter commission representa­tion for any Miami-Dade address, visit the county’s interactiv­e version of the proposed map.

Last-minute changes affecting the seven districts were not made public before the meeting, and not part of the town halls and public meetings that the advisory board held. J.C. Planas, an elections lawyer and board member, criticized the surprise changes. “This is extremely inappropri­ate,” Planas said in a Twitter post.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States