The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Gerrymande­ring debate includes prisons

- — The Philadelph­ia Inquirer, The Associated Press

It is surprising how two wonky subjects like the census and redistrict­ing have become such hotly debated topics.

It is surprising — and encouragin­g — how two decidedly wonky subjects like the U.S. Census and political redistrict­ing have become such hotly debated topics among the public in the last year or so.

The attempts of Pennsylvan­ia lawmakers to retain control of drawing lopsided congressio­nal districts last year ended when the State Supreme Court intervened and issued a new congressio­nal map; that ruling was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court. (Ironically, the U.S. Supreme Court recently ruled that courts could no longer intervene in redistrict­ing battles.)

The debate over adding a citizenshi­p question to the U.S. Census has not been definitive­ly settled, despite a separate Supreme Court ruling barring the inclusion of the question.

But both of these issues sit at the crux of our democracy: that everyone counts, and every person gets a vote.

The new focus on gerrymande­ring bodes well for an important subset of the issue: “prison gerrymande­ring,” the impact of a huge prison population that advocates fear is compromisi­ng fair representa­tion and apportionm­ent of political power.

The fact that most states prohibit those in prison from voting, combined with the standard practice of the U.S. Census to count a prisoner’s residence as the prison where they’re serving time rather than their original home address, has sparked new attention on how this can distort democracy.

The method of counting prisoners creates false counts of population­s based on locations of prisons, and as a result, can unfairly favor white rural voters — where many prisons are located — at the expense of urban voters.

According to an Inquirer report by Jonathan Lai, a new study by two Villanova researcher­s suggests prison gerrymande­ring is a particular problem for Philadelph­ia. The authors, Brianna Remster and Rory Kramer, found that if prisoners were counted based on their home addresses rather than prisons, the city could gain at least one, if not two majority-minority state House districts.

The implicatio­ns go well beyond Philadelph­ia. A mass incarcerat­ion movement over the last few decades had put a disproport­ionate number of African Americans behind bars.

Many of the prisons holding these people are in rural areas with low population­s.

When prisoners are counted as residents of the towns where they are serving time — not the communitie­s they come from — those numbers have a direct impact on political power and resources. The Villanova researcher­s also point out that the practice harms the communitie­s from which prisoners come whose population­s (and needs) end up being undercount­ed.

This is a problem that is easily fixed — logistical­ly if not politicall­y. For

example, the state of Washington recently followed the example of New York, Maryland, Delaware, and California by requiring prisoners to be counted at their pre-incarcerat­ion address.

In Pennsylvan­ia, state Rep. Joanna McClinton (D., Philadelph­ia) has introduced a bill to have prisoners counted at their home addresses for redistrict­ing purposes. Governor Wolf has signaled his support for making that change.

areas have too much to lose to have this be an easy consensus, but this city and others have too much to gain that makes the fight worthwhile.

The fact that most states prohibit those in prison from voting, combined with the U.S. Census counting as residence as the prison where they’re serving time rather than their original home address, has sparked attention on how this can distort democracy.

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