Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Lost population paring 4 counties’ JP positions

- STEPHEN SIMPSON ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE

Four Arkansas counties will lose a total of eight jus- tice of the peace positions beginning in 2023 because of a state law that bases the number of a county’s quorum court members on the county’s population.

Shelby Johnson, geographic informatio­n officer for the Arkansas Geographic Informatio­n Systems Office, said Ashley, Crittenden, Phillips and Polk counties will reduce their justice of the peace districts by two each.

“It’s going to be an interestin­g new decade,” Phillips County’s County Judge Clark Hall said. “Because of the drop in population, we have had to rearrange the whole Quorum Court. The nine seats remaining have been totally rearranged with new rules and margins for deviation. It has changed a lot of our districts up, and Quorum Court members have to run against each other. It’s a tragedy, but it’s the way things go.”

Arkansas law states that the number of quorum court districts per county in Arkansas is based upon population ranges. Apportionm­ent of those districts is the responsibi­lity of the county board of election commission­ers and is based on federal decennial

census informatio­n.

The U.S. Constituti­on requires a census every 10 years. The most recent one took place in 2020, and the results were announced last year. Since then, U.S. House and state legislativ­e districts have been redrawn based on how the population changed.

Justices of the peace serve on quorum courts, the legislativ­e body of counties. The county judge is a county’s top executive.

Josh Curtis, government­al affairs director for the Associatio­n of Arkansas Counties, said that while a multitude of counties saw a drop in population and might be dropped in classifica­tion, the drop must be pretty steep for a county to lose two justice of the peace positions.

“Those who this affects should have been made aware of it last year,” he said.

The number of justices of the peace in a county falls in these population ranges:

■ Nine positions in counties with population­s up to 19,000.

■ 11 positions for population­s of 20,000 to 49,999.

■ 13 positions for population­s of 50,000 to 199,999.

■ 15 positions when the population is more than 200,000.

This law means that Arkansas will have a total of 775 justice of the peace positions on the basis of the 2020 census, a decrease from the 783 positions after the 2010 census.

This despite the fact that Arkansas’ population grew, from 2,915,918 in the 2010 census to 3,011,524 in 2020.

There are no counties gaining justice of the peace positions this decade.

Johnson said the state Board of Apportionm­ent is required to provide the population informatio­n to the counties within 90 days of receiving it from the U.S. Census Bureau.

“However, in the modern age, with the Census publicizin­g the population data online it’s immediatel­y accessible; and the counties are aware of the impact when the Census occurs, and that’s why several County Judges were involved in leading the 2020 Census Complete Count committee,” he said in an email. “So the counties were probably looking at those numbers within a few days after it was published.”

The change will apply to justices of the peace elected this year.

“[S]o the current JP members will serve the remainder of their current term until the next election is held and new JPs are sworn into office,” Johnson said.

He said that because of the law, some citizens who have developed relationsh­ips with their justices of the peace over the past decade may lose them.

“[B]ecause if a County is moving from 11 JPs down to 9 JPs, then that means some of the existing members would have to be drawn into the same district,” he said. “Assuming both incumbents ran against each other, one of them will not be re-elected. The opposite would be true if a county jumped up in class.”

COUNTY REACTIONS

Hall said he was expecting the drop in justice of the peace positions.

“I have been keeping track of it for several years,” he said. “We have been losing population for 20 years, but I also think they miscounted us this year by 1,000, but we can’t afford a recount.”

Hall said he was estimating Phillips County’s population to fall from 21,757 to somewhere around 17,500, but the 2020 census total was 16,568.

“It was a shock,” he said. “We did what we had to do with the numbers that have been given to us. We have been working with the state and created a viable map.”

Ashley County’s County Judge Jim Hudson said justices of the peace there are planning to have public hearings on redistrict­ing soon when the new districts are mapped out.

“Then we will decide who goes where and which Quorum Court members will be losing their spot,” he said.

Ashley County’s population dropped from 21,853 in 2010 to 19,062 in 2020.

County Judge Woody Wheeless said Crittenden County, which is going from 13 to 11 districts, has already redrawn the lines and is in a 30-day waiting period.

“We were anticipati­ng this,” he said. “We were only 500 people over 50,000 at the time, and I believe we fell about 1,800 people.”

Crittenden County’s population dropped from 50,902 in 2010 to 48,163 in 2020.

Wheeless said he believes probably half of the county is aware of the coming changes.

“This is the first of the year, and we will put it out there soon and let them know and give them the rest of this year to be aware of what is happening,” he said.

County Judge Brandon Ellison said Polk County hired

an outside company to redraw the area from 11 to nine districts.

“That won’t go into effect until next year, but we have a primary in May, and that is when the nine new district seats will be vied for,” he said.

The general election is Nov. 8.

Polk County’s population dropped from 20,662 in 2010 to 19,221 in 2020.

Ellison said like most of the counties that have lost justice of the peace positions, the decline in population in his county wasn’t a complete surprise.

“We were kind of on the bubble beforehand,” he said. “I will say that 2020-21 probably wasn’t a great year for the census, and most rural counties lost population. We lost 6%, and that put us under.”

 ?? SOURCE: Arkansas GIS Office Arkansas Democrat-Gazette ??
SOURCE: Arkansas GIS Office Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

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