Dayton Daily News

Prospects dim for new state House, Senate maps

Housekeepi­ng talk fills redistrict­ing commission meeting.

- By Jim Gaines Staff Writer

Republican­s on the Ohio Redistrict­ing Commission met Wednesday to declare they can do nothing — but subsequent­ly agreed to meet again the next day.

The commission faces a 9 a.m. Friday deadline from the Ohio Supreme Court to pass new state House and Senate district maps. Separately, a panel of federal judges has said if the issue isn’t settled by May 28, they will order election officials to use a map the commission previously approved but that the Ohio Supreme Court threw out as unconstitu­tional.

The five Republican commission­ers argued that no maps they approve now could be in place in sufficient time for use in an Aug. 2 special primary for Ohio General Assembly seats.

Two new members joined the commission, with state Sen. Rob McColley, R-Napoleon, replacing Senate President Matt Huffman, R-Lima;

and state Rep. Jeff LaRe, R-Violet Twp., replacing House Speaker Bob Cupp, R-Lima. LaRe also took over Cupp’s seat as commission co-chair with state Sen. Vernon Sykes, D-Akron.

Debate on housekeepi­ng matters took up much of Wednesday’s meeting. House Minority Leader Allison Russo, D-Upper Arlington, moved for the commission to urge allocation of pay to Democratic map-drawing consultant­s — reallocati­on, really, since previously approved funds hadn’t been entirely spent but authorizat­ion for their use expired March 4, she said.

The newly arrived McColley questioned two payments of more than $50,000 each to consultant Chris Glassburn in February and March, and payments last year to consulting firm HaystaqDNA totaling $119,000.

Russo said the House Democratic Caucus has limited staff, so had to hire outside consultant­s. She said the caucus had been allocated $500,000 but only spent $354,000 of it; meanwhile, she alleged, Republican­s had spent $600,000 on consultant­s of their own, but much of that was categorize­d as legal expenses and so not invoiced in detail.

Glassburn worked under contract for a set amount, and submitted invoices for those large sums to meet a shortened contract deadline, Russo said. He was working on two sets of state legislativ­e maps and a congressio­nal district map, spending an enormous amount of time, she said.

The HaystaqDNA contract was signed before Russo joined the redistrict­ing commission, and the firm was dropped in favor of Glassburn, she said.

McColley, noting that he and Russo chair the task force on legislativ­e redistrict­ing that has oversight of related spending, said if

other commission­ers did not object, he and Russo could agree to approve the Democratic funding request.

Russo, on the understand­ing it would be approved soon, withdrew her motion.

Sykes asked the commission to approve rehiring independen­t map-drawers Douglas Johnson and Michael McDonald to finish the work they had to abandon March 28, when the commission voted 4-3 to instead pass a slightly altered version of maps the state supreme court had already overturned. The court threw out that March 28 version, too, finding it unconstitu­tionally gerrymande­red to favor Republican­s, just like the previous three tries.

Sykes said Johnson and McDonald had already put in a lot of work and were “very close” to finishing maps as the court ordered.

Republican commission­ers objected, with Secretary of State Frank LaRose saying approval of any new maps now would be too late to implement in time for a projected Aug. 2 primary.

“It’s important to note that today is 90 days from Aug. 2,” he said. LaRose said meeting all legal deadlines for election preparatio­n takes at least that long, not even counting potential legal challenges to any new maps.

Use of any newly created maps would require state legislativ­e action to alter some pre-election deadlines,

and that would require a supermajor­ity in the state House and Senate, he said.

LaRose said he would need assurances from all caucus leaders in both houses that the needed legislatio­n would pass before he would vote for any new maps.

If Republican­s are so concerned about deadlines, Sykes asked in response, why did they “squander” 22 days from the supreme court’s last ruling before reconvenin­g the redistrict­ing commission?

“The time crunch is legitimate, but we have the ability to make decisions,” he said. “It’s only been the reluctance of the majority to pass a constituti­onal map that has led us to where we are today.”

Gov. Mike DeWine, a redistrict­ing commission member, urged use of Republican and Democratic staff members to “improve” the third set of maps, which the state supreme court overturned but which a panel of federal judges has said it will likely impose if the issue isn’t settled by May 28.

The commission rejected rehiring the outside map-drawers by a 5-2 party-line vote.

LaRe then asked for any discussion on setting more meetings, but got none. The commission adjourned, but less than an hour later a notice went out setting another meeting for 4:45 p.m. today.

 ?? ?? Audience members at the Ohio Redistrict­ing Commission meeting Wednesday chant “Fair maps now!” after the commission adjourned without action.
Audience members at the Ohio Redistrict­ing Commission meeting Wednesday chant “Fair maps now!” after the commission adjourned without action.

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