Lodi News-Sentinel

California could lose a congressio­nal district following 2020 census count

- By Sarah Parvini and John Myers

LOS ANGELES — California is poised to lose a congressio­nal seat for the first time in its history as a state, based on U.S. Census Bureau population estimates released Monday that showed the nation’s growth continued to slow in 2019.

Some 27 states and the District of Columbia lost residents through net domestic migration between 2018 and 2019, the new census data show.

About 203,000 people left California in that period, a result of the state’s shifting migration patterns and economic strains that are making it harder to afford living here. New York, Illinois, New Jersey, Massachuse­tts and Louisiana also saw large losses to other states.

California’s potential loss in reapportio­nment, which will be determined by next year’s census count, would drop the state’s number of seats in the U.S. House of Representa­tives from 53 to 52, said William Frey, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n.

“It’s got a lot to do with dispersion from California to the rest of the west,” Frey said. “Arizona, Texas and Colorado are all big destinatio­ns for California migrants, and they all are gaining seats.”

A 2019 relocation study by Texas Realtors found that 63,175 California­ns moved to Texas in 2017, while California was the top destinatio­n for Texans to move — nearly 41,000 relocated here.

Texas is likely to gain three seats following the 2020 decennial count, according to Frey’s analysis of census data, while states such as Arizona, Colorado and Oregon may gain one seat apiece.

The apportionm­ent population count for each of the 50 states includes the state’s total resident population — citizens and noncitizen­s — as well as a count of the overseas federal employees and their dependents who have that state listed as their home state in their employers’ administra­tive records, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

The House of Representa­tives is limited to 435 members, not under the U.S. Constituti­on, but because of a 1929 federal law that could be changed if lawmakers and the president agreed to do so.

Exactly where California would lose a seat in the House depends on which communitie­s are larger or smaller compared to census numbers from 2010. The state’s Citizens Redistrict­ing Commission, whose members will be selected in coming months, will hold public hearings in 2021 to determine how to redraw congressio­nal maps.

Paul Mitchell, one of the state’s leading analysts of the redistrict­ing process, said that two places could dominate the discussion: the communitie­s sitting at the intersecti­on of Los Angeles, Orange and San Bernardino counties and the suburbs to the east of San Francisco.

But other big changes to the political map-drawing process are also in store — including the 2013 ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court to strike part of the federal Voting Rights Act that strongly influenced the current California maps.

“That will allow a massive rewrite of the Central Valley congressio­nal districts, so it might be really hard to see the total impact” of losing a House seat because of population, Mitchell said.

Even so, the most obvious political impact would be to force incumbent House members to either run against each other or leave office. In 2012, Rep. Brad Sherman (D-Northridge) defeated former Rep. Howard Berman in a bitter contest brought on by the new lines drawn in Los Angeles County.

California’s future numerical strength in Congress hinges in part on making sure that members of historical­ly undercount­ed groups are included in the census count. In California, 72% of the population belongs to one of these groups, according to the Public Policy Institute of California.

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