Los Angeles Times

L.A. County needs a bigger Board of Supervisor­s

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Several candidates are seeking the 3rd District seat of Los Angeles County Supervisor Sheila Kuehl, who will leave office when her second term ends in December 2022. But none of those hopefuls yet know exactly which 2 million constituen­ts they’re running to represent, because new lines for all of the supervisor­ial districts won’t be finalized by the county’s Citizens Redistrict­ing Commission for several months.

Will most of the San Fernando Valley remain in the 3rd District, incongruou­sly tied to Beverly Hills, West Hollywood, Santa Monica and Malibu? Or will it instead join Burbank as part of the 5th District, which includes Covina, about an hour’s drive to the east during a typical commute, and Lancaster, an hour and a half to the north? For that matter, will district lines continue to run right through Burbank, Canoga Park and Koreatown?

What is also up in the air is how racial and ethnic communitie­s might be carved up among the districts. They have changed markedly since 1990, when a federal court threw out district boundaries and ordered a new election for a seat with more proportion­ate representa­tion for Latinos, who at the time made up a third of the county’s population. The court found that for decades the all-white, all-male supervisor­s had repeatedly drawn lines to prevent Latino candidates from being elected. Running in a special election the following year with a redrawn district, Gloria Molina became the first Latino supervisor since 1875.

But here we are, 30 years later, with the county’s Latinos close to half the population and the San Fernando Valley’s at more than 40%, yet the county still has only one district in which a Latino candidate is likely to be elected.

So should the Valley be carved up and joined with other regions to create a second (or third) Latino-majority district? Or should Latino neighborho­ods in Sylmar or Arleta look to Hilda Solis, Molina’s successor in the distant 1st District, when issues arise that join their interests with those of other Latino communitie­s around the county?

Fortunatel­y, county district lines are no longer drawn by the supervisor­s themselves, so these questions will be answered by the independen­t commission. But that panel lacks the power to order the most important and the most necessary improvemen­t to representa­tion: Downsize the districts.

The notion that each supervisor can adequately represent 2 million people is absurd. Supervisor­s allocate billions of dollars in state and county funds and have jurisdicti­on over the most essential human services, including mental health, public health, child protection and jails, and they have an outsize role in the region’s transporta­tion, water and parks systems. They bear enormous responsibi­lity for the homelessne­ss crisis and its solutions.

Five districts is the exact same governance structure at play in tiny Alpine County, where each supervisor has approximat­ely 250 constituen­ts and presumably knows each one of them by name. Even in San Diego County, the state’s next-largest county after L.A., each of the five districts is only a third as populous as any of L.A. County’s.

Smaller districts mean more accountabi­lity, more responsive­ness and more opportunit­y for public input on important decisions. They mean fewer divided neighborho­ods.

Smaller districts in Los Angeles County would mean creating more districts, which in turn means electing more supervisor­s, and that’s been the rub for county voters. Measures to expand the board have come to the ballot eight times since 1926, and voters have said “no” each time, often after campaigns funded or directed by incumbent board members who don’t want to see the reach of their power diminished.

And they are quite correct that the power of each would shrink if they were one of 11, as in San Francisco, which in California is a special case because it is a combined city and county. A larger L.A. County Board of Supervisor­s would have to act less like a collection of executives with no one clearly in charge and more like an oversight and legislativ­e body — and that, too, would be an improvemen­t, if there were an independen­t executive to share power, preferably elected.

The same is true of the L.A. City Council, which like the county is also going through a redistrict­ing process to take into account population changes ref lected in the last census. The council has the same number of districts — 15 — that it had nearly a century ago to serve a population that was a quarter of its current size. Among other things, this means that Watts will again be fused to San Pedro despite those two communitie­s being geographic­ally, socially, politicall­y and ethnically distinct from each other.

The L.A. County, city — and school — redistrict­ing processes will be concluded by the end of this year. But they can be only partially effective at improving representa­tion unless voters follow up with a demand for smaller districts and more direct accountabi­lity. The status quo is fine only if you think they’re providing the best possible service to their constituen­ts as they are. Chances are, though, that you believe they could do much better.

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