Miami Herald

Senate redistrict­ing chair vows to redeem process as he plans to limit public’s input

In an effort to redeem the Florida Legislatur­e’s redistrict­ing process, the Senate announced new rules that put limits on public input into the drawing of new maps.

- BY MARY ELLEN KLAS meklas@miamiheral­d.com Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau Mary Ellen Klas : Mary Ellen Klas Mary Ellen Klas can be reached at meklas@miami herald.com and @MaryEllenK­las

In an effort to “take steps against the shadow process” that marred legislativ­e redistrict­ing 10 years ago, Senate Reapportio­nment Committee Chair Ray Rodrigues on Monday announced new rules that put limits on the input the Senate gets from average citizens, political consultant­s and lobbyists.

The Senate will now require more disclosure from anyone who attempts to address legislator­s in a public meeting by requiring them to submit a disclosure form that indicates if they are a lobbyist or getting expenses paid. New rules will prohibit legislator­s from considerin­g maps submitted by the public, unless a lawmaker explicitly requested the map in writing. The Senate will also require legislator­s to retain all records of communicat­ions they get about maps.

And, in what may be the most radical change of all, Rodrigues said the Senate is considerin­g abandoning public meetings to collect citizen input from communitie­s across the state to hear how they would like the maps drawn.

“If you go back and look at the litigation from the last cycle, the [Florida Supreme] Court was very clear that we’re no longer allowed to use communitie­s of interest because that was not articulate­d in the Fair Districts amendments,’’ said Rodrigues, R-Estero, during the inaugural meeting of the Senate Reapportio­nment Committee. The Fair Districts amendments to the state Constituti­on prohibit legislator­s from drawing maps intended to protect incumbents or political parties.

Rodrigues said the U.S. Supreme Court in Shelby v. Holder in 2013 removed the requiremen­t that legislator­s do a “traveling road show” to determine which communitie­s of interest want to be kept together in legislativ­e and congressio­nal districts. Now he questions whether public hearings “makes sense in Florida.”

“So, given that the key piece of informatio­n that we received from this roads how is no longer applicable to the drawing of the districts, my personal position is I’m not sure we should spend the time to do that,” he said.

The House Redistrict­ing Committee, chaired by Rep. Tom Leek, R-Ormond Beach, will hold its first meeting Wednesday. The two committees are expected to launch a website in the next week that will provide map-drawing software for the public to use to draw maps.

GOAL TO REDUCE OUTSIDE INFLUENCE

Rodrigues said the goal of the new Senate rules is to prevent legislator­s from using political consultant­s to illegally influence redistrict­ing as they did 10 years ago, when the courts invalidate­d the legislativ­ely-drawn Senate and congressio­nal maps. Florida’s courts ruled that legislator­s violated the

Fair Districts amendments.

“I intend for this committee to conduct the process in a manner that is consistent with case law developed during the last decade, is beyond reproach and free from any kind of unconstitu­tional intent,’’ he said.

Rodrigues said he wants the Legislatur­e to restore public trust so that the courts give it “legislativ­e deference” again, and when the maps are reviewed the court will start with the assumption that the maps are legal.

After the court ordered legislator­s back to the drawing board in 2015, “the Florida Senate was in a position where they had to record each of their meetings,’’ Rodrigues recalled. “They had lost the legislativ­e deference, and they’d lost the presumptio­n that any map they brought forth was constituti­onal.”

He vowed to change that this time.

“This committee will pass maps that are compliant with the Constituti­on, that are compliant with all of our Florida Statutes, and that meet all federal requiremen­ts,’’ Rodrigues said. “We’re going to be constituti­onal, and we’re going to preserve our legislativ­e deference that exists. We’re not going to give the courts any reason to assume that anything we do is unconstitu­tional.”

OUTSIDE MAPS MUST HAVE SENATE SPONSOR

In addition to requiring additional disclosure, the Senate will require any map submitted by the public for inclusion into the Senate proposal to be sponsored by a senator. Publicly submitted maps that do not have a Senate sponsor will be available on the joint website, www. floridared­istricting.gov, for members to review. A similar process was followed last time but many publicly-drawn maps were rejected by Senate leadership in favor of parts of maps drawn by political consultant­s.

The new appearance form will apply to all committees, not just the Reapportio­nment Committee. Speakers will be asked to check one of the following: “I am appearing without compensati­on or sponsorshi­p,” “I am a registered lobbyist” or “I am not a lobbyist, but received something of value for my appearance (travel, meals, lodging, etc.).“

It is not clear what kind of enforcemen­t the Senate will employ or what penalties there will be for violations.

The Senate committee is comprised of eight Republican­s, four Democrats and three senators who are serving in the Senate for the first time. Despite that, two of freshmen, Republican Sens. Danny Burgess, R-Inverness, and Jennifer Bradley, R-Fleming Island, were chosen by Senate President Wilton Simpson to chair the legislativ­e and congressio­nal redistrict­ing subcommitt­ees.

Sen. Lauren Book, the Senate Democratic leader from Plantation, could not be reached for comment on what she thinks of the new rules or whether she had any input on which Democrats were chosen to be members of the committee.

Meanwhile, as redistrict­ing software becomes more accessible for the general public, several groups will be monitoring and analyzing what Florida’s legislator­s draw.

Political students at the University of Florida will download every map proposed by House and Senate leaders to provide the public with an independen­t analysis of which communitie­s, and incumbents and political parties the maps help and hurt, said UF political science professor Michael McDonald.

He said he has been working with a team of researcher­s for the last four years to collecting precinct boundaries and data. They have merged the Census data with precinct boundaries and they will be building maps using online map-drawing apps.

UF’s political science department will also conduct a map-drawing contest for students, offering up $100 gift cards for those who produce winning maps by Oct. 30, McDonald said.

Another non-partisan group, RepresentU­S, has teamed up with the Princeton

Gerrymande­ring Project to create the Redistrict­ing Report Card, an algorithm that identifies gerrymande­ring as it happens and gives states grades on proposed voting maps.

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