Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

County election officials await redistrict­ing decisions

- TOM SISSOM Tom Sissom can be reached by email at tsissom@nwadg.com or on Twitter @NWATom.

FAYETTEVIL­LE — Washington County election officials are waiting for the state to set boundaries for House and Senate seats before they decide how to draw the lines for Quorum Court districts.

The county’s Election Commission met Friday to review three proposals showing how the 15 seats on the Quorum Court will be defined. No decision was made, and the commission­ers said they want more informatio­n and more options.

“I definitely want to see alternativ­es,” Renee Oelschlaeg­er, commission chairman, said Friday.

Oelschlaeg­er said she wants to try and have every district include a mix of urban and rural areas and if possible allow room for population growth over the next 10 years. Oelschlaeg­er said she wants to avoid a split between urban and rural areas on the Quorum Court.

“These three districts we have now in the south are mostly rural,” Oelschlaeg­er said of districts 13, 14 and 15 while looking at one of the maps reviewed Friday. “These districts in the center are mostly in Fayettevil­le and Springdale. I would like to see if we can’t have a better mix of rural and urban in every district so every JP represents the whole county.”

Max Deitchler, election commission­er, said he wants to keep communitie­s of people with similar interests from being separated in the redistrict­ing. He said some of the possible boundary changes in the initial maps divide south Fayettevil­le, for instance.

“I’d prefer to not see that happen,” Deitchler said.

Deitchler also asked Jeff Hawkins, director of the Northwest Arkansas Regional Planning Commission, if the maps being drawn so far considered the Latinx population, particular­ly in Springdale.

Hawkins said that detail had not been included in drawing the lines in the three maps reviewed by the commission Friday. He said decisions on the demographi­cs of the districts are complicate­d. He noted a Hispanic person was elected to the Springdale City Council in a citywide election and said if that population is sufficient­ly concentrat­ed there might be a minority-majority district.

The Regional Planning Commission is drawing the maps for the county. The three maps that have been presented to the county are posted on the Washington County website at washington­countyar.gov under the Election Commission, along with contact informatio­n for Jennifer Price, election director, should anyone want to comment on the proposals.

The districts are redrawn after every U.S. census and state and federal laws require the districts have roughly equal population. Washington County’s population after the 2020 census is 245,871, according to informatio­n from Price. The target population for each of the 15 districts is 15,572, with up to a 10% variance having been establishe­d by the courts as acceptable.

Before any redistrict­ing, the population of the districts ranges from a high of 20,019 in District 10, represente­d by Robert Dennis, to a low of 13,800 in District 14, represente­d by Jim Wilson.

Hawkins said the best practice will be to wait for the state Board of Apportionm­ent to draw boundaries for state House and Senate districts. Hawkins said if those districts are drawn, the county can try to use some of the same boundary lines in drawing justice of the peace districts, requiring fewer voting precincts and making elections simpler for both election officials and voters.

Hawkins said he thinks the state maps may be completed by early November.

The county has until mid-December to complete its redistrict­ing work, so the commission can wait for the state maps to be done, Price said.

“If those House and Senate maps are out in the next week or so, we may want to scrap all this,” Price said of the three maps done for the county as of Friday by the Regional Planning Commission. “We don’t want to create a lot of tiny little precincts if we don’t have to.”

The commission set another meeting for Nov. 3 to resume its work on the new justice of the peace district maps.

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