Porterville Recorder

Proposed redistrict­ing maps presented to KCCD board

- By Ema Sasic The Bakersfiel­d California­n

The Kern Community College District Board of Trustees was presented with four proposed maps showing new trustee area boundary lines during its third public hearing on redistrict­ing Thursday.

The KCCD is undergoing a redistrict­ing process “to align the District with the requiremen­ts of the California (Voting) Rights Act,” according to Chancellor Thomas Burke. The district’s last redistrict­ing was in 2012.

There are currently five trustee areas with seven trustee representa­tives. Area 1, which includes Bakersfiel­d, is held by trustees Kyle Carter and Nan Gomezheitz­eberg, while trustees Dennis Beebe and Kay Meek oversee Area 3, which includes Arvin. Board President John Corkins represents Area 5, which includes Portervill­e College.

The four proposed maps, created by Redistrict­ing Partners, show seven trustee areas, each with one trustee representa­tive. Proposed maps A and B have similar boundaries to the current ones, but create two additional districts from Areas 1 and 3. Proposed maps C and D were created from scratch by looking at communitie­s of interest and existing supervisor­ial district lines, K-12 school district boundaries and city limits, explained Paul Mitchell, head of Redistrict­ing Partners.

Population sizes of the seven areas range between 129,000 and 139,000; no area is more than 10 percent larger or smaller than any other.

There are also around three Latino majority areas per map. Proposed map D was a preferred one among community members because its Area 4 has a 68 percent Latino citizen voting age population, along with an Area 3 of 52 percent and Area 6 of 53 percent Latino citizen voting age population.

“With plan D, it shows there are three majority/minority Latinostro­ng districts, which is what we were asking for here, and which would give our communitie­s that we spoke with the representa­tion that they really want and need,” said Sophia Garcia of the Dolores Huerta Foundation, which held six community meetings in outlying areas about the redistrict­ing.

Former Trustee Bill Thomas also noted that more than one trustee does not reside in any one district area shown in plan D. That’s a plus because at the time the current five districts were created, it was not completely clear that having more than one trustee represent an area was not allowed. “It is absolutely clear now that it is illegal,” he said.

After the presentati­on, Corkins suggested the board might not approve any of the maps at an upcoming meeting. Instead of completing the process for the 2020 election, he said it might be better to see census results and complete the redistrict­ing process in time for the 2022 election.

“We need that census to give us the indication of where the final districts will be and not have to go back through the process twice,” Corkins said to Mitchell. “You say it’s a re-tweaking, but I suspect it could be more than a re-tweaking, and now we’re redrawing districts two different times.”

According to district

documents, Meek, Beebe and Area 4 Trustee Romeo Agbalog’s terms expire in 2020. The other four seats will be up for election in 2022. The next meeting is schedule for March 5.

 ??  ?? John Corkins
John Corkins

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