Santa Fe New Mexican

Special session on redistrict­ing could be delayed to late this year

State still waiting for census data needed for redrawing

- By Robert Nott rnott@sfnewmexic­an.com

New Mexico lawmakers hoping to tackle a major redistrict­ing plan in a September special session got some surprising news Monday.

They may have to wait until November or December due to census data delays.

Albuquerqu­e pollster Brian Sanderoff, whose company Research & Polling Inc. plans to help compile data for redistrict­ing, told members of the Legislativ­e Council the coronaviru­s pandemic slowed the 2020 U.S. census, which will hinder New Mexico’s process of drawing new voting district boundaries based on population changes.

“We can’t do our work until we get that data,” Sanderoff said.

Voting districts in New Mexico were last drawn in 2012 by a state District Court after then-Gov. Susana Martinez, a Republican, vetoed a redistrict­ing plan drafted by a Legislatur­e with a majority of Democrats following the 2010 census.

New Mexico has more time than some other states to meet a requiremen­t for redistrict­ing based on updated census data. New Jersey and Virginia, for instance, have legislativ­e elections scheduled later this year, creating tighter deadlines for redistrict­ing.

Sanderoff said there are five key principles to redistrict­ing. The first is to ensure nearly equal population­s among all districts, some of which have grown since 2010, while others have seen a decline.

Districts should remain compact, Sanderoff said, as well as contiguous.

Minority voting rights also should play a role in the process. “It’s important to not dilute the voting strength of protected minority racial groups” when redistrict­ing, Sanderoff said.

Finally, he said, it’s important to maintain the integrity of existing county boundaries and not split up neighborho­ods.

Those five principles “don’t always work hand in hand in harmony,” Sanderoff said. “You can’t maximize one and minimize another.”

New Mexico probably won’t see “earthshaki­ng” difference­s in its upcoming redistrict­ing plan later this year, he said, because preliminar­y census data indicates New Mexico has seen an increase of only about 48,000 people — about 2 percent of the population — since 2010.

The federal government uses census data to allocate financial support for a wide range of public programs, from education and health care to housing and transporta­tion.

 ?? LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN ?? Damacio Otero, deputy sergeant at arms at the state Senate, organizes bill books Monday at the desk of Sen. Leo Jaramillo, D-Los Alamos.
LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN Damacio Otero, deputy sergeant at arms at the state Senate, organizes bill books Monday at the desk of Sen. Leo Jaramillo, D-Los Alamos.

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