South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Jacksonvil­le highlights conflicts over local gerrymande­ring

- By Ayanna Alexander

JACKSONVIL­LE — Not far from the postcard images of Jacksonvil­le —the white sand beaches, the riverfront fountain, the upscale shopping district — is another side of the city.

Here, neighborho­od roads are pitted with potholes and sometimes unpaved. Weeds swallow abandoned cars in empty lots. Grocery stores are sparse.

The people who live in this other Jacksonvil­le are mostly Black, and many of them lay blame for their neighborho­ods’ lack of services on the city’s politics. They point to a lack of representa­tion resulting in part from the way the districts have been drawn for the city council, the decision-making body for Jacksonvil­le’s 950,000 residents.

“It’s about diluting Black representa­tion, Black power and change that needs to happen in the Black community,” said Moné Holder, a city resident who holds a leadership role at Florida Rising, a local voting rights group that focuses on communitie­s of color. “Others may tell a different story as to why it is, but we see it in the lack of resources that go into those communitie­s.”

A group of Jacksonvil­le residents and local civil rights organizati­ons sued the city last year, alleging that the council’s redistrict­ing maps packed Black communitie­s into four of the 19 council districts, five of which are at-large.

A U.S. district court judge last fall ruled in their favor and ordered the maps redrawn. Advocates said the city returned with more of the same, and in December the same court ordered that a map proposed by the advocates be used for Jacksonvil­le’s elections this spring.

“There’s just naturally an incentive to keep things the same, and that’s what you saw in the Jacksonvil­le process,” said Nick Warren, staff attorney with the ACLU of Florida.

The council argued in its court filings that the advocates’ latest plan would be the third council map in less than a year and would “cause voter confusion and undermine voter confidence.” The court rejected the appeal in early January, so voters will be casting ballots in new council districts for the city’s March elections.

The fight over how Jacksonvil­le’s districts are drawn reflects an aspect of redistrict­ing that often remains in the shadows. Redistrict­ing for congressio­nal and state legislativ­e boundaries captures wide attention after new census numbers are released every 10 years, as the two major political parties seek mapmaking advantages that will help them retain or regain power at the federal or state level — a process known as gerrymande­ring.

No less fierce are the battles over the way voting lines are drawn in local government­s, for city councils, county commission­s and even school boards.

Conflicts over local redistrict­ing erupted into public view late last year when a leaked audiotape revealed how Latino members of the Los Angeles City Council were plotting to gerrymande­r council districts in a way that would boost political power for their community at the expense of traditiona­lly Black ones.

The exchange was punctuated with racist and graphic language and has widened racial fissures within the city, led the state Department of Justice to announce an investigat­ion

and prompted a legislativ­e effort to remove the council’s redistrict­ing power.

“Self-interest should not be the deciding factor,” said the bill’s sponsor, Democratic state Sen. María Elena Durazo. “It should be the Voting Rights Act, the California Constituti­on and the U.S. Constituti­on.”

When the city was going through the redistrict­ing process, Los Angeles City Councilmem­ber Marqueece Harris-Dawson recalled bringing up topics important to his constituen­ts related to what he termed the “One Black district” but said he was ignored.

“Now I understand that that was on purpose,” he said.

A U.S. Supreme Court ruling a decade ago gutting a section of the federal Voting Rights Act gave state and local government­s tremendous freedom to change voting procedures and to redraw political boundaries, even if redistrict­ing was done in a way that diluted the voting power of minority communitie­s. Previously, some states and local government­s were required to get approval from the Justice Department before making significan­t voting-related changes.

The gerrymande­ring for local government bodies receives far less attention than congressio­nal or state legislativ­e gerrymande­ring, in part because few local groups have the money and expertise to bring lawsuits against what they perceive as unfair maps.

Jacksonvil­le is an exception. Local branches of the NAACP and the American Civil Liberties Union teamed up with community civil rights groups to challenge the maps the City Council approved in March 2022.

Some community activists trace the city’s redistrict­ing problems to a 1968 consolidat­ion with Duval County, which allowed the city to grow but also changed its racial dynamics. At the time, it was hoped that a mix of predominan­tly Black council districts and at-large council positions would help boost Black representa­tion.

Yet in the more than half-century since t he merger, just six Black residents have served in the at-large positions, which are elected on a citywide basis, and just two of those were Democrats, according to research by Marcella Washington, a retired Florida State College at Jacksonvil­le political science professor who is a plaintiff in the lawsuit.

Black residents made up at least 40% of Jacksonvil­le’s total population at the time of the consolidat­ion, and today they account for a little over 30%.

While seven members of today’s Jacksonvil­le council are Black, Washington said they don’t always vote in the interest of the Black community. As one example, she cited contentiou­s votes over whether to remove Confederat­e monuments across the city. Other residents noted additional concerns i n predominan­tly Black areas of Jacksonvil­le they feel the council does not prioritize — city properties that are overgrown, problems with water and sewer service, inadequate services for homeless people.

Councilman Rory Diamond was the l one vote against the council’s original map, saying it was designed to protect incumbents. But he also is critical of the redrawn map to be used in the upcoming elections because he believes it could have the unintended consequenc­e of “destroying African-American representa­tion on the City Council.” Other council members declined to comment, citing the litigation.

Local activists say forcing Black residents into a handful of council districts has led to a sense in those communitie­s that their voice doesn’t matter. That has made it difficult to get them engaged politicall­y, said Rosemary McCoy, a plaintiff in the lawsuit and CEO of the Harriet Tubman Freedom Fighters, a nonprofit that registers new voters.

“We understand that when you pack a group of people together, then these people don’t have a say. Their vote happens to be wasted,” McCoy said. “I ask people to sign petitions to put things on the ballot ... and many times they ’re telling us, ‘My vote don’t matter. My vote don’t count. Why should I vote? Nothing’s going to change’ ”

Ben Frazier, another plaintiff in the case and CEO of the Northside Coalition of Jacksonvil­le, which focuses on injustice, said he would like the court fight in Jacksonvil­le to inspire other groups around the country to challenge local redistrict­ing maps when they appear to be drawn unfairly.

“I’m hopeful that there will be other cities and other states who look at Jacksonvil­le and say Jacksonvil­le moved against them, and maybe we should, too,” he said.

 ?? GARY MCCULLOUGH/AP ?? Marcella Washington, a plaintiff in a local gerrymande­ring case, speaks in Jacksonvil­le on Jan. 18.
GARY MCCULLOUGH/AP Marcella Washington, a plaintiff in a local gerrymande­ring case, speaks in Jacksonvil­le on Jan. 18.
 ?? GARY MCCULLOUGH/AP ?? Rosemary McCoy, CEO of the Harriet Tubman Freedom Fighters, a nonprofit that registers new voters, and local activists say forcing Black residents into a handful of council districts has led to a sense in those communitie­s that their voice doesn’t matter.
GARY MCCULLOUGH/AP Rosemary McCoy, CEO of the Harriet Tubman Freedom Fighters, a nonprofit that registers new voters, and local activists say forcing Black residents into a handful of council districts has led to a sense in those communitie­s that their voice doesn’t matter.

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