The Arizona Republic

States use tech to allow public to draw maps

Residents can make submission­s, suggestion­s

- Kristian Hernández Stateline.org TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

At least a dozen states are giving residents access to the software and web tools needed to map out how their government should represent them.

After every census, redistrict­ing authoritie­s draw new boundaries for state legislativ­e and congressio­nal districts. Most states hold public hearings, even though half the country lacks laws requiring public input. Now, some states are going even further.

So far, Alaska, California, Colorado, Illinois, Michigan, Montana, New Mexico, Ohio, Oregon, Utah, Washington and Wisconsin have made online mapdrawing tools publicly available and begun accepting submission­s, according to Stateline research.

Several more states – Idaho, Michigan, Missouri, New Jersey and New York – are obligated by law to accept and consider maps drawn and submitted by the public, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es, a nonpartisa­n group that tracks state legislatio­n.

Other states don’t have the same legal obligation, but they can use the public-generated maps to critique official maps or proposals and to evaluate state requiremen­ts and criteria.

Republican state Rep. Paul Ray, cochair of Utah’s Legislativ­e Redistrict­ing Committee, said he was eager to see what residents would come up with this cycle. In 2011, a map drawn by a Utah resident was used to set the state’s school board boundaries.

Lawmakers need all the help they can get, he said. “It’s not as easy as you think.

“Drawing a map to encompass 75 House seats, 29 Senate seats is not that easy,” Ray told Stateline in July at a redistrict­ing seminar hosted by the National Conference of State Legislatur­es. “Especially when redrawing district boundaries to comply with the Voting Rights Act and the principle of one person, one vote.”

If a map distribute­s voters or potential voters in a grossly uneven way, it can be challenged in court for being unconstitu­tional or violating the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

In the past 30 years, new technology has made it much easier to draw new boundaries that follow the rules while also enabling maps that benefit a party or candidate without flouting the law.

Glenn Koepp, former secretary of the Louisiana Senate, worked in the legislatur­e from 1972 to this past July, when he died of a heart attack. His first redistrict­ing cycle was in 1981. In an early July interview with Stateline, he said Senate staff would spend weeks back then drawing lines on paper maps pinned up to walls, then would use a mainframe computer to analyze the demographi­cs of the districts they created.

“We had one computer that could do this and the software cost thousands of dollars,” Koepp said during a reception at the NCSL redistrict­ing seminar.

“At the time no one had a personal computer or extensive training, so you’d spend lots of sleepless nights just waiting for the computer to spit back the data,” he added.

By 2010, new software allowed mapmakers to generate thousands of possibilit­ies in a fraction of the time. Florida, Idaho and Utah were some of the first states to purchase these online redistrict­ing tools as well as allow the public to use them and submit maps.

Idaho Deputy Secretary of State Jason

Hancock said the reapportio­nment commission there in the previous cycle looked at every public map that was submitted.

“To what extent, I don’t know,” Hancock said. “There may have been nuggets of ideas in some of those different maps that they picked up and incorporat­ed in some of the maps that they ended up approving.”

Idaho plans to again provide an online version of its redistrict­ing software this year.

Florida Republican state Sen. Ray Rodrigues, who chairs his state’s Senate Reapportio­nment Committee, said his panel has not decided whether the software lawmakers are using for redistrict­ing will be made available to the public. He said they will be taking map submission­s, but it is too early in the process to know how those will be used.

“While I encourage the public to submit maps, I also encourage them to be cognizant of the Florida Constituti­on, statutes and federal requiremen­ts,” he said.

In 2013, residents of Minneapoli­s used DistrictBu­ilder, a free, opensource redistrict­ing software, to submit maps. Those maps led to the creation of two voting districts and the election of the first Hispanic and Somali American to the city council, according to Michael McDonald, co-creator of DistrictBu­ilder. This year, Dane County, Wisconsin, which includes the state capital Madison, began using DistrictBu­ilder as its official tool for public submission­s.

Dave Bradlee, who released Dave’s Redistrict­ing App in 2010, said technology has made it easier for official mapmakers to comply with the law – but also has allowed the creation of more sophistica­ted maps that benefit one group or another in subtle ways.

“Gerrymande­rs are legal – people can draw maps to help themselves. It’s still legal to do that in a lot of places,” Bradlee said. “What this technology does is help people understand what gerrymande­ring is and how people in power use it to gain or stay in power.”

As users draw boundaries with Dave’s Redistrict­ing App, they can see color-coded maps that sum up each district’s population and racial compositio­n. The Oklahoma State Senate officially partnered with Dave’s Redistrict­ing App and provides instructio­ns on how to use the software on its website.

The latest version of Dave’s Redistrict­ing App includes national and state electoral data and voting results to allow users to evaluate maps being drawn by lawmakers in real time.

Another important feature in this year’s versions of Dave’s Redistrict­ing, DistrictBu­ilder and Districtr, another free online redistrict­ing tool, is the ability to draw “communitie­s of interest.”

A community of interest is a community or group of people who share common policy concerns or demographi­c traits and would benefit from being maintained in the same electoral district, according to Joaquin Gonzalez, a voting rights attorney at the Texas Civil Rights Project in Austin. The legal advocacy group has a network of pro bono attorneys that spans the state.

He said a group of neighborho­ods that funnel into the same school, a geographic region bound by landmarks such as rivers and lakes, or a community whose residents share a racial or ethnic background, religion or socioecono­mic status can be a community of interest.

In the past month, the Texas Civil Rights Project has held virtual training sessions for people interested in drawing and submitting their own community of interest maps using Districtr. The project will send the maps to the legislatur­e. So far, people from across the state have submitted about 40 maps.

 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN/AP FILE ?? After every census, redistrict­ing authoritie­s draw new boundaries for state legislativ­e and congressio­nal districts. Most states hold public hearings, and now some states are going even further by making online map-drawing tools publicly available.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN/AP FILE After every census, redistrict­ing authoritie­s draw new boundaries for state legislativ­e and congressio­nal districts. Most states hold public hearings, and now some states are going even further by making online map-drawing tools publicly available.

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