The Columbus Dispatch

Will Ohio commission heed call for fair maps?

- Jessie Balmert

From Cincinnati to Cleveland and Mansfield to Zanesville, the refrain was the same: Ohioans want fair legislativ­e and congressio­nal districts – maps that give their preferred candidate a shot.

They filled rooms, sat on floors and waited for their turns to speak at 10 regional meetings of the Ohio Redistrict­ing Commission. Many were part of the 2015 and 2018 ballot efforts to change how Ohio draws districts for representa­tives in Washington, D.C.,

and Columbus.

They came with hopes that mapmaking would be different this time and fears that it would be more of the same.

“I sincerely hope Ohio mapmakers have heard the message: the people are watching and expect maps that serve them – not the selfish, short-sighted interests of political parties or individual candidates,” said Jen Miller, executive director of the League of Women Voters of Ohio.

For every voter in suburban Columbus frustrated that he shares a congressio­nal district with Athens, there was a voter in Chillicoth­e aggravated that she must share a representa­tive with suburbanit­es in Cincinnati.

“Ross County is divided into some of the strangest machinatio­ns that anyone could contrive, and contrive is exactly how it feels,” Bart Henshaw, president of the Chillicoth­e’s League of Women Voters, said at Rio Grande Community College.

After 10 stops across the state, here’s what we learned:

h Maps weren’t ready. Maps weren’t ready for Ohioans to review before the 10 regional meetings took place. Instead, legislativ­e staff members were working on them elsewhere. The maps were late because U.S. Census data needed to draw legislativ­e districts was late, delayed several months by the COVID-19 pandemic.

That left mapmakers in a time crunch. The first deadline for Ohio

House and Senate district maps is Wednesday.

Lawmakers have until Sept. 30 to approve a bipartisan, 10-year map for congressio­nal districts.

The result, however, was that everyone who offered feedback did so about hypothetic­al maps rather than actual plans.

“It’s important that we have public discussion dealing with the actual maps or some maps that are being considered,” said state Sen. Vernon Sykes, Dakron, who co-chairs the commission.

h Decision-makers didn’t attend. Attendance was spotty for most of the Ohio Redistrict­ing Commission’s members. Their absence was noted by attendees, some of whom expressed frustratio­n about being disrespect­ed.

“I am addressing my points today specifically to the Republican members of the redistrict­ing commission – or to their designees since so many opted not to be here today,” said St. Bernard resident Nicole Klungle, who attended the hearing at the University of Cincinnati. “Dear Republican­s, we see you.”

Gov. Mike Dewine did not attend any of the 10 meetings, choosing instead to visit a practice for the Cincinnati Bengals on one day. Dewine’s spokesman called the hearings “staff-level listening tour stops” and said the governor would review his proxy’s notes.

Sykes attended every session, and Ohio Auditor Keith Faber, a Republican, had the second-best attendance record.

Even when commission members were there, they asked few questions of the Ohioans who came to express concerns about past maps.

h Many are skeptical. Former Ohio

Democratic Party Chairman David Pepper remembers how Republican­s drew congressio­nal maps in 2011 – behind closed doors with consultant­s, rather than in public meetings. Former U.S. House Speaker John Boehner had a heavy hand in the process.

It’s with that history that Pepper expressed skepticism that maps weren’t already being drawn behind closed doors.

“I’m under no illusion that meetings have not been taking place throughout this process in private,” Pepper said at the University of Cincinnati. “In case this sounds a little over the top, I am describing exactly what happened 10 years ago.”

State Rep. Jessica Miranda, D-forest Park, filled in for House Minority Leader Emilia Sykes at three hearings. Miranda said it’s hard to say whether Republican­s are acting in good faith or not.

“Since we don’t know who is drawing them, I don’t even believe I have enough informatio­n to answer that question,” Miranda said. “I would hope my colleagues on the other side of the aisle are acting in good faith, but that’s a high hope right now.”

Democrats are working on maps privately, too. But Republican­s wield more power over the mapmaking process because they control the Ohio Legislatur­e and five of the seven spots on the Ohio Redistrict­ing Commission.

h Everyone won’t be happy. Many attendees pushed back against maps that favored Republican­s, who hold a veto-proof majority in the Ohio Statehouse and most statewide elected spots.

Hamilton County Republican Party

Chairman Alex Triantafilou faced backlash for tweeting what some Republican­s quietly believe: “Republican­s should look out for Republican­s when drawing the lines for apportionm­ent. We won.”

Changes to the Ohio Constituti­on will prevent some of the slicing and dicing that were hallmarks of the 2011 map. Cleveland and Cincinnati can’t be divided. The so-called snake on the lake district that extends from Toledo to Cleveland will be exterminat­ed under the new rules.

“I’m not going to try to defend how some of the current districts look because I don’t think it’s defensible on some of those,” said state Sen. Jay Hottinger, R-newark, who filled in for Senate President Matt Huffman.

But the state has voted Republican in recent elections – backing former President Donald Trump twice by 8 percentage points and electing two Republican governors – so the new maps will reflect that, Hottinger said.

In the end, everyone won’t be happy. “I don’t know how it is that we can keep people from saying that these maps are gerrymande­red because somebody’s going to say that who doesn’t like whatever result it is that they have,” Huffman told Wooster radio station WQKT.

“If we follow the Constituti­on and follow the laws of the state, then we’ll have a map that is fair.”

Jessie Balmert is a reporter for the USA TODAY Network Ohio Bureau, which serves the Akron Beacon Journal, Cincinnati Enquirer, Columbus Dispatch and 18 other affiliated news organizati­ons across Ohio.

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