Politics & Government
Where Agoura Hills Voters Will Be in Final State Redistricting Maps
The California Citizens Redistricting Commission voted on Friday to approve its final maps for congressional and state legislative offices. There will now be a two week public review period before the final vote, but there will be no revisions to the map.
A state redistricting commission approved its final maps for congressional and state legislative electoral districts on Friday, making it likely that they will become the voting districts until the next redistricting process in 10 years.
The final meeting of the California Citizens Redistricting Commission will be on August 15, according to the commission's spokesman Rob Wilcox. At that point, the commission will either vote to finalize the maps or reject them–there will be no further revisions before that deadline, Wilcox said (for more on the commission and its process ).
That means that the maps that have been released (which can be viewed at right or on an interactive map here) will most likely be the next state districts.Â
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You can view the current changes from the , released on June 10.
It is the first time in California history that an independent citizens' commission has drawn district boundaries. The commission was created after voters in 2008 passed Proposition 11, the Voters First Act.
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The commission is comprised of 14 members from various ethnic backgrounds and geographic locations. It includes five Democrats, five Republicans and four members who decline to state a party preference.
"When California voters created the Citizens Redistricting Commission, their hope was that an independent panel could and would draw fair district lines in a transparent process and end the partisan gerrymandering of the past," Commission Chairwoman Connie Galambos Malloy said during a press conference. "We as a commission are here to tell you that day is here."
Malloy said the commission tried to engage with the public and held 34 hearings and received more than 20,000 written comments.
"It was no secret as to how the commission drew the lines," Malloy said. "It was a completely open and transparent process."
That said, Malloy noted that the commission expected legal challenges to the maps and has retained its staff in case a legal defense is required in the coming weeks.
Hal Dash, chairman of Los Angeles-based public policy consulting firm Cerrell Associates, said the new maps should keep the Democratic majority intact in the state legislature and 53-person congressional delegation, the largest in the nation.
Dash said he expected Agoura's representative in the U.S. House, Henry Waxman, would run for the coastal West Los Angeles seat that now runs from Malibu to the Palos Verdes Peninsula.
"It's still going to be a Democratic area," Dash said. "Waxman is a great fundraiser, and he won't have a tough race. It's just a new constituency. He'll have to spend some time meeting and greeting new people, which he hasn't had to do in years."
Michael Shires, an associate professor of public policy at , said the new maps are expected to have a critical role in the next election in the balance and control of Congress, and next year's budget cycle.
Shires also said he expects to see efforts to put the maps to a referendum. He said challenges are most likely to come from Republicans or on the basis of ethnic representation.
Black and Latino populations have shifted significantly in recent decades, making it more difficult to draw representative maps.
"Today’s action is the next step in the process but it is by no means final," Shires said.
He added that the 1990 redistricting process is seen as the "fairest" redistricting of late—and judges drew those maps after a referendum.
He said that could happen again this year.
"There are a lot of organized interest groups out there with resources that are concerned about this set of maps," Shires said. "Through the referral process or through the litigation process, these maps may still be redrawn by a panel of judges."
Ironically, some of the main voices calling for the new process in the first place are now the unhappiest, he added.
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