Bill Text: AZ SCM1001 | 2011 | Fiftieth Legislature 4th Special | Introduced


Bill Title: Independent redistricting commission; recommendations.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 23-0)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2011-11-01 - Senate read second time [SCM1001 Detail]

Download: Arizona-2011-SCM1001-Introduced.html

 

 

 

REFERENCE TITLE: independent redistricting commission; recommendations.

 

 

 

State of Arizona

Senate

Fiftieth Legislature

Fourth Special Session

2011

 

 

SCM 1001

 

Introduced by

Senators Pearce R, Allen, Antenori, Barto, Biggs, Bundgaard, Driggs, Gray, Griffin, Klein, McComish, Murphy, Pierce S, Shooter, Smith, Yarbrough; Representatives Harper, Kavanagh: Senators Crandall, Gould, Melvin, Nelson, Reagan

 

 

A CONCURRENT MEMORIAL

 

urging the Independent Redistricting Commission to immediately commence a new mapping process for both the congressional and legislative districts that comports with the requirements of article IV, part 2, section 1, Constitution of Arizona.

 

 

(TEXT OF MEMORIAL BEGINS ON NEXT PAGE)

 



To the Independent Redistricting Commission:

Your memorialist respectfully represents:

Whereas, pursuant to article IV, part 2, section 1, Constitution of Arizona, the Independent Redistricting Commission shall advertise a draft map of congressional districts and a draft map of legislative districts to the public for comment, which comment shall be taken for at least thirty days; and

Whereas, either or both bodies of the legislature may act within this period to make recommendations to the Independent Redistricting Commission, by memorial or by minority report, which recommendations shall be considered by the Independent Redistricting Commission; and

Whereas, on October 31, 2011, the Arizona Joint Legislative Redistricting Committee issued its final report in which it recommended that the Senate and House of Representatives recommend to the Independent Redistricting Commission that the process used to arrive at the draft congressional and legislative maps is so fundamentally flawed that the resulting maps have been unconstitutionally created and that the only remedy is to start the process over; and

Whereas, the Joint Committee stated that its recommendation is necessary to correct multiple violations of the criteria set forth in the Arizona Constitution.  Specifically, the Joint Committee found that the draft congressional and legislative maps violate the constitutional criteria as follows:

1.  Compliance with the United States Constitution and the Voting Rights Act.

·         The draft congressional and legislative maps were drawn without the benefit of any racially polarized voting analysis.  Without that analysis, and without additional analysis of the voting effectiveness of any polarized minority populations, the Independent Redistricting Commission has no objective basis to assess whether its districts satisfy the Voting Rights Act. 

·         It appears that none of the minority groups that participated and consulted with the Independent Redistricting Commission were given the opportunity to review any racial voting analysis, including polarized racial block voting data.  Without this data and analysis, and additional data demonstrating voter effectiveness, it is impossible to assess whether districts satisfy the Voting Rights Act.  The Independent Redistricting Commission should have completed this analysis before draft maps were voted on and should have released this data and analysis with the draft maps so that all Arizonans would have the opportunity to meaningfully evaluate the draft maps.

·         The Independent Redistricting Commission created minority-majority districts that have wide variations in the minority voting age population; some are above 60% and other adjacent districts are barely majority-minority districts.  Without racially polarized voting analysis, there is no clear basis for this disparity.

2.         Equal population.

·         The draft congressional maps appear to satisfy this criterion.

·         The draft legislative map is suspect at 5.6% overall population deviation given the constitutional requirement that "legislative districts shall have equal population to the extent practicable."

·         The overall population of the draft legislative districts is significantly less equal than the legislative districts established by the 2001 Independent Redistricting Commission. The 2004 legislative districts plan had an overall population deviation of 4.23%.  The 2001 Independent Redistricting Commission under populated the legislative majority-minority districts to meet Voting Rights Act benchmarks.  Without these deliberately underpopulated majority-minority districts, the overall population deviation of the legislative districts established by the 2001 Independent Redistricting Commission is 3.0% — a  full two and a half points tighter deviation.

3.         Geographical compactness and contiguity.

·         CD 4 violates these criteria by linking municipalities and communities of interest from the extreme northwestern parts of the state with eastern and southeastern metropolitan areas of Maricopa and Pinal counties.

·         CD 4 violates these criteria by including an "arm" that intrudes into and splits Gila County.

·         CD 1 violates these criteria by extending into Cochise County, picking up minimal population in order to create a third congressional district that includes the international border.

·         LD 7 is a huge area.  It is larger than some states, three and a half times the size of the next largest draft district, and twice as large as the largest current legislative district.  The enormity of the draft LD 7 is partly because of the Independent Redistricting Commission's unjustified insistence on removing Flagstaff from the district.

·         LD 6 is a large, oddly shaped district with parts of 4 counties, again caused by the Independent Redistricting Commission's treatment of Flagstaff.  The draft district's driving distance from end to end is over two hundred miles.

·         LD 14 is primarily Yavapai County, but is forced all the way into the metropolitan Phoenix area as a result of the treatment of Flagstaff.

·         LD 13 is a bizarrely shaped district that starts in Yuma and ends up by a narrow neck in Litchfield Park.

·         LD 8 runs from urban northwest Tucson to Payson in rural Gila County.

·         LD 1 begins in urban eastern Tucson and runs through rural areas of Graham and Cochise counties.

·         The Independent Redistricting Commission failed to adopt a clear standard for "compactness" that can be objectively applied throughout the process.

4.         Respect for communities of interest.

·         CD 4 commits copious violations of this criterion by linking multiple communities of interest in rural Arizona with multiple communities of interest within the metropolitan areas of Maricopa County, as well as high-growth areas in Pinal County.

·         CD 4 violates this criterion by unnecessarily linking multiple rural communities of interest with a metropolitan Phoenix population of over two hundred thousand, almost 30% of the population of the district.

·         CD 4 violates this criterion by unnaturally dividing the town of Fountain Hills from its neighboring municipalities (Scottsdale, Carefree and Cave Creek) and linking it with multiple rural communities of interest.

·         CD 1 violates this criterion by linking multiple communities of interest in rural Arizona with multiple communities of interest in high-growth areas in Pima County.

·         CD 9 unnecessarily aggregates parts of several disparate communities of interest within Maricopa County.

·         CD 9 is not supported by any coherent community of interest within Maricopa County.  The claim that this is the "light rail district" cannot be supported, as more than one-half of the light rail runs completely outside of the district.  In addition, only a very small percentage of the population in CD 9 rides the light rail on a regular basis.

·         CD 9 groups two communities of interest, Phoenix and Tempe, which have diametrically opposite positions regarding the Phoenix Airport.  One elected official will not be able to serve both interests.

·         LD 1 places urban areas of Pima County with distinctly rural areas of Cochise and Graham Counties.

·         LD 8 contains a relatively urban area of northwest Tucson and combines it with eastern Pinal mining communities and southern Gila County areas that have virtually nothing in common.

·         LD 14 splits Yavapai County in order to provide a legislative district for Flagstaff to be separate from the Navajo Nation.  This forces the legislative district south all the way into the metropolitan Phoenix area.

·         LD 13 is a bizarrely shaped district that runs from the north side of Yuma through a narrow neck to Litchfield Park in the metropolitan Phoenix area.  These communities have little in common.

·         LD 7 includes a huge area from the northwest corner of the state to Greenlee County on the south.  Greenlee County is hundreds of miles away from the northwest part of this district and has nothing in common with the Navajo reservation or Coconino County.

·         LD 24 combines the Fort McDowell and Salt River Reservations into the same district as the downtown area and 19th Avenue & McDowell. This was done under the theory that the Voting Rights Act requires the creation of two additional minority coalition districts. However, the commission has no empirical data to support the effectiveness of this district.

5.         Use of visible geographic features, city, town and county boundaries and undivided census tracts.

·         CDs 1, 4, and 9 violate these criteria by making copious, unnecessary divisions of municipal, county and census tract lines.

·         These criteria are violated in multiple areas throughout the draft congressional map as a direct result of the unnecessary decision to place the City of Flagstaff in CD 1.  Several counties could be kept whole if Flagstaff were placed in CD 4.

·         Pinal County is unnecessarily divided.

·         Cochise County is unnecessarily divided.

·         Gila County is unnecessarily divided.

·         Maricopa County is unnecessarily divided into 8 different congressional districts.

·         CD 9 violates these criteria by gratuitously dividing municipalities throughout Maricopa County.

·         There are numerous instances in the legislative draft map where the Independent Redistricting Commission has broken municipal, county and census tract lines without justification and contrary to the Constitution of Arizona.

·         The Independent Redistricting Commission's treatment of Flagstaff causes LD 6 to break four county lines.

·         LDs 8 and 11 have pieces of three different counties as a result of the manner in which the Independent Redistricting Commission has drawn the Pima County districts.

·         The legislative district map in Pima County splits several census tracts, affecting the positioning of several incumbent legislators.

·         LD 7 has pieces of six different counties as a result of the Independent Redistricting Commission splitting Flagstaff from that draft district.

·         The City of Glendale is divided into 5 different legislative districts.

6.         Competitiveness.

·         As a whole, the draft congressional map is less competitive than the existing congressional map.

·         CD 1 is significantly less competitive than the current CD 1.  It contains 80% of the area and 67% of the population from the current CD 1.  However, in terms of Democrat and Republican voter registration, it is about 6% points higher in Democrat voter registration.

·         The elections from 2004 and 2006 have not been taken into account in the Independent Redistricting Commission's measures of competitiveness.  This makes any analysis of competitiveness by the Independent Redistricting Commission highly suspect.  The 2010 election year was an aberration in that Republican candidates in Arizona received unusually strong support from voters of all types. Emphasizing 2010 election returns without smoothing data from several prior elections skews the results of any competitiveness analysis.

·         CD 9 was designed with the primary purpose of being competitive in complete disregard of the other constitutional criteria.

·         By failing to define the constitutional term "competitive," the Independent Redistricting Commission has made it possible for the term to have more than one meaning.  Without a specific meaning for the term, it is impossible to assess whether competitiveness has a "significant detriment" on any other constitutional criteria.  The Independent Redistricting Commission should create a specific definition for "competitive" so that the term can be applied in conjunction with the other constitutional criteria.

7.         Party registration and voter history.

·         While initially party registration and voting history data were not considered during the drawing of the grid map, the grid map lines were erased and replaced with lines that did take party registration and voting history into consideration.  By abandoning the grid map instead of making logical incremental adjustments to it, the draft congressional map has violated these constitutional criteria.

8.         Improper consideration of places of residence of incumbents and candidates.

·         Of the eight incumbent congressmen, two Republicans have been divided from the vast majority of their current districts.  No Democrat congressman has been significantly divided from the population of his or her current district. 

·         Two incumbent congressmen were moved into new districts over the course of a weekend.  In one case the change required intricate, pinpoint mapping.  The drafter of the map drafted at the block level.  The two Republican incumbent congressmen were affected by a map that was drafted over a weekend and then introduced and voted on the same day, October 3, 2011.

·         The legislative draft map has numerous instances where census tract lines are broken in an apparent attempt to place incumbents in particular districts contrary to the Constitution.

·         There are at least 10 legislators who are drawn in or out of districts by a distance of a few hundred feet.  Several of these instances exist because the Independent Redistricting Commission has broken census tracts contrary to the Constitution.

·         The most numerous examples of drafting focusing on places of residence appear to occur in Pima County where several Democrat incumbents appear to have been protected by breaking census tracts and one incumbent stays with the bulk of his district by block redistricting literally down the middle of his street.

9.         Additional constitutional problems.

·         The Independent Redistricting Commission accepted and adopted in substantial part maps from outside sources.  As a consequence, the Independent Redistricting Commission could not assess whether the constitutional criteria were followed when these maps were constructed.  This is a systemic failure that potentially could have a deleterious effect on many or all of the constitutional criteria.

·         The Independent Redistricting Commission has violated the constitutional comment requirement.  The public and the Legislature cannot assess the draft congressional map for compliance with the Voting Rights Act without polarized racial block voting analysis and the associated voting effectiveness data.  The Independent Redistricting Commission has not made this data available to the public or the Legislature.  Commenting on minority districts is a meaningless exercise without the benefit of the essential data on which those districts must be based. 

·         The Independent Redistricting Commission did not follow the constitutionally required redistricting process by adjusting the grid maps to account for the six mandated constitutional criteria.

Wherefore your memorialist, the Senate of the State of Arizona, the House of Representatives concurring, prays:

1.  That the Independent Redistricting Commission immediately commence a new mapping process for both the congressional and legislative districts that comports with the requirements of article IV, part 2, section 1, Constitution of Arizona.

2.  That the Secretary of State of the State of Arizona transmit copies of this Memorial and the report of the Arizona Joint Legislative Redistricting Committee to the Independent Redistricting Commission, each member of the Independent Redistricting Commission and to each Member of Congress from the State of Arizona.

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