Oxnard residents are being urged to call the California Redistricting Commission to voice their opposition to a proposal that would split Oxnard into two Assembly District. Half of Oxnard’s residents, as well as Santa Paula and Fillmore, would be split and go into Simi Valley’s 37th Assembly District, opponents reported. Half of Oxnard would also fall within the 24th U.S. Congressional District. The plan is being reviewed by the commission by June 10. Residents are urged to call the commission at 1.866.356.5217.
Click here or
here for stories on the redistricting in the Ventura County Star. Also, here is an opinion piece on the issue presented by the League of United Latin American Citizens District 17.
Redistricting Commission should reconsider plan to split Oxnard
Ventura County residents must wonder how California Redistricting Commission staff decided to submit a draft proposal that split Oxnard into two Assembly Districts. There is no doubt that California’s unique demographics present a challenge for commission staff that draw the lines. However, dividing a community of almost 200,000 mostly Latino voters hardly seems fair or even legal.
A decade ago Oxnard was again divied up as politicians from both parties created their own “safe” districts. The plan ignored communities of interest and in the process Oxnard wound up with two assembly members, one based in Santa Barbara and another in Santa Monica.
This also diluted the voting power of Latinos and had far reaching effects on the number of local Latino elected officials.
California Redistricting Commissioner Michelle DiGuilio was quoted in this morning’s Ventura County Star as saying “given that we’re constrained by section 5 (of the federal voting rights act) to the north, it seems like you have to do a split of Oxnard”.
We respectfully disagree. Commissioners are bound only by the law of the land and their best judgement.
If the reasoning behind this involves the pre-clearance requirements imposed by federal law to protect minority voters in Monterey County, then it makes little sense to repeat the practice that imposed the pre-clearance in the first place, some where else.
Commissioners must consider it their duty to preserve the compactness and community of interest features of a geographic area as they draw lines.
As our organization has stated before, redistricting boundaries should never inhibit the ability of residents to relate to one another politically, socially, or economically.
The commission should do everything in it’s power to prevent this from occurring a second time.
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