Advocates ask lawmakers to slow down remap process
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[August 27, 2021]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Voting rights advocates and
minority community members urged Illinois lawmakers on Thursday to take
more time in redrawing legislative district maps so the general public
can have more time to study whatever new maps will be proposed.
“We're joining other advocates today in asking for more time to provide
an efficient analysis of the 2020 census numbers, and to present a map
to this committee and to the legislature that can be considered when
making these adjustments,” said former state Sen. Miguel del Valle Jr.,
who is now with the Latino Policy Forum.
His comments came during a joint hearing in Chicago of the House and
Senate Redistricting Committees just days ahead of a special session of
the General Assembly on Tuesday, Aug. 31, to redraw state legislative
district maps for a second time.
But Roberto Valdez, also of the Latino Policy Forum, urged lawmakers not
to vote on any new maps before the general public has had a reasonable
amount of time to review any new proposal.
“It would be ideal to have a minimum of 30 days, again, not only to
conduct the analysis, produce a map, but also try to conduct discussion
groups with our community-based organizations,” he said. “Ideally 30
days, we know that that's maybe a stretch.”
Lawmakers approved new maps in May, and Gov. JB Pritzker signed those
into law. But those maps were based on population estimates using five
years’ worth of data from the Census Bureau’s American Community Survey
because the release of official, neighborhood-level data from the 2020
U.S. Census was delayed by several months.
Those detailed numbers were finally released Aug. 12, and many analysts
have said it shows the districts lawmakers approved in May were vastly
unequal in population, thereby violating the U.S. Supreme Court’s “one
person one vote” standard.
The state’s urban areas, and particularly Chicago and Cook County,
gained more population than was originally estimated while rural areas
and small towns in downstate Illinois lost more population than
expected, according to staff testimony.
Kendall County, on the southwest edge of the Chicago metropolitan area,
added more than 17,000 people since the 2010 census, or 15 percent,
according to the data, making it the fastest-growing county in the
state. Alexander County, which includes the town of Cairo at the
southern tip of Illinois, lost 36.4 percent of its population, lowering
it to just 5,240 people.
But while the Census Bureau has released detailed population figures, it
still has not released detailed racial, ethnic and other demographic
data that some advocates argued should be factored into the map-making
process.
“The next level of demographics based on ethnicities has not been
released and will be released soon,” said Dilara Sayeed, of the Illinois
Muslim Civic Coalition. “We urge you to wait for that. If you choose not
to wait for that, we urge you to continue to use community organizations
like ours to provide you with more information so that you can be as
accurate as possible.”
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Roberto Valdez, left, of the Latino Policy Forum, and
former state Sen. Miguel del Valle Jr. testify before a joint
hearing of the House and Senate Redistricting Committees as
lawmakers prepare to amend the legislative district maps they
approved in May. (Credit: Blueroomstream.com)
The mapmaking process that lawmakers have used is
already the subject of two federal lawsuits being heard by a
three-judge panel in Chicago. One, filed by the Mexican American
Legal Defense and Educational Fund, or MALDEF, argues that the maps
lawmakers passed in May dilute the voting power of the state’s
Latino population. Another filed by Republican leaders in the
General Assembly argues, among other things, that lawmakers failed
to enact legal maps by the June 30 deadline set out in the Illinois
Constitution and, therefore, should be thrown out and redrawn by a
bipartisan legislative commission.
Republicans on the committees, meanwhile, alleged
Thursday that Democrats who control the General Assembly have
already started drawing new maps behind closed doors and that the
public hearings now taking place are only for show.
“I literally witnessed with my own eyes a member of the General
Assembly looking at the map, talking to staff about whether it was
square enough or not, which is what I overheard,” said Rep. Tim
Butler, a Springfield Republican. “There was many members of the
majority in that room, looking at the maps. And I would ask you, the
people who are going to testify today, have you been invited into
those meetings so far to look at the maps? Are you having solid
input on what these maps are going to be? No. They're being drawn by
the majority as we saw in the spring with partisan intent.”
Later, when asked what data was being used to draw the new maps,
House committee chairwoman Lisa Hernandez, D-Cicero, said she didn’t
know and that she hadn’t seen the maps that Butler was talking
about. But she said Democrats were determined to draw new districts
that would reflect the racial and ethnic diversity of Illinois.
Ami Gandhi of the Chicago Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights, said
there are still many communities of color in Illinois that remain
apprehensive about the process.
“We’re hearing time and time again, even in today’s hearing,
communities of color themselves, and ourselves, are saying loud and
clear that we’re uncomfortable with this redistricting process, with
this huge rush, with this lack of transparency, and people do not
feel reassured that their rights are being respected,” she said.
Lawmakers have scheduled a series of public hearings in different
parts of the state throughout the weekend, and Senate committee
chair Omar Aquino, of Chicago, said another hearing will likely take
place at the Statehouse in Springfield on Monday or Tuesday leading
up to the special session.
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