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HomeMy WebLinkAbout6.1 Dublin Districts Public Hearing 1 Program Overview and Community Feedback OpportunitySTAFF REPORT CITY COUNCIL Page 1 of 4 Agenda Item 6.1 DATE:April 19, 2022 TO:Honorable Mayor and City Councilmembers FROM:Linda Smith, City Manager SUBJECT:Dublin Districts—Public Hearing 1: Program Overview and Community Feedback OpportunityPreparedby:John Stefanski,Assistant to the City Manager EXECUTIVE SUMMARY:The City Council will hold a public hearing to give the community an opportunity to provide input regarding potential boundaries and district composition. At the February 15, 2022, meeting, the City Council adopted a Resolution Declaring its Intention to Transition From an At-Large Election System to a District-Based Election System. Pursuant to Elections Code section 10010, the City is required to hold at least two public hearings over a period of no more than 30 days before any map or maps of the boundaries for the proposed voting districts are drawn.Representatives from Tripepi Smith and National Demographics Corporation will provide a brief presentation, prior to the public hearing,to detail the map drawing process and community outreach strategy. STAFF RECOMMENDATION:Receive the presentation, open the public hearing, receive public comment, and close the public hearing. FINANCIAL IMPACT:In March 2022, the City issued a Request For Qualifications for District-Based Elections Transition Demography and/or Community Outreach Consultants. The City received two proposals and selected the consultant team of Tripepi Smith and National Demographics Corporation (NDC). The cost of these services includes approximately $50,000 in Demographer Fees and $59,000 in project management, community outreach,and translation fees. Staff has also budgeted a contingency for translation services (Mandarin and Punjabi)or additional community meetings, should they be necessary, for a total not-to-exceed amount of $125,000. Additionally, the City may be required to reimburse a prospective plaintiff for its documented attorney’s fees and costs, up to $30,000 (plus an annual adjustment for inflation). 195 Page 2 of 4 DESCRIPTION:BackgroundOn February 15, 2022, the City Council adopted Resolution 17-22 Declaring its Intention to Transition from an At-Large Election System to a District-Based Election System in conformance with the California Voting Rights Act of 2001 (CVRA). The Resolution declares the City’s intent to consider adoption of an ordinance establishing district-based elections beginning with the November 2024 regular municipal election.Under Elections Code Section 10010, a City is required to hold at least five public hearings during the transition process. The first two public hearings will give the community an opportunity to provide input on the composition of the districts before any maps are drawn. At the conclusion of the second public hearing, the City Council will determine which criteria will be used to create one or more proposed district maps. Subsequently, draft district maps will be drawn by the City’s Demographer, and two additional public hearings will be held for the public to provide input regarding the content of the draft maps and the proposed sequence of elections. The maps must be published at least seven days before the public hearings. The fifth, and final, public hearing will be for the City Council to consider an ordinance that establishes the district-based elections and approves the maps.District Drawing FactorsThe public is requested to provide input regarding communities of interest and other local factors that should be considered while drafting distract maps. A Community of Interest is a neighborhood or group that would benefit from being in the same district because of shared interests, views, or characteristics. Examples of these include, but are not limited to: -Naturaldividinglinessuchasmajorroads,hills,orhighways.-Areasaroundparksandotherneighborhoodlandmarks/amenities.-Schoolattendanceareas.-Commonissues,neighborhoodactivities,orlegislative/electionconcerns;and-Shareddemographiccharacteristics,suchas: o Similarlevelsofincome,education,orlinguisticinsolation. o Languagesspokenathome. o Single-familyandmulti-familyhousingunitareas.The district boundary maps must meet certain criteria. In particular, the districts must be roughly equal in population, excluding incarcerated persons. (Elec. Code, § 21601, subd. (a).) The districts are further subject to the following criteria in order of priority:-Geographical contiguity.-Minimize the division of any local neighborhood or local community of interest.-Easily identified and understood by residents.-Geographical compactness. (Elec. Code, § 21601, subd. (c).) 196 Page 3 of 4 To assist with these districting efforts, the City has hired a consultant team of Tripepi Smith and NDC. Tripepi Smith will serve as the project manager and outreach consultant for this process and will coordinate with Staff and NDC on the overall process and community outreach efforts. Outreach efforts are intended to promote public participation in the district formation process,facilitate the collection of information regarding Communities of Interest, and facilitate the public’s understanding of how to suggest new district lines through the drawing of draft maps for the Council’s consideration. Planned outreach includes the following: -Strategic counsel on the city's districting webpage content.-Flyers promoting two virtual workshops and four public hearings.-Social media outreach for the duration of the project.-Social media advertisements.-Press releases promoting the virtual workshops and public hearings.-Two virtual workshops:○Virtual workshop 1: overview of the district formation process and collection of public input on COI’s.○Virtual workshop 2: demonstration of how to use the paper mapping tool, Dave’s Redistricting App (online mapping tool).-Direct Community Group outreach.Representatives from Tripepi Smith and NDC will be providing a brief presentation, prior to the public hearing, to detail the map drawing process and community outreach strategy.Next StepsInterested community members are strongly encouraged to visit the Dublin Districts webpage at www.dublin.ca.gov/dublindistricts. There individuals can subscribe for program updates and findall materials relating to the transition to district-based elections. Anyone with questions or comments on this process can email the City at dublindistricts@dublin.ca.gov or call the District Formation Call Line at 925-574-4875.The tentative schedule for future hearing dates and workshops regarding the City’s potential transition from at-large elections to district-based is as follows:Table 1: Tentative ScheduleDateMeeting TopicsThursdayApril 28, 20226:00 p.m.Virtual Workshop 1 Overview of Process, Parameters, Mapping Tools; Community Feedback. WednesdayMay 4, 20226:00 p.m.Virtual Workshop 2 Overview of Process, Parameters, Mapping Tools; Community Feedback. TuesdayMay 17, 20227:00 p.m.Public Hearing 2 Map Drawing Criteria, Communities of Interest; Mapping Tools; Community Feedback. 197 Page 4 of 4 TuesdayJune 21, 20227:00 p.m.Public Hearing 3 NDC and Community Draft Maps; Community Feedback. TuesdayJuly 19, 20227:00 p.m.Public Hearing 4 NDC and Community Revised Maps; City Council Selects Finalist(s); Sequencing of District Elections.TuesdayAugust 16, 20227:00 p.m.Public Hearing 5 City Council Final Map Selection; Introduction of Ordinance. TuesdaySeptember 6, 20227:00 p.m.City Council Consent Calendar Second Reading of Ordinance. Virtual Workshops will take place on Zoom and will be recorded. Recordings will be made available at www.dublin.ca.gov/dublindistricts. The City may adjust this schedule to include additional public outreach or special City Council meetings. All interested parties are encouraged to subscribe to program updates at www.dublin.ca.gov/dublindistricts to stay up to date. STRATEGIC PLAN INITIATIVE:None. NOTICING REQUIREMENTS/PUBLIC OUTREACH:The City published a Public Hearing Notice in the East Bay Times and posted on www.dublin.ca.gov/dublindistricts on April 13, 2022. Individuals subscribed to the Dublin Districts notification list were emailed regarding this meeting. The City Council Agenda was posted. ATTACHMENTS:None. 198 City of Dublin Introduction to Districting April 19, 2022 199 2 Election Systems 1.“At Large” 2.“From District” or “Residence” Districts 3.“By District” The California Voting Rights Act was written to specifically encourage by- district elections. April 19, 2022 200 3 California Voting Rights Act (CVRA) ❑Under the Federal Voting Rights Act (passed in 1965), a jurisdiction must fail 4 factual tests before it is in violation of the law. ❑The California VRA makes it significantly easier for plaintiffs to force jurisdictions into “by-district” election systems by eliminating two of the US Supreme Court Gingles tests: ❑Can the protected class constitute the majority of a district? ❑Does the protected class vote as a bloc? ❑Do the voters who are not in the protected class vote in a bloc to defeat the preferred candidates of the protected class? ❑Do the “totality of circumstances” indicate race is a factor in elections? ❑Liability is now determined only by the presence of racially polarized voting April 19, 2022 201 4 CVRA Impact ❑Switched (or in the process of switching) as a result of CVRA: ❑At least 240 school districts ❑34 Community College Districts ❑Over 165 cities ❑1 County Board of Supervisors ❑35 water and other special districts. ❑Cases So Far: ❑Palmdale, Santa Clara and Santa Monica went to trial on the merits. Palmdale and Santa Clara lost. Santa Monica is awaiting a decision. ❑Modesto and Palmdale each spent about $1.8 million on their defense (in addition to the attorney fee awards in those cases). ❑Santa Monica has spent an estimated $7 million so far. Plaintiffs in Santa Monica requested $22 million in legal fees after the original trial. ❑Key settlements: ❑Palmdale: $4.7 million ❑Modesto: $3 million ❑Highland: $1.3 million ❑Anaheim: $1.1 million ❑Whittier: $1 million ❑Santa Barbara: $600,000 ❑Tulare Hospital: $500,000 ❑Camarillo: $233,000 ❑Compton Unified: $200,000 ❑Madera Unified: about $170,000 ❑Hanford Joint Union Schools: $118,000 ❑Merced City: $42,000 ❑An estimated $16 million in total settlements and court awards so far. April 19, 2022 202 5 Districting Timeline Step Description Public Hearing 1 April 19, 2022 Overview of Process, Outreach Preview, Mapping Tools, Communities of Interest; Community Feedback. Virtual Workshops (1) April 28, 2022 (2) May 4, 2022 6:00 p.m. Overview of Process, Parameters, Mapping Tools; Community Feedback. Public Hearing 2 May 17, 2022 7:00 p.m. Map Drawing Criteria, Communities of Interest; Mapping Tools; Community Feedback. June 5, 2022 5:00 p.m. Deadline to submit draft maps for Council consideration at the June 21st Public Hearing. Public Hearing 3 June 21, 2022 7:00 p.m. NDC and Community Draft Maps; Community Feedback. July 6, 2022 5:00 p.m. Deadline to submit draft maps for Council consideration at the July 19th Public Hearing. April 19, 2022 203 6 Step Description Public Hearing 4 July 19, 2022 7:00 pm NDC and Community Revised Maps; City Council Selects Finalist(s); Sequencing of District Elections. Public Hearing 5 August 16, 2022 7:00 pm City Council Final Map Selection; Introduction of Ordinance. City Council Consent Calendar September 6, 2022 7:00 pm Second Reading of Ordinance. April 19, 2022 Districting Timeline (cont.) 204 7 Equal Population Federal Voting Rights Act No Racial Gerrymandering Respect voters’ choices / continuity in office Future population growth 1. Federal Laws 2. California Criteria for Cities 1.Geographically contiguous 2.Undivided neighborhoods and “communities of interest” (Socio-economic geographic areas that should be kept together) 3.Easily identifiable boundaries 4.Compact (Do not bypass one group of people to get to a more distant group of people) Prohibited: “Shall not favor or discriminate against a political party.” 3. Other Traditional Redistricting Principles Redistricting Rules and Goals April 19, 2022 205 8 Demographic Summary Estimates using official 2020 demographic data and NDC’s estimated total population figures. Each of the 4 districts must contain about 17,867 people. April 19, 2022 Category Field Total Category Field Total 2020 Census Total Population 71,468 age0-19 28% Hispanic/Latino 11%age20-60 58% NH White 25%age60plus 14% NH Black 4%immigrants 39% NH Asian/Pac.Isl.58%naturalized 51% NH Native Amer.1%English 52% Total 35,769 Spanish 5% Hisp 12%Asian-lang 27% NH White 41%Other lang 16% NH Black 5%Language Fluency Speaks Eng. "Less than Very Well"15% Asian/Pac.Isl.41%hs-grad 22% Native Amer.1%bachelor 38% Total 34,207 graduatedegree 30% Latino est.11%Child in Household child-under18 47% Spanish-Surnamed 10%Pct of Pop. Age 16+employed 72% Asian-Surnamed 26%income 0-25k 5% Filipino-Surnamed 3%income 25-50k 7% NH White est.54%income 50-75k 7% NH Black 5%income 75-200k 47% Total 29,128 income 200k-plus 34% Latino est.10%single family 70% Spanish-Surnamed 10%multi-family 30% Asian-Surnamed 26%rented 35% Filipino-Surnamed 3%owned 65% NH White est.54% NH Black 5% Total 18,235 Latino est.10% Spanish-Surnamed 10% Asian-Surnamed 21% Filipino-Surnamed 3% NH White est.59% NH Black est.5% Housing Stats Voter Registration (Nov 2020) Voter Turnout (Nov 2020) Age Voter Turnout (Nov 2018) Household Income Education (among those age 25+) Immigration Language spoken at home Total population data from California's adjusted 2020 Census data. Citizen Voting Age Population data from 2016-2020 Special Tabulation data. Age, Immigration, and other demographics from the 2015-2019 American Community Survey 5-year data. Turnout and Registration data from California Statewide Database ("Latino" figures calculated by NDC using Census Bureau's Latino undercount by surname estimate). Total Pop. Citizen Voting Age Pop 206 9 Latinos are slightly concentrated in the southern/central part of the City, but the red and green Census Blocks have very few people in them. Latino CVAP April 19, 2022 207 10 Asian-American CVAP April 19, 2022 208 11 African-Americans are not geographically concentrated in large numbers anywhere in the city. African- American CVAP April 19, 2022 209 12 Other Socio-Economic Demographics These data are only available at the Block Group and Tract level of geography, not the more granular Census Block level. April 19, 2022 210 13 Community Outreach Efforts Multi-Media Outreach & engagement efforts to date Dedicated Districting Webpages Press Release Social Media Community Group Outreach Process Flyer Outreach & engagement moving forward Workshops and additional hearings Continued engagement publicizing each milestone in the process April 19, 2022 211 14 Districting Webpages Dedicated City Districting Webpages: Dublin.ca.gov/DublinDistricts Includes Meeting Schedule, Documents, FAQs, Mapping Tools, and Subscribe option to sign up for districting email updates April 19, 2022 212 15 Press Release Press release announcing initiation of new process, opportunities for public engagement, & meeting schedule. Shared with Dublin press release distribution list, districting subscriber list and posted to the website. April 19, 2022 213 16 Social Media Social media content on districting launched April 8 (on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram) Will be shared weekly moving forward April 19, 2022 214 17 Process Flyer Process flyer with FAQ’s about districting and multilingual notice April 19, 2022 215 18 Direct Outreach to Community Groups Direct emails and phone calls to reach out to local community groups prior to 4/19 hearing Inform them of process Ask for their active participation Elections Code 21628 requires a good faith effort to provide: “information through good government, civil rights, civic engagement, and community groups or organizations that are active in the city, including those active in language minority communities” April 19, 2022 216 19 Future Outreach Opportunities Virtual Community Workshops April 28, 6 p.m. May 4, 6 p.m. Due dates for draft map submissions June 5, by 5 p.m. (for consideration at Public Hearing 3) July 6, by 5 p.m. (for consideration at Public Hearing 4) Continued engagement publicizing each milestone in the process Will continue to publicize each hearing and community workshop to increase public engagement April 19, 2022 217 20 Defining Neighborhoods 1st Question: What is your neighborhood? 2nd Question: What are its geographic boundaries? Examples of physical features defining a neighborhood boundary: ❑Natural neighborhood dividing lines, such as highway or major roads, rivers, canals and/or hills ❑Areas around parks or schools ❑Other neighborhood landmarks In the absence of public testimony, planning records and other similar documents may provide definition. April 19, 2022 218 21 Beyond Neighborhoods: Defining Communities of Interest 1st Question: What defines your community? ❑Geographic Area, plus ❑Shared issue or characteristic ❑Shared social or economic interest ❑Impacted by city policies ❑Tell us “your community’s story” 2nd Question:Would this community benefit from being “included within a single district for purposes of its effective and fair representation”? ❑Or would it benefit more from having multiple representatives? Definitions of Communities of Interest may not include relationships with political parties, incumbents, or political candidates. April 19, 2022 219 22 Possible Neighborhoods / Communities April 19, 2022 220 23 Possible Neighborhoods / Communities April 19, 2022 221 24 Public Mapping and Map Review Tools ❑Different tools for different purposes ❑Different tools for different levels of technical skill and interest ❑Simple “review draft maps” tool ❑Easy-to-use “Draw your neighborhood” tool ❑Paper “Draw a draft map” tool ❑Powerful, data-rich “Draw a draft map” tool Whether you use the online mapping tool, the paper kit, or just draw on a napkin, we welcome your maps! April 19, 2022 222 25 Simple Map Drawing Tool Paper “Public Participation Kit” ❑For those without internet access or who prefer paper ❑Total Population Counts only –no demographic numbers April 19, 2022 223 26 Dave’s Redistricting App (DRA) ❑DavesRedistricting.org ❑A powerful but easy-to-use online mapping tool April 19, 2022 224 27 Public Hearing & Discussion ❑What is your neighborhood and what are its boundaries? ❑What other notable areas are in the City, and what are their boundaries? ❑Any questions about the mapping tools? April 19, 2022 225 28 Share Your Thoughts Website Dublin.CA.Gov/DublinDistricts Phone (925) 574-4875 Email dublindistricts@dublin.ca.gov April 19, 2022 226 29 Staff Recommendation 1.Receive the presentation. 2.Open the public hearing. 3.Receive public comment. 4.Close the public hearing. 227