Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Arizona Independent Redistricting Commission Analysis of Public Hearings Round One Types of Public Input Public Meetings • Actual testimony • Additional material handed in Public Hearings (Round 1) • Actual testimony • Blue Sheets handed in Additional material handed in • Web Submissions • Snail Mail • Phone Goal is to ensure everyone who voiced an opinion is heard for the mapping process. 2 Round One - By the numbers Dates Cities Visited July 21 through August 6 23 (includes 8 satellite locations) Total attendance ~ 2,250 (1,395 Sign-sheets) Total comments 595 Unique speakers ~ 531 Total number of comments 1,002 Number of Criteria related comments 710 Public hearings in minutes 2,085 Average meeting Length 2 hours 19 minutes Views of the live stream 800+ 3 Round One by the Numbers Breakdown • By city • Number of attendees who signed in • Number of people that requested to speak • Total number of comments recorded 4 Round One by the Numbers Location Date Sign-in Sheets Request to Speak Total Comments South Phoenix 21-Jul 131 71 65 Nogales 22-Jul 26 17 16 Yuma (San Luis and Parker) 23-Jul 124 25 24 Mesa 25-Jul 114 50 50 Bullhead City 26-Jul 82 25 25 Casa Grande (Maricopa) 27-Jul 74 32 31 Prescott (Cottonwood) 28-Jul 153 37 33 Window Rock 29-Jul 21 7 7 Hon Dah (Holbrook and Winslow) 30-Jul 81 34 34 5 Round One by the Numbers Location Date Sign-in Sheets Request to Speak Total Comments Flagstaff (Page and Tuba City) 1-Aug 104 45 41 South Tucson 2-Aug 86 62 59 Glendale 3-Aug 126 54 46 Sierra Vista 4-Aug 49 53 50 Phoenix 5-Aug 84 54 48 Tucson 6-Aug 140 76 66 6 Round One by the Numbers Sign-in Sheets 1,395 Requested Total to Speak Comments 642 595 93% of those who requested to speak, spoke 7 Comments Based on Criteria Total summary of the number of times the public commented on one of the six criteria for Redistricting • Voting Rights Act – 49 • Equal Population – 12 • Compactness or Contiguous – 34 • Communities of Interest – 265 • Geographic Features / Political Boundaries – 114 • Competiveness – 236 • Other – 292 8 Round One by the Numbers Voting Rights Act 5% Equal Population 1% Other 29% Compactness or Contiguous 3% Communities of Interest 27% Competiveness 24% Geographic Features / Political Boundaries 11% 9 Round One by the Numbers Voting Rights Act 7% Equal Compactness Population or Contiguous 2% 5% Competiveness 33% Geographic Features / Political Boundaries 16% Communities of Interest 37% 10 Competitiveness 236 comments Important Lower Priority • Competitive districts are important- they get people involved • Need more competitive districts on both sides of aisle. • Competiveness is the most important of the criteria • More competition = better candidates • Competitiveness- should only be used after other criteria • COIs should be prioritized before competitiveness • Current CD and LD are competitive now. • Compactness, COI, and Geographic Boundaries are more important that Competitiveness. 11 Competitiveness Definitions offered by public • Roughly equal voter registration among Is, Ds, Rs • Competitiveness means looking at whole district would a qualified candidate have a chance of winning? • Either D or R can win an election every 2 or 4 years • The majority of legislative districts being competitive in the general election • Elections not decided in the primary 12 Communities of Interest 265 comments • Partisanship has no factor in COIs • People live with likeminded people- should use COIs as main criteria • Keep Flagstaff with Prescott as they are a COI and have geographic similarities • Don’t keep Flagstaff with Prescott as they are not a COI with similarities • Light rail is a tie to a COI • Oro Valley is a COI—talked about newspaper 13 description and likes it Recurring Input Summary of top two to four public comments, by city, that included specific recommendations July 21 – South Phoenix • Support Senator Leah Landrum Taylor’s map – 8 • Make LD 15 competitive – 3 • Ahwatukee as a COI – 3 July 22 – Nogales • Keep Santa Cruz County in two districts – 2 • Create three border districts – 3 14 Recurring Input July 26 – Bullhead • Keep Mohave County together – 13 • Create a rural Congressional District – 10 • Keep Tri-Cities together (Kingman, Bullhead City, Lake Havasu) – 4 • Create a river district – 4 July 27 – Casa Grande • Keep Pinal County intact – 5 • Keep Pinal County in one Congressional District – 4 15 15 Recurring Input July 28 – Prescott • Create two rural Congressional Districts – 8 • Yavapai County as a COI – 4 • Put Verde Valley with Flagstaff – 4 July 29 – Window Rock • Don’t split Navajo Nation – 2 • Don’t gerrymander Hopi – 2 16 16 Recurring Input July 30 – Hon Dah • Create two rural Congressional Districts – 16 • Keep Legislative District 5 together – 8 • Create eight rural Legislative Districts – 6 August 1 – Flagstaff • Don’t separate Flagstaff – 13 • Create two rural Congressional Districts – 6 • Don’t include Prescott with Flagstaff COI – 5 17 17 Recurring Input August 2 – South Tucson • Keep Congressional District 8 together – 7 • Keep Legislative District 30 together – 6 • Keep Legislative District 26 together – 5 • Move Tucson to Congressional District 7 – 4 August 3 – Glendale • Support Arizona Minority Coalition maps – 5 • Put Tonopah Valley together – 3 18 18 Recurring Input August 4 – Sierra Vista • Create three border districts – 12 • Keep two border districts – 4 August 5 – Phoenix • Light rail as a COI – 4 August 6 – Tucson • Keep Legislative District 26 intact – 7 • Keep Legislative District 30 and CD 8 intact – 3 • Discussed how to address prison population– 3 • Oro Valley as a COI – 3 19 19 Types of Public Input Public Meetings • Actual testimony • Additional material handed in Public Hearings (Round 1) • Actual testimony • Blue Sheets handed in Additional material handed in • Web Submissions • Snail Mail • Phone Goal is to ensure everyone who voiced an opinion is heard for the mapping process. 20