Politics & Government

County Redistricting Could Mean New Supervisor for Montrose & La Crescenta

17 potential redistricting plans for the County Board of Supervisors are under consideration. One could put La Crescenta and Montrose in the First District, currently represented by Gloria Molina.

A plan for how to redraw the County Board of Supervisor electoral districts could be approved by a county redistricting committee as soon as tomorrow, according to county staff familiar with the process.

Most of the scenarios call for keeping La Crescenta and Montrose together and within their current district, the Fifth District, represented by Michael Antonovich. But one plan (pictured right) would move La Crescenta and Montrose to the First District, which is represented by Gloria Molina. Another plan suggests increasing the number of Supervisor seats from five to 16.

County redistricting is particularly important for La Crescenta and Montrose since they are unincorporated communities. The five-member County Board of Supervisors is the elected government of La Crescenta and Montrose, and decides important issues that would be referred to a City Council in incorporated communities.

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And while the committee is in the advance stages of its meeting, it appears that there has been very little public input.

The Process

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In coming up with possible district scenarios, the county took a somewhat unusual tack: rather than looking at plans from professional redistricting consultants, or suggesting their own alternatives, the committee has been accepting suggested district scenarios from members of the public.

The full list of options, which can be found on the committee's website, does contain submissions from well-known organizations such as the Mexican-American Legal Defense and Education Fund.  There are also some unsurprising contributors, such as a University of California Los Angeles urban planning professor.

However, there are some unusual contributors as well: One scenario was mapped up and submitted by a Utah resident, according to Lori Glasgow, the deputy of budget and redistricting for Antonovich.

All submitted plans are then looked at by county lawyers to see if they comply with redistricting guidelines, Glasgow said.  Those guidelines include maintaining the boundaries with balanced populations and retaining the existing five-district system, rather than expanding the number of seats.

Unlike the new state redistricting process, in which state legislators no longer have the final say over the districts, the Board of Supervisors will ultimately vote on their new boundaries.

The Committee

So who makes up this committee that is deciding the new boundaries?  

The committee has 10 members: each of the county's five supervisors selected two members last fall.

Antonvich selected San Marino Councilman Richard Sun and local Republican political consultant Allan Hoffenblum to sit on the committee.

All 10 members of the committee are listed on the committee website under the "Bios" tab, though only three of the 10 have links that lead to their biographical information.

Timeline

The next meeting for the committee is on July 6, and they could approve a plan at that meeting, Glasgow said.

They could also put off a decision for one of two meetings on July 11 and July 13, she said.

Once they have a plan it would have to be approved by the Board of Supervisors, who would likely vote on it about two or three weeks after the committee approves it.

Evaluating Plans and Comments

On the committee's websites it is possible to look at each individual plan and also at each individual official comment.  However to do so requires downloading each file separately as a pdf.

The list of plans is here, and the comments are here.  Anybody who wants to submit a comment can do so by emailing Commserv@bos.lacounty.gov.

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