Redistricting in Santa Barbara County Hinges on Community Participation

By Glenn Morris and Megan Turley   |   October 19, 2021

The right to vote is one of our most foundational rights as Americans – we have the right to be equally and fairly represented. Our county is redistricting, which means that we are assessing current Supervisorial district boundaries and redrawing all five districts based on the federal 2020 Census to account for changes in the county’s population and to comply with the California Fair Maps Act. This process relies on community members weighing in on what the County of Santa Barbara Board of Supervisors’ Districts should look like. 

Redistricting happens every 10 years following the federal Census and requires all voting districts to be roughly equal in population. Measure G, a county ordinance passed in 2018, requires that this decennial process be led by the Santa Barbara County Citizens’ Independent Redistricting Commission (SBCIRC): a nonpartisan commission made up of 11 Santa Barbara County residents. SBCIRC’s mission is to determine the county’s supervisorial district borders based on community-submitted maps to satisfy the state’s legal requirements, and to accurately represent and enfranchise our county’s diverse communities. 

We are honored to be the chair and vice chair of this commission. The SBCIRC’s top priority is to get our diverse communities engaged. We know that it is in the county’s best interest that residents in every neighborhood and community share thoughts on what your Supervisorial districts should look like.

What do you believe are your “communities of interest” – areas throughout the county where the population shares common social or economic priorities? This could be a neighborhood surrounding a business district or school, an area with common interests in a geographic or ecological landmark, or a neighborhood that shares a language other than English. By defining your communities of interest, your input will help the SBCIRC properly consider the impacts of changes to a district’s boundary. Submit your thoughts on local “communities of interest” via email at redistricting@countyofsb.org or SBCIRC’s website at drawsantabarbaracounty.org. 

Get more involved by drawing maps and asking others to do the same. This allows you to have an even more direct impact on this process. It’s easier than you think; residents can use the county’s online mapping tools available at drawsantabarbaracounty.org or physically draw maps using paper templates that are available at our meetings or can be downloaded from the website and mailed to the commission. Residents can draw the county’s five districts or just one. These maps, along with the explanation of why residents drew the lines where they did, will help to inform us of your priorities and identities that should be preserved and represented on the county’s Board of Supervisors. 

Unfortunately, the delays in releasing the Census data that informs these maps severely limits the time for reviewing and adopting a final map. We only just received the official data. Despite these challenges, the state set a deadline of December 15, 2021, for our county to adopt a final map. 

It is a sprint for the next few weeks – that’s all the time you have to draw and submit maps for the Commission’s consideration. The deadline for map submissions is October 18, to provide the Commission enough time to select a final map by December 15, 2021. 

The final map will decide a great deal – including how residents vote, which communities they vote with, and which county Board of Supervisor will represent them following the June 2022 election, and in all elections for the next decade. 

We cannot accomplish our goal of creating the most fair and equitable County district map without your help. Get started today by visiting drawsantabarbaracounty.org

The above is a guest opinion is written by the Santa Barbara Citizens Independent Redistricting Commission Chair Glenn Morris, 5th District, & Vice Chair Megan Turley, 2nd District

 

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