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Palm Springs releases potential district maps

An interactive public workshop was held Wednesday evening to offer Palm Springs residents a firsthand view of the mapping process involved in the city’s transition from at-large to district elections.

The workshop was held at the Palm Springs Convention Center, attendees learned how to create and submit their own custom district maps to city officials.

Submitted maps will be reviewed by the city council as Palm Springs makes its switch from at-large elections, in which city officials are elected based on votes from the entire city’s population, versus district elections, in which various electoral districts throughout Palm Springs will elect council members through separate elections.

City officials continue to consider where the new district boundaries will lie for its first district-based election and have engaged the services of a demographer to “document voting patterns by ethnicity and geography.” The demographer’s results will be shared at upcoming meetings, according to city
officials.

Input is also being sought from residents regarding what criteria they consider important when laying out the district boundaries, including school attendance areas, single-family or multi-family housing unit areas and income levels.

The city also released eight tentative maps created by the demographer to the public, along with statistics breaking down how each district was split based on various factors, including citizen voting
age, voter turnout in past election years, age, race, income and more.

The final district maps are expected to be completed by the end of the year.

The switch to district elections comes after a voting rights group threatened litigation against the city earlier this year, alleging that Palm Springs was violating the California Voting Rights Act by conducting at-large elections that “diminished the ability of Latino residents to impact elections and has resulted in racially polarized voting.”

Though city officials denied the nonprofit Southwest Voter Registration Education Project’s claims, they noted that municipalities that have chosen to fight similar legal threats often lose, citing the northern Los Angeles County city of Palmdale, which lost a court battle over the matter and was forced to make the switch, as well as pay millions of dollars in legal fees.

Similar notices were sent to Cathedral City and Indio in recent years, prompting both municipalities to switch to district-based elections.

The deadline to submit a map is Sept. 17. Map submissions and comments should be emailed to CityClerk@palmspringsca.gov. The mapping tool and other maps created by members of the public may also be viewed at www.psdistricts.com.

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