Skip to Content

Palm Springs city council votes to adopt final district map

The Palm Springs City Council voted Monday night adopt a voting district boundary map, the culmination of the city’s yearlong transition from at-large to district-based elections.

The final map caps off a process that began earlier this year, which included drafting a series of map proposals based on input from city officials and Palm Springs residents.

A copy of the final map can be viewed below:

Beginning with the November 2019 general municipal election, voters in districts 1, 2 and 3 will elect city council members to four-year terms.

Districts 4 and 5 will begin voting for their candidates starting November 2021. Council members who were elected at-large will continue to serve until their terms expire.

The move to district elections comes after a voting rights group threatened litigation against the city earlier this year, alleging that Palm Springs is violating the California Voting Rights Act by conducting at-large elections.

A letter from the nonprofit Southwest Voter Registration Education Project asserted that at-large elections “diminished the ability of Latino residents to impact elections and has resulted in racially polarized voting.”

“Remember in Palm Springs in the 80 years we’ve been a city, we have elected one Latino and one African-American to our city council, yet today one-third of the residents of Palm Springs are people of color,” said councilmember Lisa Middleton. “We are going to have people in communities that have felt left out that are going to participate in our city in the future.”

Though city officials denied the nonprofit’s contentions, they noted that municipalities that chose to fight litigious threats of that sort 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 conduct their first district-based elections this year.

Four previously-considered maps that were recently narrowed out of consideration can be viewed below, along with its corresponding demographic breakdown:

Download the KESQ & CBS Local 2 app on iTunes or Google Play for up-to-the-minute breaking news alerts & more

More: Today’s Top Stories

First Alert Forecast

More: I-Team and Stands for You investigations

Find us on Facebook: KESQ News Channel 3 & CBS Local 2

Follow us on Twitter for breaking news updates: @KESQ & @Local2

We’re on Instagram! @KESQ_News_Channel_3 & @CBSLocal2

Watch live newscasts

Noticias en español: Telemundo 15

Article Topic Follows: News

Jump to comments ↓

KESQ News Team

BE PART OF THE CONVERSATION

News Channel 3 is committed to providing a forum for civil and constructive conversation.

Please keep your comments respectful and relevant. You can review our Community Guidelines by clicking here

If you would like to share a story idea, please submit it here.