COUNTY LATINOS CHARGING BIAS IN REDISTRICTING.Byline: TROY ANDERSON Staff Writer The U.S. Justice Department may review the 2001 redistricting redistricting: see legislative apportionment. plan for the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors is the five member governing board of Los Angeles County, California. Members of the board of supervisors are elected by district, the current members as of April 2006 are:
Latinos comprise 47 percent of the county's population but are represented by only one of the five supervisors. Joaquin G. Avila, special counsel to the 1,070-member Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. County Chicano Employees Association, recently provided the Justice Department with what he says is new evidence that the supervisors deliberately packed Latino voters into a single district when two districts could have been drawn. DOJ (Department Of Justice) The legal arm of the U.S. government that represents the public interest of the United States. It is headed by the Attorney General. spokeswoman Cynthia Magnuson said the agency will review Avila's brief to determine whether to proceed. But Chief Deputy County Counsel Donovan Main noted that the Justice Department had previously approved the county's redistricting plan. ``We've had these claims in the past and our districting is appropriate,'' said Main, declining to comment further. Currently, 1st District Supervisor Gloria Molina Gloria Molina is a member of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors, and the current chairwoman of the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority.[1] Molina grew up as one of ten children in the Los Angeles suburb of Pico Rivera, California, U.S. represents most of the county's Latino residents. Avila's filing seeks the creation of two supervisorial districts with Latino majorities, said Alan Clayton, director of equal employment opportunity at the LACCEA. Under the proposal, the 3rd District of Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky -- who now represents the Westside and the western San Fernando Valley San Fernando Valley Valley, southern California, U.S. Northwest of central Los Angeles, the valley is bounded by the San Gabriel, Santa Susana, and Santa Monica mountains and the Simi Hills. -- would be shifted to the San Gabriel Valley The San Gabriel Valley is one of the principal valleys of southern California. It lies to the east of the city of Los Angeles, to the north of the Puente Hills, to the south of the San Gabriel Mountains, and to the west of the Inland Empire. . That would potentially force Yaroslavsky to run against another incumbent supervisor, or to run in the San Gabriel Valley against a Latino candidate. Yaroslavsky declined to comment. Currently, the San Gabriel Valley is split among three districts and no member of the Board of Supervisors lives there. The county's coastal areas also are now divided into districts represented by Yaroslavsky and 4th District Supervisor Don Knabe. The association's proposal would unify the coastal areas into a single district, Clayton said. The plan would also keep the foothill regions of San Gabriel Valley, Burbank, Glendale and Pasadena, the north San Fernando Valley and the Santa Clarita and Antelope valleys as one district, now represented by 5th District Supervisor Michael D. Antonovich Michael Dennis Antonovich (born 1939 in Los Angeles, California) is a member of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors representing the Fifth District, which covers northern Los Angeles County, the Antelope, Santa Clarita, Pasadena, and parts of the San Fernando and San , Clayton said. The plan would not affect the 2nd District, now represented by Supervisor Yvonne B. Burke, Clayton said. And the plan does not attempt to change the partisan makeup of the districts. The board is currently comprised of two Republicans -- Antonovich and Knabe -- and Democrats Yaroslavsky, Molina and Burke. ``If the Justice Department does sue and is successful, the Board of Supervisors would get the first opportunity to correct the districts,'' Clayton said. In the brief, Avila argued that the current supervisorial districts disenfranchise dis·en·fran·chise tr.v. dis·en·fran·chised, dis·en·fran·chis·ing, dis·en·fran·chis·es To disfranchise. dis 2.3 million Latinos, a claim similar to one filed by the Mexican American Legal Defense Fund and the Justice Department in 1989. At that time, the board consisted of three Republicans -- Antonovich, Deane Dana and Peter Schabarum -- and two Democrats, Kenneth Hahn and Edmund Edelman. That lawsuit alleged that the district boundaries fragmented minority voting strength in East Los Angeles East Los Angeles, uninc. city (1990 pop. 126,379), Los Angeles co., S Calif., a residential suburb of Los Angeles, in an industrial area. It has a large Mexican-American population. There is a performing arts center and a cultural center. A junior college is there. , Avila said. The lawsuit was successful and led to Molina's election. troy.anderson(at)dailynews.com (213) 974-8985 |
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