As a professional lurker and a member of the Charter Commission, I feel I
need to respond to the barrage of complaints concerning the Redistricting
Commission's work. Two words: Get Involved! There are vacancies on the
Charter Commission which need to be filled by Chief Judge Kevin Burke. The
Charter Commission is now considering a major rewrite of the City Charter.
Issues to be addressed include the appointment process for the Redistricting
Commission and city department heads(i.e. Police Chief). I would also
encourage list members to continue to discuss changes they would like to see
in the City Charter. We need you to volunteer and continue to give us your
input.

Dan Boivin
Fulton, Ward 13(or Edina east according to my north side friends)


From: "David Brauer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Mpls list" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: RE: [Mpls] Fat lotta good testifying does ya
Date: Sat, 13 Apr 2002 07:33:03 -0500

First, thanks also go to Vic Thorstenson for his work on the NAACP plan.

Tim Connolly mentioned how hard it was for non-geeks to grapple with
this (one of my best friends on the list deleted every single
redistricting post, not wanting to cling to a steep learning curve). Vic
took his considerable skills to a community organization to expand the
circle of knowledge. That's an impressive thing. He also educated me and
I'm sure others out there.

So now I and two-thirds of my Kingfield neighbors are in Ward 8 - our
neighborhood is among those split and for good measure isolated with a
ward that is 85 percent east-of-the-highway. It's interesting that Wards
13 and 11 lost population, and thus needed to grow size-wise, yet
somehow Ward 8 *expanded* its sliver west of the highway.

Congrats to Downtown - a newly recognized community of interest.
Apparently, southwest Minneapolis does not have quite the same cachet.

Oh well; after being depressed about not being in a ward oriented toward
southwest - as I believe most southwest-school-attending, Southwest
Journal-reading, Uptown-shopping, 5th Precinct-policed, Lake
Harriet-jogging residents of Kingfield are - I'm enough of a
rationalizer to try to find the silver lining. I know embarrassingly
little about communities like Bancroft (hi Holle Brian!) and west
Powderhorn (hello Matthea Smith? Hey, on May Day; I'll now watch the
boats cross the lake that's in MY WARD). There's also the
barely-explored terrain of Bryant and Regina and Northrop. And of
course, I'll get to meet more Central people than just Eva Young in a
political context!

The highway was built as an intentional racial moat and now the
political heads have forced more of us to leap it. There's good that can
come from that.

Still, too often communities of interest were split for political
interests. The game involving us, as I understand, is that the
Republicans really wanted Wenonah Park to be in the 11th Ward - although
the question of "how many angels can dance on the head of a pin?" is
rivaled only by "how can you really create a Republican opportunity
ward?" Apparently, Ward 11 is the attempt. The Republicans get their 2
months in the sun and it affects my neighborhood for the next 10 years.

Because Wenonah was in 11, Scott Benson couldn't get more of Kingfield,
which he and many of we Kingfield neighbors wanted. (Why straddle the
highway in Ward 11 but not 8? Because there are at least two other
west-of-highway neighborhoods there - it's at least balanced with
communities we regularly deal with.)

Also, there was a political interest in dicing up our very staunchly DFL
neighborhood - both for Republican and Independence Party opportunity
elsewhere in Southwest but to also "southwest-ize" the 8th Ward.

My position has been if you're going to straddle the highway, balance
both sides' interest. However, the "southwest-ization" game is a craven
political one, and a far better alternative would have been to not
dilute political interests east of the highway by throwing us in there,
and not diluting our interests by doing so.

Hopefully I'm horribly wrong about such mutual dilution, but I think any
neutral observer would have to agree this is how it looks.

Some of you may be asking, "so if you're so DFL how 'come the DFL
commissioners didn't take care of you?"

Part of it is every party had to negotiate with each other and give
something. The simplest answer, though, is that none of the three DFL
Commissioners really represented us. None of them would have been seen
at a rally last fall for RT Rybak, a symbol of the "new guard" who
overwhelmingly carried our ward. Earl Pettiford and Steve Claypatch are
primarily labor-backed, and Rick Stafford - the guided missile of the
inside game - was hired by the DFL council members to protect their jobs
(nine out of 10 aint bad, Rick!).

That's politics - they were picked and all fiercely protected their
constituencies. It's just that some constituencies fell in-between the
cracks, and others were over-represented.

(To be fair, Rick did keep me in the loop on what was happening with
Kingfield, though we were always mostly in 8. I also know he fought hard
not to reduce Ward 8's minority percentage, which held at 60 percent
after dipping to 51 percent in the tentative plan.)

This showed me you have to pay attention to the whole process: from the
Hennepin County Chief Judge who appoints the Charter Commission who
appoints the Redistricting Commission who determines your council fate.
If those parts aren't attuned in a way that represent a broad swath of
the public, you're going to get a result that doesn't.

A final political observation: I came away from the redistricting
commission meeting feeling that the DFL continues to push
African-Americans into the arms of the Green Party.

Now, I've been around the block enough to know one can't assume the
NAACP speaks for the black citizen on the street, just as other
political organizations often don't. But it was impossible to miss the
black anger at a redistricting plan that the DFL helped cobble together
and the Greens eschewed.

I'm agnostic (professionally and personally) on the
one-ward-for-Downtown question; however, getting the Jordan neighborhood
out of Barb Johnson's ward and into Natalie Johnson Lee's may not be
packing in a Voting Rights context (the 82 percent minority count gives
way to a 51 percent eligible-minority-voter percentage, which some claim
is enough to torpedo such a claim) but seems to be in the moral sense.

If you read this far, thanks for letting me disgorge. Despite whatever
happened here, we need to keep working toward open, understandable
processes and transparent government. I learned a lot from this that I
hope will help me do that better in the future.

David Brauer
Kingfield - Ward 10 & 8


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