CWmike writes "As the 2010 U.S. census results arrived, Los Angeles
County's politicians started ramping up for redistricting — the
once-a-decade, computing-intensive, often contentious process of
geographically carving up the populace into discrete parcels of
voters. In the past, such decisions were made by politicians using
expensive computer systems and software. Participation in the process
was limited to an elite few who could afford experts who understood
redistricting's arcane rules and GIS technology well enough to game
them. This year, however, it won't just be the politicians and special
interest groups poring over the data and tweaking boundary lines. All
4.5 million registered voters in LA County have access to a
cloud-based redistricting application called the Public Access Plan
that lets voters view and modify existing maps and boundaries, submit
comments, and even create and submit their own plans from scratch. LA
County is among the first government entities to consider providing
Web-based tools that allow for direct public participation. 'This
notion of public access has changed quite dramatically,' says Tim
Storey, a senior fellow at the National Conference of State
Legislatures. 'Throwing that wide open is a big step.' The big
question now is whether the public will use it."

http://politics.slashdot.org/story/11/05/25/1719206/Redistricting-20-Cloud-Lets-Voters-Take-Part?utm_source=rss1.0&utm_medium=feed

Ok, not about Australian political boundaries, but why shouldn't our
politicians be held to the same accountability.

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