Group forms to fight districts
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Jenny Marder
A newly formed resident’s group kicked off a grass-roots campaign on
Monday to fight a ballot measure that would slice the city into five
districts and cut the City Council from seven members elected at
large to five elected by district.
The five-district plan, known as the Fair District Initiative, was
proposed by former Assemblyman Scott Baugh last year and will be on
the March ballot. The Huntington Beach Concerned Voter’s Coalition
set up the first of many information booths at a crowded City Council
meeting on Monday. The organizers’ goal is to educate the public on
the dangers of creating council districts and to encourage volunteers
to join the battle, said Ed Kerins, president of Huntington Beach
Tomorrow, a residents’ group that has taken a stand against
districts.
Fliers warning about the changes that would come with districts
were also passed out at the meeting.
“What we really need is a public education program to let
[residents] know exactly what districts mean,” said Dean Albright, a
public works commissioner and member of the new coalition.
The group plans to amass volunteers to get its message out by
sending fliers, speaking out at city meetings and walking precincts,
with special attention being paid to areas with a high voter turnout,
Albright said. The campaign’s logo, a red circle with a slash through
the word “districts,” will be sprouting up all over town on fliers
and yard signs.
“We’ll have at least two speakers at every council meeting from
now on, getting our message out,” Albright said.
Critics main objection is that residents will no longer vote for
each council seat.
“The main thing is that they’re losing their voting power,” Kerins
said. “Seven votes for City Council members every four years will be
reduced to one vote every four years, and that one vote may or may
not represent them. The person who represents them may be backed by
the big money people who put districting on the ballot.”
Kerins, who is hoping to garner thousands of volunteers, thinks
that many who of those who favor districts lack an understanding of
what the change will mean for voters.
“My sense is that people hear about districting and they get a
warm, fuzzy feeling that there will be someone that they can talk
to,” he said. “But reality is, this will not be so. One person will
represent 40,000 people in five square miles. The likelihood of you
knowing this person is slim.”
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