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Gay leaders in Sacramento are organizing an effort for their community to be considered in the city’s redistricting process.
The gay community has formed a redistricting committee through the Sacramento Rainbow Chamber of Commerce’s foundation.
Rosanna Herber, chair of the new committee, said the center of the city’s lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community is in Midtown and downtown.
“We would like to see those areas in one district,” Herber said.
The LGBT population wants to be considered a “community of interest,” which is one of the elements the City Council will use to redesign its districts, Herber said.
Steve Hansen, a member of the city’s advisory redistricting committee who is also active in the gay community’s redistricting effort, said the LGBT vote is now split between three City Council districts in the city’s urban core. Because three council districts represent the area, the gay community’s vote is weakened, he said.
“And we’ve never had a LGBT official on the City Council or on the County Board of Supervisors. Our electoral power has been diluted,” he said.
Specific numbers on how many people identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender in the city are unclear at this point.
The group is using statistics from city voters’ positions on Proposition 8 to show that LGBT community members and supporters are concentrated in the city’s urban core, Hansen said.
In the 2010 U.S. Census, people had the option of filling out information on whether they are married to or living with a same-sex partner.
The data on same-sex couples is expected to be released later this year or early next year, according to Hansen.
Scot Mende, the city’s new growth manager, confirmed that the city has not yet received any Census data on same-sex couples.
If the data is released after September, it may not assist the gay community’s effort with the redistricting process, as the city must complete the process by September, according to the city charter.
Mende said the city doesn’t have Census data to back up a strict geographic boundary for the LGBT community. Still, the city is open to the idea of an LGBT community of interest, he said.
“We are open to anecdotal evidence if someone can explain reasonably well where that community resides,” he said.
View the Sacramento Rainbow Chamber Redistricting Committee's map of Proposition 8 votes in Sacramento County:
Prop. 8 Vote Breakdown, Sacramento County
(Image by: Sacramento Rainbow Chamber Redistricting Committee)
Kathleen Haley is a staff reporter for The Sacramento Press.
But I would be interested to hear how the LGBT community thinks that having one of their own on the city council could possibly impact life in the city core. The city council has little power to influence or legislate matters related to peoples social arrangements. What is the LGBTcommunities vision for how things would be different if there was a LGBT councilperson?
Or is this just a matter of respect and pride of having someone from one's own community sitting on the city council?
Mayor Kevin Johnson: Steve Maviglio, political communications consultant.
Angelique Ashby, District 1: Roman Porter, executive director of the state’s Fair Political Practices Commission
Sandy Sheedy, District 2: Bill Camp, executive secretary of the Sacramento Central Labor Council
Steve Cohn, District 3: Cyril Shah, commissioner, Sacramento Housing and Redevelopment Agency
Rob Fong, District 4: Julius Cherry, former fire chief for the city of Sacramento
Jay Schenirer, District 5: Steve Hansen, vice chair of the Downtown Sacramento Partnership
Kevin McCarty, District 6: Bill Motmans, president of the Tahoe Park Neighborhood Association
Darrell Fong, District 7: Bernard Bowler, former board chair of the Sacramento Metro Chamber of Commerce
Bonnie Pannell, District 8: Sandra Frye-Lucas, faculty member of Sacramento Unified School District Florin Technology Educational Center. Ph.d. from UC Davis’ School of Education.
The good news is that there are gay household spread throughout Midtown/Downtown that are part of neighborhood and other constituencies that can help build those coalitions.
The bad news is that much of the business community is happy with the status quo where the actual residents in Midtown/Downtown have less influence with their councilmembers. The council members are influenced by the wealthier ring neighborhood donors and the business donors of Midtown/Downtown.
The other difficulty is being balanced by population. The current huge inbalance is District 4 with a shrunken population and District 1 that has massive growth. Until the infill of Downtown and the Railyards is a reality there isn't the population in Downtown/Midtown to justify a district on its' own. Do you start from the center and work out? My neighborhood not far outside the central city has four lesbian and two gay households in less than one block.