Common Cause/NY Releases Proposed Congressional Maps, Files with Steuben County Court
Group calls for constitutional amendment for citizen led redistricting
NEW YORK, NY (05/03/2022) (readMedia)-- Today, Common Cause/NY released its own congressional maps to the public, seeking leave to file them officially with the Steuben County Supreme Court. The maps are non-partisan pursuant to Article III, sec.4 (c) (5) of the New York State Constitution and the organizational mission of Common Cause/NY, reflecting the reality of how New Yorkers live and associate.
See the maps here, and our full district by district explanation attached.
"New Yorkers deserve a non-partisan alternative to the gerrymandered maps the Legislature proposed and the court ultimately shot down. The entire process - set in motion by Andrew Cuomo and Senate Republicans in 2014 with this so-called Independent Commission - was always designed to fail voters. Common Cause/NY has long maintained that people, not politicians, should decide what the maps look like. If New York lawmakers want to make sure this chaos never happens again, they must advance an amendment that enshrines a citizen-led redistricting process - based on the gold standard in California - into the constitution now," said Susan Lerner, executive director of Common Cause/NY.
Common Cause/NY will propose a constitutional amendment that would establish a truly independent, citizen-led redistricting commission for New York State, similar to the citizen redistricting commissions successfully used in California and Michigan and currently at work in Syracuse, NY.
Background
In the 2010 redistricting cycle, Common Cause New York released the only set of non-partisan redistricting maps for both the state legislature and Congress, which were widely hailed as fair and viable alternatives to the Legislature's official proposals. The proposed congressional map significantly influenced the final map drawn by Special Master Nate Persily, which was adopted by the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York. The latest proposed map not only follows the constitutional criteria, the federal Voting Rights Act, and all other relevant law, but it prioritizes protection of the voting rights of language and racial minorities. The Common Cause/NY map uses the existing congressional districts as its starting point, respecting the cores of existing districts to the maximum amount possible, given the demographic changes reported by the United States Census data. The goal, wherever possible, is to avoid splitting counties and towns, and also respect communities of interest, pursuant to Article III, sec.4 (c) (5) of the New York State Constitution. The Common Cause/NY congressional map is drawn to come as close to exact equivalence of population as reasonably possible (-1 to +1).
During the passage of the most recent redistricting constitutional amendments, Common Cause/NY regularly weighed in on the underlying policy, including on the specific criteria that should guide the map making process. Common Cause/NY submitted detailed comments to the Redistricting Commission regarding their proposed maps.