Court Date! Suit Challenges Misleading Redistricting Amendment Ballot Language

Oral arguments expected

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ALBANY, NY (09/11/2014)(readMedia)-- Susan Lerner, Executive Director of Common Cause/NY and Neil Steiner, a litigation partner in the New York office of Dechert LLP, will appear in Albany Supreme Court to pursue their petition opposing ballot language for Proposition 1.

Oral arguments are expected.

WHO:

Petitioners opposing ballot language for the redistricting amendment

WHAT:

Background

On August 18th petitioners filed a lawsuit (attached) appealing the New York Board of Elections' approved ballot language for Proposition 1, which concerns amending the state constitution to establish a redistricting commission. The petitioners are represented by Neil Steiner, a partner at Dechert LLP.

On August 1st, the Board of Elections reviewed sample language submitted by the Attorney General. Commissioner Andrew Spano submitted edits on behalf of Citizens Union and the League of Women voters, which was approved despite objections from Common Cause/NY Executive Director, Susan Lerner, who was at the meeting. The language proposed by Commission Spano and adopted by the Board (additions to the Attorney General's recommendation with asterisks, and subtractions in capitals) is as follows:

"The proposed amendment to sections 4 and 5 and addition of new section 5-b to Article 3 of the State Constitution revises the redistricting procedure for state legislative and congressional districts. The proposed amendment establishes an independent redistricting commission every 10 years beginning in 2020, with *two* members appointed *by each of* the four legislative leaders and two members selected by the eight legislative appointees; *prohibits legislators and other elected officials from serving as commissioners*; establishes principles to be used in creating districts; requires the commission to hold public hearings on proposed redistricting plans; subjects the commission's redistricting plan to legislative enactment; *provides that the legislature may only amend the redistricting plan according to the established principles if the commission's plan is rejected twice by the legislature*; ESTABLISHES THE LEGISLATURE AS THE DEFAULT REDISTRICTING BODY IF THE COMMISSION'S PLAN IS NOT LEGISLATIVELY ENACTED; provides for expedited court review of a challenged redistricting plan; and provides for funding and bipartisan staff to work for the commission. Shall the proposed amendment be approved?"

According to Commissioner Spano, the sticking point was the word "default", in describing how the maps will ultimately be determined. The Commission ignored Common Cause/NY's objection to the description of the legislatively-appointed commission as "independent." Rather, a coalition of good government advocates (including Common Cause/NY, NYPIRG, and EffectiveNY), civil rights groups, and environmentalists had previously called for neutral language and submitted a suggested draft:

"The proposed amendment to Article 3 of the Constitution would allow New York State's legislative leaders to appoint a bipartisan commission to establish new state legislative and congressional district lines every ten years pursuant to stated criteria with final approval by the Legislature. Shall the amendment be approved?"

WHEN: Friday September 12, 2014 at 09:30AM Eastern Time (US & Canada)
WHERE: Albany Supreme Court
16 Eagle St
Albany, New York
NOTES:

Petitioners have been told to appear at 9:30AM but the exact time and location of the hearing will be determined the morning of. Follow Common Cause/NY on Twitter for live updates: @commoncauseny.