by Wanda Bertram
This week, the Editorial Board of The New York Times called on states and the federal government to
end prison gerrymandering, the practice of drawing legislative districts around large prisons and counting the people inside as legitimate constituents. As the Editorial Board remarked, this practice
"makes no sense, because virtually everyone who goes to prison comes from somewhere else, and almost all will return there after being released. While they are behind bars, they can't vote, nor do they have any attachment to the local community or its elected officials...The result is
one of the more persistent and pernicious distortions in the redistricting process."
The bad news is that with redistricting just around the corner, policymakers are running out of time to prevent another 10 years of prison-driven election distortion. The good news is that momentum is rapidly building to fix the problem in several local, state, and federal lawmaking bodies, as well as in the national media:
- Connecticut, Michigan, Rhode Island, and Missouri are all considering bills that would require state and local redistricting officials to count incarcerated people as residents of their home addresses.
- Federal bill H.R. 1, the "For the People Act," contains clauses that would end prison gerrymandering nationally -- forever -- by requiring the Census Bureau to change how it counts incarcerated people. As the NYT editorial correctly notes, this is by far the most efficient solution to prison gerrymandering. However, even if H.R. 1 passes this year, it won't fix the problem until the 2030 Census.
- A small storm of recent press coverage is bringing public attention to prison gerrymandering, including a powerful oped in The Boston
Globe, a deep dive published in The New Republic, and a flurry of articles from Connecticut about its new bill.
- State and local governments are also considering solutions that don't require legislation. Cities and counties can simply choose to exclude prison populations when they draw new legislative districts this year, a solution that hundreds of local governments have already chosen. Meanwhile, state redistricting officials can divide up their prison populations among multiple districts to ensure that no one district claims a disproportionate number of incarcerated people.
If you live in a state that still hasn't taken action, you may wonder what the options are for ending prison gerrymandering where you live this year. Again, there is good news and bad news. Most states have run out of time to introduce new bills this year that would take effect before the 2021 redistricting process begins.
But all states still have time to limit prison gerrymandering this year through non-legislative means (the solution described in the fourth bullet above). And the stakes have never been higher. In the words of the Times Editorial Board: "A healthy
representative democracy needs an accurate picture of who lives where in order to allocate the proper number of lawmakers to represent their interests."
Learn more about what your state is doing to end prison gerrymandering at https://www.prisonersofthecensus.org/action.html
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