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Writer's pictureClassic City News

Georgia's voting redistricting must be fair and transparent


The Census is done, and the redistricting season that occurs every ten years, has begun.

Maps in Georgia are drawn by the party in charge of the state legislature.

Done under a veil of secrecy sanctioned by law, the process lacks an open, fair, and public process. Every party has used this opportunity to protect their incumbents to the detriment of Georgia voters. Communities can find their influence either diluted or overly concentrated by map line-drawers interested in partisan gain or pleasing powerful interests. The newly-drawn districts will be in place until 2030, so voters need to have a say in developing them now.

At a minimum, the House and Senate apportionment committees should listen to community input through a series of open public hearings across the state; show their work by holding meetings in public, sharing data sources, and releasing proposed maps well in advance of adoption for public comment; and, commit to independent evaluation using non-partisan standards to make sure districts aren’t biased, the non-partisan Fair Districts GA has resources on their website, fairdistrictsga.org to educate citizens about redistricting, and provides ways to encourage legislators to ensure that the process is fair and transparent. Please contact Senator Bill Cowsert, bill.cowsert@senate.ga.gov and ask him to guarantee a transparent, fair, and open process as he redraws Georgia’s electoral maps.

Vicki Krugman

Athens


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