Redistricting; Virginia Redistricting Commission established. (SB203)

Introduced By

Sen. Louise Lucas (D-Portsmouth) with support from co-patrons Sen. Jennifer Boysko (D-Herndon), and Sen. Mamie Locke (D-Hampton)

Progress

Introduced
Passed Committee
Passed House
Passed Senate
Signed by Governor
Became Law

Description

Redistricting; Virginia Redistricting Commission; standards and criteria. Establishes the Virginia Redistricting Commission (the Commission) pursuant to Article II, Sections 6 and 6-A of the Constitution of Virginia. The Commission, tasked with establishing districts for the United States House of Representatives and for the Senate and the House of Delegates of the General Assembly, will consist of eight legislative commissioners and eight citizen commissioners. The legislative commissioners consist of four members of the Senate of Virginia and four members of the House of Delegates, with equal representation given to the political parties having the highest and next highest number of members in their respective houses. The citizen commissioners are chosen by a selection committee consisting of five retired judges of the circuit courts of Virginia, from lists submitted to the selection committee by the Speaker of the House of Delegates, the leader in the House of Delegates of the political party having the next highest number of members in the House of Delegates, the President pro tempore of the Senate of Virginia, and the leader in the Senate of the political party having the next highest number of members in the Senate. The bill contains eligibility requirements for the citizen commissioners, including restrictions on holding or having held partisan national or state public office. As part of the application process for service on the Commission, the Division of Legislative Services acts as a repository for applications submitted by interested persons and is tasked with screening out applicants who are ineligible or submit incomplete applications. The applications of the citizen candidates selected by political leadership and submitted for consideration to the selection committee are public records. The bill also directs the Division of Legislative Services to provide staff support to the Commission in the redistricting of congressional and state legislative districts. The Commission is required to submit to the General Assembly plans of districts within certain time periods, and the bill sets out criteria by which the districts are to be drawn, including equal population, racial and ethnic fairness, communities of interest, contiguity, and compactness. The bill prohibits a map of districts from unduly favoring or disfavoring any political party when considered on a statewide basis. The bill provides for the preparation and use of adjusted population data for redistricting and reapportionment purposes to reflect the reallocation of persons incarcerated in federal, state, and local correctional facilities. Persons incarcerated in such a facility whose address at the time of incarceration was in the Commonwealth are to be counted at that address and persons incarcerated in such a facility whose address at the time of incarceration was outside of the Commonwealth or cannot be determined are to be counted at the facility. Provisions to ensure public participation in the redistricting process are included. If efforts to establish districts fail, the Supreme Court of Virginia is responsible for establishing districts, and the bill directs the Court to enact rules and procedures for doing so. The rules and procedures enacted by the Court are required to allow public participation in the Court's redistricting deliberations, to provide for the Division of Legislative Services to provide staff support and technical assistance to the Court, and to ensure districts established by the Court adhere to constitutional and statutory criteria. The bill directs the Court to appoint two special masters to assist in the establishment of districts, from lists submitted by the legislative leaders of the majority and minority political parties. The bill has a contingent effective date of November 15, 2020, provided that the voters approve the amendments to Article II of the Constitution of Virginia, amending Section 6 and adding Section 6-A, at the November 2020 general election. Read the Bill »

Outcome

Bill Has Failed

History

DateAction
12/30/2019Prefiled and ordered printed; offered 01/08/20 20102515D
12/30/2019Referred to Committee on Privileges and Elections
01/29/2020Impact statement from DPB (SB203)
02/04/2020Reported from Privileges and Elections with substitute (13-Y 2-N) (see vote tally)
02/04/2020Committee substitute printed 20107237D-S1
02/04/2020Rereferred to Finance and Appropriations
02/06/2020Reported from Finance and Appropriations (15-Y 1-N) (see vote tally)
02/10/2020Constitutional reading dispensed (36-Y 0-N) (see vote tally)
02/10/2020Impact statement from DPB (SB203)
02/10/2020Impact statement from DPB (SB203S1)
02/11/2020Committee substitute agreed to (21-Y 19-N) (see vote tally)
02/11/2020Read second time
02/11/2020Reading of substitute waived
02/11/2020Committee substitute agreed to 20107237D-S1
02/11/2020Engrossed by Senate - committee substitute SB203S1
02/11/2020Engrossment reconsidered by Senate (39-Y 0-N) (see vote tally)
02/11/2020Committee substitute reconsidered (40-Y 0-N) (see vote tally)
02/11/2020Floor substitute printed 20108171D-S2 ( Vogel and Hanger)
02/11/2020Committee substitute agreed to 20107237D-S1 (21-Y 19-N) (see vote tally)
02/11/2020Constitutional reading dispensed (40-Y 0-N) (see vote tally)
02/11/2020Passed Senate (20-Y 20-N) (see vote tally)
02/11/2020Chair votes Yes
02/18/2020Placed on Calendar
02/18/2020Read first time
02/18/2020Referred to Committee on Privileges and Elections
02/21/2020House committee, floor amendments and substitutes offered
02/21/2020Reported from Privileges and Elections with amendment (16-Y 3-N) (see vote tally)
02/25/2020Read second time
02/26/2020Read third time
02/26/2020Committee amendment agreed to
02/26/2020Engrossed by House as amended
02/26/2020Passed House with amendment (86-Y 13-N)
02/26/2020VOTE: Passage (86-Y 13-N) (see vote tally)
02/28/2020Passed by for the day
03/02/2020House amendment rejected by Senate (0-Y 40-N) (see vote tally)
03/03/2020House insisted on amendment
03/03/2020House requested conference committee
03/04/2020Senate acceded to request (25-Y 15-N) (see vote tally)
03/04/2020Conferees appointed by Senate
03/04/2020Senators: Lucas, Barker, Ruff
03/05/2020Conferees appointed by House
03/05/2020Delegates: Simon, VanValkenburg, Price
03/07/2020Senate requested second conference committee (33-Y 5-N) (see vote tally)
03/08/2020House acceded to request for second conference committee
03/12/2020No further action taken
03/12/2020Failed to pass in Senate

Comments

Ronald N Quasebarth writes:

This is just thinly disquised partisan politics to create more gerrymandered districts to benefit the party in conrol.