Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 27, 2001, Page 3, Image 3

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    Redistricting
continued from page 1
Because the city council adopted
state criteria tor reassigning coun
cilors, the original Indigo choice
would have moved Bettman from her
current Ward 3 to Ward 4, north of the
Willamette River. The state policy
dictates that the representative with
the highest number of constituents in
the district remain assigned there.
Bettman, who currently repre
sents the West University neighbor
hood and a large part of the Univer
sity campus, will now become the
councilor in the new Ward 1 in
South Eugene.
The resolution follows eight
months of work on the new districts
bv planners and council members,
who did not always see a clear end
to the task.
“It has been a painstaking, long
and at times painful process,”
Councilor Scott Meisner said.
The other option before the coun
cil was the Violet-A scenario, which
would have varied the least from
current boundaries.
“It seems the councilors right now
pretty much represent their ward and
the will of their district,” Carol Fein
berg-McBrian said, who spoke dur
ing the meeting's public forum. “I
urge you to consider the Violet option
because it seems to reinforce that. ”
Resident Nick Urhausen said that
incumbency should never have been
a part of the council’s reasoning.
“The city councilors are sup
University of Oregon
New city ward boundaries
The Eugene City Council redrew district boundaries
Monday. The new ward, distinguished below with
shading and numbers, will be used for the
next 10 years.
0 6200 ft
Russell Weller Emerald
posed to be here for the voters,” he
said. “The councilors are expend
able. Not any one of them deserves
the guarantee of a seat.”
The council redraws the bound
aries every decade based on new pop
ulation figures from the U.S. Census.
Eugene grew about 22 percent in the
last decade, with Wards 5 and 6 grow
ing the most in size. These wards are
north of the Willamette River, in the
Santa Clara and Cal Young/Coburg
Road neighborhoods.
“We need a plan that more fairly
divides up the area,” Nathanson
said. “I want a plan that has the
long-term best interests of the city.”
The new ward boundaries must
be in place by Jan. 1,2002.
Sue Ryan is a community reporter for the
Oregon Daily Emerald. She can be reached
at sueryan@dailyemerald.com.
News brief
Professors, psychologist
speak on Afghanistan
A public forum on possible reso
lutions to the situation in
Afghanistan will be held at 7 p.m.
today at the First United Methodist
— i -
Church, 1376 Olive St.
Community Alliance for Lane
County is sponsoring the session,
which includes three speakers.
Martin Hart-Landsberg and Zaher
Wahab, both professors at Lewis
and Clark College in Portland, will
speak about the government’s ap
proach to the conflict in
Afghanistan and ideas for resolving
it. Dr. Carl Peterson, a psychologist
in Eugene, will talk about the trau
ma in New York City following the
events of Sept. 11. He recently visit
ed the city to counsel workers.
— Sue Ryan
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