A4 THE ASTORIAN • TuESdAy, SEpTEmbER 14, 2021 OPINION editor@dailyastorian.com KARI BORGEN publisher DERRICK DePLEDGE Editor Founded in 1873 SHANNON ARLINT Circulation manager JOHN D. BRUIJN production manager CARL EARL Systems manager GUEST COLUMN How will redistricting affect you? I had just parked outside a cafe in downtown Tillamook when state Rep. David Gomberg happened to call. When I casually mentioned my location, Gomberg commented that I was barely a block outside his legisla- tive district. Say what? Small-town Tillamook is divided. Gomberg, D-Otis, and Sen. Dick Anderson, R-Lincoln City, repre- sent the southern part of Tillamook County. Rep. Suzanne Weber, R-Til- lamook, and Sen. Betsy Johnson, D-Scappoose, DICK represent the northern HUGHES portion. That division came about when the 2011 Legislature rejig- gered Oregon’s 90 legislative and five congressional districts to balance popu- lation changes from the 2010 census. As is constitutionally required, the Legislature is at it again with new num- bers from the 2020 census. As one example of how this affects Oregonians, here is how the three pro- posals released this month might alter District 10, which Gomberg represents. The district runs along Lincoln and Til- lamook counties but goes inland to parts of Polk and Yamhill counties, including Sheridan and Falls City. The plan put forth by the Oregon Senate redistricting committee would remove Tillamook, Polk and Yamhill counties and bring in western Benton and Lane counties as far south as Flor- ence. The House Democrats’ plan also would drop Polk and Yamhill counties, not go as far south but add Yachats, the rest of the city of Tillamook and coastal Tillamook County. The House Republi- cans’ plan would add Yachats and more of the western Willamette Valley. Which is best for residents? Would their influence at the Legislature be strengthened or diluted? Which political party would benefit, although theoreti- cally that’s not supposed to matter? Like many of his colleagues, Gomberg recently wrote to constituents about the relevance of redistricting: “We presently have four districts in the Oregon House that stretch primar- ily along our coast. But imagine for a moment if Florence were paired with Eugene, Newport and Toledo with Cor- vallis, Lincoln City with Salem and Til- lamook with McMinnville. We’d essen- tially have more Valley-dominated districts and coastal voices would be diminished. “To some degree that is the case now with Sheridan, Grand Ronde and Falls Salem Reporter State lawmakers are redrawing political boundaries. STATE LAW dECREES, ‘NO dISTRICT SHALL bE dRAWN FOR THE puRpOSE OF FAVORING ANy pOLITICAL pARTy, INCumbENT LEGISLATOR OR OTHER pERSON.’ THuS, GERRymANdERING IS ILLEGAL. IT HAppENS ANyWAy. STATE ANd CONGRESSIONAL LAWmAKERS WANT dISTRICTS CREATEd THAT ENHANCE THEIR REELECTION ANd THEIR pARTy’S CONTROL. City, which were added to our House district 10 years ago. I visit them and advocate for them as much as I can. But it is an hour from the coast to Falls City in Polk County and I have to drive out of the district through Dallas to get there. They are frustrated. They don’t feel they belong in a ‘coastal’ district and I understand that.” The rub is that each of Oregon’s 60 state House districts must be roughly equal in population. The same holds true for the 30 state Senate districts and the six congressional districts. The big- gest battle will be where to put that sixth congressional district that Oregon has gained with the 2020 census. State law decrees, “No district shall be drawn for the purpose of favoring any political party, incumbent legislator or other person.” Thus, gerrymandering is illegal. It happens anyway. State and congressio- nal lawmakers want districts created that enhance their reelection and their par- ty’s control. Oregon Congressmen Peter DeFazio and Kurt Schrader made national news for complaining that state House Speaker Tina Kotek, D-Portland, surren- dered Democrats’ advantage when she put an equal number of D’s and R’s on the House redistricting committee. State law calls for districts “as nearly as practicable” to be internally contig- uous, have equal population, use cur- rent geographic or political boundaries, be connected by transportation links and not divide “communities of common interest.” Urban areas generally have grown in population, so rural legisla- tive districts must expand in order to have as many residents. Again, tak- ing Gomberg’s district as an exam- ple, should it grow to the north, east or south? Which of the current and poten- tial towns constitute communities of common interest? Similar scenarios are playing out across the state. Rep. Shelly Boshart Davis, R-Albany, is co-chair of the House redistricting committee. She rep- resents House District 15, which is cen- tered on Linn County. The House Republicans’ proposal most closely would follow existing boundaries. The House Democrats’ plan divides the Greater Albany School Dis- trict. The Senate’s plan would add part of Marion County, including some of south Salem, and remove part of Linn County. As for the potential boundaries for congressional districts, the competing proposals play to partisan desires — although proponents contend they’re not gerrymandering. We’re left with a series of questions: 1. How much gerrymandering will ultimately occur, albeit under the guise of common-sense decision-making? 2. Will the Legislature actually meet in special session on Sept. 20 to act on redistricting proposals? 3. Will lawmakers and Gov. Kate Brown agree on a plan? Or, as has hap- pened almost always, will it be left to the courts to set congressional boundar- ies and Oregon’s secretary of state, lib- eral Shemia Fagan, to draw legislative districts? 4. In the meantime, what effect, if any, will the public testimony at the online hearings and individual Ore- gonians’ boundary proposals have on legislators? 5. Who will win and lose? What com- munities will be segmented? Which leg- islators will be edged out of their current districts? 6. As cities and school boards eventu- ally take up local redistricting to equal- ize population numbers, how will the resulting boundary changes in wards and zones affect local elections? In short, from city hall to Capitol Hill, how will redistricting determine who represents you? Will you be more likely or less likely to elect someone who represents your views? dick Hughes has been covering the Oregon political scene since 1976. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Do our part R emember the relief we felt at the beginning of the summer, as we began visiting family and friends and enjoy- ing our favorite recreational activities? We could be at that place again in a few months, if we would all get vaccinated as soon as we are eligible ( unless there is a medical reason not to be vaccinated) and wear masks in crowded public places until then. The minor pinprick of vaccination and the temporary inconvenience of wear- ing a mask are a negligible price to pay for the freedom to gather without infect- ing each other with a potentially deadly disease. If we would all do our part, we could look forward to celebrating our favorite winter holidays this year with the added joy of leaving this COVID ordeal behind us. DEBRA LIVINGSTON Astoria Pleased to hear B ecause of the recent surge of COVID cases, I have been reluctant to dine inside in a restaurant, so I was pleased to hear that Carruthers is requiring proof of vaccination. I appreciate that this restaurant is doing its best to create a safe environment for its staff and customers. Great food, too! KATE DARLING Astoria A pledge T he opinion page of The Astorian has appealed with cogent reasoning to a broad number of persons to reconsider their unwillingness to be vaccinated. With this letter, I’m appealing to one single person — a longtime good friend. I asked him a couple of months ago whether his reluctance to get vaccinated is based on his religious belief or his political ori- entation. He told me it was not his belief, as the leaders of his particular religion got their shots early on. The friend said he did not care for “(Dr. Anthony) Fauci and his gang.” When his late mom was lying on her deathbed, she asked my wife and me to continue to be her son’s steady friends as we had been in the past. We pledged our loyalty. We now ask him to consider whether his continued loyalty to perceived politi- cal principles is of a higher nature than to serve his fellow human beings from the imminent dangers to their lives by set- ting an example. If the human commit- ment is secondary to personal political convictions, how can our friend reconcile his personal obstinacy with the scriptural demands that he professes to follow? We pledged our loyalty to his mom and her son. Now we appeal to him to pro- tect his own life and the lives of his fellow human beings. ERHARD GROSS Astoria