The BulleTin • Tuesday, april 27, 2021 A5 District Which states will gain seats in Congress based on 2020 Census data? Continued from A1 Gained Lost No change Gov. Kate Brown said the strong turnout in Oregon to answer the census ensured that Ore- gon’s voice will be amplified in federal decisions. Brown released a statement praising the “great news” of the additional seat. “Thanks to everyone who participated in the 2020 Census to make sure you were counted,” Brown said. Oregon’s new seat was in apportionment, the +2 reassignment of the 435 congressional seats after each census. The census reports Oregon’s 2020 population Source: Census Bureau is just under 4.24 million, up from 3.83 million in 2010. Oregon’s 10.6% increase was well above the of State Shemia Fagan, while congressional seats national population growth of 7.4%, the slowest would be determined by a special judicial panel. rate since the 1940 census that came after the The deadline under that scenario is Oct. 18 to Great Depression. complete maps. With legal challenges, the Ore- Bend had the largest population growth in gon Supreme Court has set Feb. 7, 2022, as the Oregon — about 25% — over the past decade. latest date for maps to be finalized. That leaves The other largest concentration of growth one month until the March 8, 2022, deadline for was the ring of suburbs around Portland, with candidates to file for the May 17 primary. Gresham, Troutdale, Sandy, Estacada, Beaver- If Fagan’s or the judges’ maps are found want- ton, Tigard, Newberg and St. Helens all posting ing under legal review, the Oregon Supreme strong growth. Court would draw the lines itself. The sixth congressional dis- The state House and Senate “The Legislature’s trict is the first new seat for Ore- have redistricting committees gon since the 1980 census. will work on the maps. But majority, governor and that Five other states received addi- their makeup is currently politi- tional seats. Texas gets two more secretary of state are cally asymmetrical. seats. Colorado, Florida, Montana, a deal this month to all Democrats. More end Under North Carolina each received one. a Republican slowdown of California lost a seat for the than 50% of the Oregon legislation, House Speaker Tina first time in state history. It will Kotek, D-Portland, named Mi- Supreme Court has still have the largest delegation, nority Leader Christine Drazan, with 52 seats. as a sixth member of been appointed by this R-Canby, Also losing a seat were New the House panel. The move gives York, Illinois, Michigan, Ohio, governor. We are at high the Republicans parity on the Pennsylvania and West Virginia. with Democrats. risk of gerrymandering. committee In an announcement that has Drazan said having an equal political leaders promising to They have the power, vote on the committee was cru- take action against the count, cial given the Democrats’ politi- but we’ll be able to New York fell just 89 people short cal dominance of all facets of the of keeping all its seats. process. question how it is done.” reapportionment Democrats currently hold “The Legislature’s majority, a 218-212 majority in the U.S. governor and secretary of state — House Minority Leader House. Five seats are vacant. Or- are all Democrats,” Drazan said. Christine Drazan, R-Canby, egon currently has four Demo- “More than 50% of the Oregon about a recent agreement crats and one Republican in its Supreme Court has been ap- regarding membership on House delegation. pointed by this governor. We are the chamber’s redistricting Each U.S. House member will at high risk of gerrymandering. committee now represent 761,169 people, up They have the power, but we’ll be about 50,000 people from 2010. able to question how it is done.” Numbers in each district can vary slightly. Still up in the air is how the House committee Still to come is dividing up the districts within will work with the Senate’s, which has retained a each state. Oregon currently has four Democrats 3-2 Democratic majority and has Sen. Kathleen and one Republican in the House. Taylor, D-Milwaukie, as chair. Oregon is among 33 states where the Legis- A constitutional quirk allows congressional lature controls all or most of the process. Eight candidates to skirt the residency requirements of states — including California and Washington most political offices. — use independent commissions to draw the The Constitution requires that members of maps. Two do a mix. the House be at least 25 years old, have been a The disruption of the census count amid the U.S. citizen for at least seven years, and live in COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted redistrict- the state they represent, but not the district they ing in most states. are running in. In Oregon, the timelines for the Legislature The result has led to frequent “district shop- to receive census data needed to draw congres- ping” for congressional districts across the coun- sional and legislative lines that meet civil rights try, especially by candidates who are squeezed and voting rights requirements has shifted from out of their seats under reapportionment. April 1 to late August or September. One name to take out of the mix for Oregon’s The delay means the state will blow past most new congressional seat is Brown’s, according of the established deadlines for creating and ap- to her longtime political consultant Thomas proving legislative and congressional maps. Wheatley. He said Monday after the census an- The Oregon Supreme Court ruled April 9 that nouncement that Brown is not interested in run- the Legislature will have until Sept. 27 to submit ning for the seat. maps for the state House and Senate seats, as “I don’t even see a crack,” of interest from well as congressional districts. Brown, Wheatley said. “She’s got a lot on her If lawmakers cannot agree on new districts, plate as it is.” legislative districts would be drawn by Secretary e e gwarner@eomediagroup.com NATIONAL BRIEFING California governor recall has enough signatures Organizers of the recall ef- fort against California Gov. Gavin Newsom collected enough valid signatures to qualify for the ballot, state election officials said Monday, likely triggering just the second such election in state history. “The people of California have done what the politicians thought would be impossible,” said Orrin Heatlie, the retired county sheriff’s sergeant who launched the recall effort last year. “Our work is just begin- ning. Now the real campaign is about to commence.” Heatlie spearheaded the signature collection effort that began last June and then picked up momentum in the fall as frustration grew over Newsom’s coronavirus-related actions. The California secre- tary of state’s office said more than 1.6 million signatures had been deemed valid as of Mon- day, about 100,000 more than required. People who signed petitions now have 30 days to withdraw their signatures, though it’s unlikely enough will do so to stop the question from going to voters. Justice Department opens probe over Breonna Taylor The Justice Department is opening a sweeping probe into policing in Louisville, Ken- tucky, over the March 2020 death of Breonna Taylor, who was shot to death by police during a raid at her home, Attorney General Merrick Young adults relocate — and reshape political geography More Americans are avoiding California and New York — long considered desirable — with implications for Oregon and other states BY NICHOLAS RICCARDI AND MIKE SCHNEIDER Associated Press Garima Vyas always wanted to live in a big city. She thought about New York, long the desti- nation for 20-something striv- ers, but was wary of the cost and complicated subway lines. So Vyas picked another metropolis that’s increasingly become young people’s next- best option — Houston. Now 34, Vyas, a tech worker, has lived in Houston since 2013. “I knew I didn’t like New York, so this was the next best thing,” Vyas said. “There are a lot of things you want to try when you are younger — you want to try new things. Houston gives you that, whether it’s food, people or dating. And it’s cheap to live in.” The choices by Vyas and other members of the millen- nial generation of where to live have reshaped the country’s political geography over the past decade. They’ve left New York and California and set- tled in places less likely to be settings for TV sitcoms about 20-something urbanites, in- cluding Denver, Houston and Orlando, Florida. Drawn by jobs and overlooked cultural amenities, they’ve helped add new craft breweries, condo- miniums and liberal voters to these once more-conservative places. The 2020 Census confirms those trends. The U.S. Census Bureau re- leased data Monday on U.S. population shifts, which affect how congressional seats are apportioned among the states every 10 years. Oregon gained one seat, Texas two; four other states also gained a seat each; and other states, mostly in the north but notably including California, lost seats. The relocations have reshuf- fled politics. Once solidly con- servative places such as Texas have seen increasingly large islands of liberalism sprout in their cities, driven by the migration of younger adults, who lean Democratic. Since 2010, the 20-to-34-year-old population has increased by 24% in San Antonio, 22% in Austin and 19% in Houston, according to an Associated Press analysis of American Community Survey data. In November’s election, two states that also saw sharp growth in young people in their largest cities — Arizona and Georgia — flipped Democratic in the presidential contest. Not just the weather These demographic win- ners are almost all in the Sun Belt, but climate is not the only thing they have in com- mon. “These places are grow- Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP Demonstrators call for a recall of California Gov. Gavin Newsom in Hun- tington Beach in November. California is likely headed for its second recall of a governor in state history. Garland announced Monday. It’s the second such probe into a law enforcement agency by the Biden administration in a week; Garland also an- nounced an investigation into the tactics of the police in Min- neapolis following the death of George Floyd. The attorney general has said there is not yet equal justice under the law and promised to bring a critical eye to racism and legal issues when he took the job. Few such investigations were opened during the Trump administra- tion. The 26-year-old Taylor, an emergency medical techni- cian who had been studying to become a nurse, was roused from sleep by police who came through the door using a bat- tering ram. Her boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, fired once. A no-knock warrant was ap- proved as part of a narcotics investigation. No drugs were found at her home. Supreme Court to take up right to carry firearms The Supreme Court agreed on Monday to hear an appeal to expand gun rights in the United States in a New York case over the right to carry a firearm in public for self-defense. The case marks the court’s first foray into gun rights since Justice Amy Coney Barrett came on board in October, making a 6-3 conser- vative majority. New York is among eight states that limit who has the right to carry a weapon in pub- lic. The others are California, Delaware, Hawaii, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey and Rhode Island. In the rest of the country, gun owners have little trouble legally carrying their weapons when they go out. Federal courts have largely upheld New York’s permit lim- its. — Bulletin wire reports David Zalubowski/AP “This is just a really great place to be,” says Sydney Kramer, a grad- uate student at the University of Colorado, pictured on campus in Boulder on Friday. The 23-year-old moved here from Miami to begin graduate studies in atmospheric and oceanic sciences in January. ing not just because they’re warmer — it’s because that’s where the jobs are and young people are moving there,” said Ryan Wiechelt, a geography professor at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire. There are other drivers of population growth, such as immigration from overseas and childbirths. But as for- eign immigration tapered off during the decade, then plum- meted during the pandemic, internal relocations have be- come an increasingly big factor in how the country is re-sort- ing itself, demographers say. Places with jobs have long attracted transplants, but this shift has been different because housing prices have risen so much in previous job clusters — Boston, New York and Sili- con Valley, for example — that cost of living has become more of a factor in relocations, said Daryl Fairweather, chief econ- omist for Redfin. “Since the last housing cri- sis, young millennials have had to move to places with re- ally strong job markets,” Fair- weather said. “Now, during the pandemic I think that is changing — you don’t have to move to San Francisco if you want a job in tech.” Plenty of young people still move to traditional destina- tions such as New York and California to start careers, experts say. They just leave them relatively quickly now, with a wider variety of alter- native job centers to choose from. “Every year these places attract a lot of young people, but they lose more,” William Frey, a demographer at the Brookings Institute, said of traditional, coastal job mag- nets, joking that his own hometown of Washington, D.C. “rents” young people. The case for Colorado Instead, places with both cheaper housing, growing economies and recreational amenities have become pop- ular. Colorado — which will gain a seat in Congress, based on Monday’s data — was the third-most popular place for young adults to relocate to since 2015, gaining more than 20,000 new young adults from elsewhere each year, accord- ing to Frey’s analysis of early census data. The state has boomed over the past decade as its libertarian lifestyle, out- door attractions and growing knowledge-based economy have drawn young people from across the country. As a result, Denver’s skyline is regularly pockmarked with construction cranes. Apart- ment complexes are spring- ing up from parking lots. For when those renters want to have children and buy homes, waves of new suburban sub- divisions are emerging in the shadow of the Front Range of the Rocky Mountains. As mostly college-educated transplants have relocated to Denver and its satellite com- munities, Colorado has gone from being a solidly Repub- lican state to a competitive swing state to a solidly Dem- ocratic one. It’s a pattern that some political experts expect could be replicated in other states importing loads of young people, even tradition- ally conservative Texas. Sydney Kramer is typical of many new Colorado arrivals. The 23-year-old moved to the university town of Boulder in January to begin graduate studies in atmospheric and oceanic sciences. She could have stayed in Miami, a nat- ural location for someone of her interests and where she finished her undergraduate studies. But Kramer was de- pressed by Florida’s anti-sci- ence turn under Republican state control. “The government and pol- icy hasn’t necessarily caught up there yet,” Kramer said of Florida, noting that state reg- ulations barred the use of the term “climate change” in some official documents under the previous governor. “Every- body here has a high level of education, is really educated about climate change.” “This,” she said of Boulder, with its wealth of environ- mental and forecasting orga- nizations, “is just a really great place to be for my industry.” A New Jersey native who did not want to deal with New York City’s high rents, Kramer has been impressed by how her new neighbors talk excitedly about hiking, camping and ski- ing and at the combination of outdoor activities and urban amenities the area offers. “It’s a really wonderful place to be for everything you get for the cost of living,” she said.