Setting boundaries for 2022 council elections

The city is in the middle of its decennial redistricting effort, to realign city council district boundaries to equalize the size of the various districts. City Clerk Zeb Navarro visited South O on Jan. 25, to highlight the 2022 redistricting effort for the bimonthly meeting of the South Oceanside Community and Merchants Association.

On Wednesday Feb. 2, the hearings and workshops will make their only appearance in South O’s district (District 3), in a 6pm workshop at Lincoln Middle School, 2000 California St., Oceanside.

As in previous years, the boundaries must be set (according to state law) to have similar population, contiguous territory, follow natural boundaries, and respect communities of interest.

City Council District boundaries, 2017-2021

When the first districts were picked in 2017 — in response to a threatened lawsuit by a shakedown lawyer — Save South O was involved in the process. In the midst of South O’s (largely successful) fight against imposing the Coast Highway “Road Diet” on South O, we asked to be placed in a different district than Seaside/Townsite, where residents sought the Road Diet (less cars, less road capacity, more walking/bikes). That desire was granted, in that the northern boundary of District 3 is Oceanside Blvd, and almost all of the area South of Oceanside Blvd. is in District 3.

District 3 is now the biggest district in the city and nearly 5% too big. The city’s 174,578 residents call for four districts of approximately 43,645 residents, so any approved plan must shed (about) 1,968 residents from District 3. (Under US law, districts are determined by residents and not voters).

Because Communities of Interest are an important (and difficult to define) construct, residents are encouraged to use the process to submit their own boundaries for Communities of Interest (COI) that should be used in setting boundaries. The city uses this definition:

A COI is a group of people in a defined geographic location that share a common bond or interest. A Community of Interest is defined as “a contiguous population which shares common social and economic interests that should be included within a single district for purposes of fair and effective representation.” Please tell us what defines your Community of Interest, where it is located, and why it should stay together.

For example, most South O residents would consider South O and the West side of Fire Mountain to share a Community of Interest — in terms of schools, traffic, freeway access, and shopping.

If possible, residents should attend Wednesday’s hearing. No matter what, residents are encouraged to submit their information (using the city’s process) no later than Feb. 10, so that it is considered in making the initial draft maps.

Picking Oceanside’s council districts

As a result of allegations made by a Malibu attorney, the City of Oceanside is moving to split the city into four districts (of approximately 40,000 residents each), starting with the 2018 elections. To collect feedback from residents, the city solicited emails and held five public workshops last month, and three maps have been developed from those workshops.

At its June 21 council meeting, the council is slated to select exactly one of those maps, which will be formally approved at the July 25 council meeting. The item is fourth public hearing item (which start at 6 p.m.), and the agenda packet is 06-21-17 SR 38. The hearing will be held in the council chambers, on Pier View Way between Freeman and Ditmar; information on emailing the council is found at the council web page.

All three maps keep South O together with Fire Mountain. Two of the maps — “Communities of Interest” and “Neighborhood” — combine South O with the entire Hwy 78 corridor. The third map (“Shoreline Intact”) combines South O with downtown, Townsite and the Harbor. The maps are shown below.

COI_MapN_MapSI_Map

Learning about district elections

The city will be conducting a series of workshops on its plans for electing four council members by districts. This comes after a 3-2 vote in favor of district elections, despite objections from local residents.

The city has created a website explaining the process. It will hold five public worships (“community meetings”) where the city will discuss its plans for district elections:

  1. May 13 (noon): Balderrama Recreation Center, 709 San Diego Street, Oceanside, CA 92058
  2. May 16 (6 p.m.): El Corazon Senior Center, 3302 Senior Center Drive, Oceanside, CA 92056
  3. May 20 (2 p.m.): Bishop Recreation Center, 5306 N. River Road, Oceanside, CA 92057
  4. May 23 (6 p.m.): Lake Elementary School, 4950 Lake Boulevard, Oceanside, CA 92056
  5. May 30 (6 p.m.): Civic Center Library Community Rooms, 330 N. Coast Highway, Oceanside, CA 92054

The alignment of the districts will determine both who South O shares a council member with, but also what influence we have — depending on whether the others have compatible or conflicting interests. All South O residents are encouraged to attend one of the workshops.