Board Adopts New Supervisory Map
After jettisoning their independent process, the board adopted a new map during a marathon meeting Friday night.
The Milwaukee County Board adopted a new map of supervisory districts, which candidates to the county board will run on for the next decade.
But the work isn’t over yet. The board still has to transmit that map to municipalities in the county to draw election wards and their own legislative districts. Then the maps have to go back to the county board who holds a final vote of approval on the maps before they can be certified. For this reason, this map is technically considered the board’s “tentative” map.
If the county fails to certify maps in time for the spring 2022 election notices, which will be posted on Nov. 23, it will face an “acute risk for litigation”, according to county Corporation Counsel Margaret Daun, as candidates are forced to run on maps from the past decade.
The map approved by the board Friday was created by SEWRPC after the dissolution of the independent redistricting process. That process began in August and involved an Independent Redistricting Committee (IRC) made up of six retired judges.
The board voted on Oct. to reject the third and final map from the IRC, thus bringing the redistricting process under their authority. Though, the independence of the committee was diminished when supervisors forced it to violate its own redistricting principles and consider incumbency.
The primary concern of the IRC was always respect for the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Creating districts that allow racial and ethnic minorities was a concern that carried over into the board’s process, too. Specifically, the board sought to create six districts that had strong Black majorities.
First, the board considered a different map, called Map M. After a lengthy untangling of various opposing motions, adoption of the map failed on an 8-10 vote, with Supervisors Ryan Clancy, John Weishan, Jr., Tony Staskunas, Willie Johnson, Jr., Patti Logsdon, Shawn Rolland and Joe Czarnezki voting in favor of adoption.
After this vote was taken, Chairwoman Marcelia Nicholson left the meeting due to a previous commitment, she later returned to the meeting as the board was considering amendments to Map K1.
Map K1 has four majority Black districts where Black residents of voting age make up more than 60% of the population. Map M had five districts with a Black voting age population above 60%. The white majority in the influence district was larger in Map M.
There were seven amendments made to the map. The amendments adopted were named for the supervisors that proposed them and then later in the meeting assigned numbers. Four amendments passed the board.
Map K1 was adopted on a vote of 10 to 7. Supervisors Czarnezki, Johnson, Jr., Logsdon, Rolland, Staskunas, Sequanna Taylor and Weishan, Jr. voted against the map.
Staskunas First Amendment or Amendment 5
Staskunas told his colleagues this amendment was created to change Map K1 so that the City of West Allis was split into no more than two supervisory districts. It did not protect any incumbents, nor did it move them into a district.
Ortiz-Velez Amendment or Amendment 1
This amendment was drawn to put Chairwoman Nicholson in district 10 by herself, Ortiz-Velez told her colleagues. She said Nicholson would have to run, no matter where she is seated. She said she thought the voters should get to decide if they want to re-elect the first Afro-Latina elected as Chair of the county board.
The amendment passed, with Sup. Clancy, Rolland, Staskunas, Taylor, Weishan Jr. and Nicholson voting against it.
Nicholson told her colleagues before the vote that she did not ask for the amendment, nor for her incumbency to be protected.
A later amendment put forward by Johnson Jr. that would have put him into a district similar to the district he is in currently failed to pass, with many of the supervisors that voted to protect Nicholson’s incumbency voting against Johnson’s amendment. Johnson Jr. said the amendment was intended to draw the boundary of District 2 to respect the municipal boundary of the city of Milwaukee.
This amendment creating a district for Nicholson also slightly increased the white majority in the minority-influence district.
Staskunas Second Amendment or Amendment 2
This amendment, Staskunas said, was drawn to “square” the boundaries of West Allis, pulling a small section of District 6 down so it is south of Interstate 43.
Logsdon Amendment or Amendment 7
This amendment was created by Logsdon. She said it was intended to move more Franklin residents into district 17.
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More about the Milwaukee County redistricting process
- Op Ed: Muslim Community Needs Representation - Janan Najeeb - Jan 29th, 2022
- City Hall: Council Ends Redistricting With Anger, Tears - Jeramey Jannene - Jan 18th, 2022
- Statement from Milwaukee Mayor Cavalier Johnson - Mayor Cavalier Johnson - Jan 18th, 2022
- City Hall: Latino Leaders Could Sue Over Redistricting - Jeramey Jannene - Jan 14th, 2022
- Latinx Leaders Condemn Common Council’s Refusal to Draw New Districts Reflecting Dramatic Growth of Latinx Population; Demand Second Legal Opinion - Voces de la Frontera - Jan 14th, 2022
- Voces de la Frontera Statement on Redistricting Decision - Voces de la Frontera - Jan 11th, 2022
- Statement on redistricting decision - Ald. JoCasta Zamarripa - Jan 10th, 2022
- City Hall: Milwaukee Starts Over On Redistricting, Only To Adopt Same Map Again - Jeramey Jannene - Jan 10th, 2022
- Statement by Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett: - Mayor Tom Barrett - Dec 14th, 2021
- City Hall: Council Halts Redistricting After Latino Pushback - Jeramey Jannene - Dec 14th, 2021
Read more about Milwaukee County redistricting process here