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LA City Council committee plans to reform redistricting process

06.13.23

LOS ANGELES (KABC) -- In an effort to reimagine how it can better draw district lines, the Los Angeles City Council's Committee on Governance Reform will spend the next three months hearing input from L.A. residents.

Monday's committee meeting at city hall was the last of four before the council's summer recess. Previous meetings took place in Exposition Park, Van Nuys and Cheviot Hills.

People who have spoken are concerned about how district maps are drawn, whether they include or exclude certain neighborhoods or divide neighborhoods that are predominantly of a certain racial or socioeconomic group. Beyond the maps themselves being in question is the trust of those elected to help create them.

"Their own experience with local government has really demonstrated a lack of trust," said Alejandra Ponce de Leon, who works for the racial equity nonprofit Catalyst California and spoke before the committee. "There's fear of corruption."

October's leaked audio recordings riddled with current and former city council members using racial slurs is a clear example of how the redistricting process can pin cultures against each other.

Ponce de Leon believes everyone can get a fair district map, but changing the system to ensure fairness requires residents engage with it.

"How do we redesign the process so it's thinking about, 'What are the biggest barriers that our communities often face that keep them from participating? and how do we actually create opportunities that enable their participation?'" said Ponce de Leon.

Read the full ABC 7 article