Wednesday, September 15, 2021

COVID Crisis In Anchorage Hospitals

 As some of you know, in addition to my regular posting here, I also do daily updates of Alaska COVID stats in a tab above which also has a chart of those number going back to March 15, 2020.  Those reports were filling up this regular blog post space, so I pushed them into the tab.  But every now and then I spill over from just reviewing the new numbers to adding additional context.  That happened today as we hit a new pandemic  high for new resident cases and for Test Positivity. And the number of COVID patients in our hospitals is only slightly below Monday's all time high.  So I'm copying today's Alaska COVID update here.

Wednesday, September 15, 2021 - We need a new way of classifying insane.  Doctors from Providence Medical Center testified at the Assembly that we are in a health crisis and that 30% of their patients are COVID positive and require much more intensive care, and people jeered them and Assembly Member Allard questioning the veracity of their testimony.

From Hrrrl Scouts Twitter coverage of Assembly


They Mayor of Anchorage is quoted in the Anchorage Daily News today as having said last week that "hospital capacity issues weren't caused byCOVID-19 patients but nurses leaving their jobs over vaccination requirements."  I'm going to believe the doctor's knowledge about the hospital crisis over the Mayor's undocumented claims.

Meanwhile we have two more deaths reported today (nine reported in the last three days.)  18 more hospitalizations.  201(34) COVID patients in the hospital- one less overall from yesterday, but one more on vents.  Is it an improvement when we gain a hospital bed because two people died?  

1064/1068 new resident cases.  That's another  2021 record.  It's a pandemic record period for one day.  (If you scroll through the chart above you'll see some higher numbers in that column - but those are for more than one day (usually Mondays when three days are reported.)  27 new non-resident cases. 

Over 11,700 tests, a fairly high one day number, yet the Test Positivity went up from 9.1 to 9.62.  A couple of notes here.  1)  Test Positivity is on a rolling seven day average.  So, even though yesterday it reported 9.1, today it reports (for 9/13/21) 9.57. Adding today's high number and dropping off the number eight days ago, raises all the numbers.  and 2) Test Positivity is the percent of people tested who test positive.  So if the Test Positivity is high, it means you should test more.  I said 'yet' above because 11,000 tests is higher then normal for one day, but the number still went up.  We should be testing more.  But the staffing to do all the contact tracing is probably not available for this level of infection.  


I'm not including the chart.  You can see that at the Alaska Daily COVID-19 Count 3 - May 2021 - ???  above.  

Tuesday, September 14, 2021

Alaska Redistricting Board Appears To Take A Partisan Turn

The Alaska Redistricting Board has publicly, up to now, acted as a reasonable, non-partisan body working on remapping Alaska's state House and Senate districts (there's only one member of Congress from Alaska, so there's only one statewide district for that.)  Although I've quibbled over some of their executive sessions because I thought that they probably covered issues that were not required or allowed to be in executive session, I think the chair, John Binkley has been pretty open about taking lots of public testimony at meetings, about chastising the Board about talking about Board issues when not on the record, and even having rejecting one Board member's request for an executive session to discuss her problems with how he was handling the board.  Instead he had her make her comments publicly during a Board meeting .

The Board also agreed, according to Board executive director, Peter Torkelson, that they would not have any partisan data in the board's official software.  And that they had agreed that "protecting incumbents" would not be one of their guidelines.  [See end of Part 4 in this June 25, 2021 blog post.]

But after the two Board proposed draft plans came out publicly, it looks like they also should have had another guideline:  No trying to get rid of incumbents.  

Soon after the maps came out, @Alaskanrobby posted the following analysis of the maps on Twitter:

 I can't seem to copy the whole thread in one embed, so I'm putting up several of the tweets.  In one case it seems I've had to repeat one tweet because it was connected to two others.   You can see the whole thread and all the maps at the @Alaskanrobby link above. 


This map with the one side box along the highway seems to reenact the attempt in the 2010 redistricting to cut Scott Kawaski's house from his district in a similar cutout.  But apparently the people who tried that found Scott's sister's address in the phonebook (it was listed as S. Kawasaki and her name is Sonia).  If this is true, it would expose Board Member Bethany Marcum's almost fanatic zeal to eliminate all protrusions on Matsu maps as hypocritical, since this protrusion got left in and, according to Alaskanrobby, it's what pulls Hannan out of her old district.  

The title of this post includes "Appears to."   I don't know that Marcum was involved with the SE maps - she was definitely focused on Matsu, Fairbanks, and Anchorage.  And I haven't independently verified @Alaskanrobby's maps.  And while I've dm'd @Alaskanrobby, I haven't heard back.  

These are only proposed plans.  There are sixty days from the proposal (until Nov 9, 2021 I think) to get feedback from around the state and for the Board to make adjustments and present its final proclamation.  And if things are still serious problems, groups and/or individuals can sue the board to get the maps changed.  

I'm trying to identify where there is a ban against gerrymandering.  In a March 17, 2011 post I listed all the parameters then Board attorney Michael White identified for the Board to follow. Among the federal parameters I've got down was   "No political or racial gerrymandering."  But I'm not sure where exactly that comes from.  The document I linked to is no longer available.

All About Redistricting was developed by Loyola Marymount professor Justin Levitt* [Be sure to see note below].  Partisan gerrymandering is tricky. Its section on partisanship begins like this:

"Most scholarly and popular attention to redistricting has to do with the partisan outcome of the process, though partisan impacts are hardly the only salient impacts.

The federal constitution puts few practical limits on redistricting bodies. Individual districts can be drawn to favor or disfavor candidates of a certain party, or individual incumbents or challengers (indeed, the Court has explicitly blessed lines drawn to protect incumbents, and even those drawn for a little bit of partisan advantage).  As for the district plan as a whole, the Supreme Court has unanimously stated that excessive partisanship in the process is unconstitutional, but the Court has also said that federal courts cannot hear claims of undue partisanship because of an inability to decide how much is “too much.”

State law, however, increasingly restricts undue partisanship.  In 2010, only eight states directly regulated partisan outcomes in the redistricting process (as opposed to attempting to achieve compromise or balance through the structure of the redistricting body); now, the constitutions or statutes of 19 states speak to the issue for state legislative districts, and 17 states do the same for congressional districts."

*[Prof. Justin Levitt is currently on leave from Loyola and serving as White House Senior Policy Advisor for Democracy and Voting Rights.  He is NOT the Justin Levitt who serves on the team that was contracted by the Board to review the Board's plan's compliance with the Federal Voting Rights Act (VRA).]

I've been trying to find a good gerrymandering site that gives lots of common methods of gerrymandering.  Here's a link to a post and video from 2018.  There's also a link to an online redistricting game you can play that shows ways to gerrymander.  

What I don't recall seeing in the gerrymandering literature is a distinction between targeting voters (playing with the voters in the district) and targeting politicians.  The Wikipedia gerrymandering article does talk about 'kidnapping' which would describe what the Juneau map is alleged to do to Rep. Hannan.  The other key approach is to put a bunch of incumbents of the 'enemy' party into one district, forcing them to run against each other.  That's what is happening in the new Anchorage district that is purported to put Reps. Claman, Drummond, and Field into one district.  

Let the battles begin.  Did the partisan gerrymanderers show their hands too soon?   

I don't think this posts wraps up neatly, but then maybe it reflects where we ae in the process.  And things are about to get a lot more confusing.  


Made It To Bangkok Today - Sort Of


My summer biking goal was to make it from Chiang Mai to Bangkok - 745 km or 462 miles.  But we haven't been out of Alaska since early March 2020.  So this was a way to set a target distance and imagine now and then, as I biked along Anchorage bike trails, the rice paddies, the temples, the markets, and the smiles of Thailand.  Here's the post from May describing the trip and the background.

I scrounged through some old boxes of slides.  I didn't want to give you something stereotypically Bangkok and my old slides and pictures are well hidden away in the closets.  But here are two pictures that mean something to me.


My third year in Thailand I lived in Thonburi, right across the river from Bangkok and the royal palace.  To get to and from my room, in a school near the river, I had to take the little ferry that crossed the Chao Phaya.  It cost 50 satang - or half a baht.  In those days the baht was 20 to the dollar if I remember right, so it was about 2.5 cents.  It took about ten minutes to get on board, cross, and get off.  It was like changing from one world into another.  A relaxation chamber as we crossed the water.  The picture is of that ferry from Tha Chang (tha means pier, and chang means elephant, so essentially the elephant pier) on the Bangkok side of the river.  These two pictures are from 1969.  


Below is a very typical Thai scene.  A monk, in the morning, going house to house giving everyone a chance to gain merit by scooping some rice into his bowl as well as other dishes to go with rice.  The monks didn't eat after noon.  I'm pretty sure this was when I was staying at Thai colleague's house right on a small canal.  When I stayed with them, bathing was in the canal.  This was before the widespread use of chemical fertilizers and other pollutants.  



And below is what it really looked like on my ride today as fall begins in Anchorage.  This is out near Campbell Airstrip.  The red leaves of low ground cover.   



I still have time before the snow flies to get some more biking in, but it's nice to make my target.  My knees will be happy when I cut back my biking.  But I'll miss it.  


Sunday, September 12, 2021

Who lost America?

 Wikipedia tells us that 

"Dawn is the largest and oldest English-language newspaper in Pakistan and the country's newspaper of record.[3]"

A Pakistani friend of mine sent me a link to this Dawn piece - Who Lost America? - today .  I don't think there is anything too startling in here for people who pay attention and have opened their minds to the views of people of different cultures.  Here's a brief bio of the author from the Middle East Institute:

Touqir Hussain is a former senior diplomat from Pakistan who has served as Ambassador to Brazil, Spain, and Japan. He also held senior positions in the Pakistani Foreign Office, including that of Additional Foreign Secretary, heading the bureaus of the Middle East and of the Americas and Europe. From 1996 to 1998, he was the Diplomatic Adviser to the Prime Minister. Additionally, he was a Senior Fellow at the US Institute of Peace in 2004–2005, and subsequently has been a Research Fellow at the George Washington University and an Adjunct Professor at Georgetown University and the University of Virginia. Currently, he is Senior Pakistan Visiting Fellow at SAIS besides teaching at Georgetown.

Here are several excerpts:

"At its heart, the loss is of democracy at home and hegemony abroad. For much of its history, American democracy has been led by elites. The system helped America’s rise as a great power but worked only when the elites were committed to public service, and the United States led the world. But much has changed. Both the domestic and international orders have been under challenge. And America has been courting failure at home and abroad. There can be no more apt expression of this failure than the shame and infamy of the Jan 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol, and the desperate scenes of chaos during evacuation at Kabul airport."

"The historical experience of Americans had made them self-centred and often overbearing and thus unable to understand the cultural and political substance of other societies. No wonder America failed in every war that it started, especially following the history-making changes that had taken place since the end of the Cold War, the rise of globalisation and 9/11. "

"The failing elite-led system has now merged with mass politics that is causing its own set of problems. It has enhanced the influence of money and media on politics. As money and politics began chasing each other, it gave a new opportunity and role to the mushrooming 24/7 cable television to be a broker between special interests, politics and the public. The commercially motivated media, joined by social media now, interpreted the world around people, and made choices for them, even choosing their politics. And often it did so by misinforming the public."

"America long lost the status of the indispensable power, but for all its moral failure, political dysfunction and perceived ‘decline’ it was still a consequential power. Even that America is lost now."

The whole piece is here. 

This is a man who, presumably, watched from a colony as Great Britain gave up its empire.   It's a perspective most American neither know nor understand.  

 

Thursday, September 09, 2021

Alaska Redistricting Board Meeting: Fight Over 800 People, Airing Of Board Grievances, And Other Board Actions

[First let me note that the Board voted to approve their proposed maps today and tomorrow's (Friday Sept 10) meeting was cancelled]

This post is going to look at some of the dynamics of the Board displayed.  I can't cover everything in this post.  These are some things I thought important today.  There's lots more and since the Board isn't meeting again until next Friday I can  probably get the most important things up during the week.

Playing Ping Pong With 800 Voters

Redistricting is a very partisan activity.  The ability to redo the maps to favor one party or another underlies this activity.  Three of the Board members were appointed by Republican politicians, one by a Democratic politician, and one by the Supreme Court Chief Justice.  

Up until today the fight over what the Alaska legislature is going to look like was below the surface.  The previous board that did the 2010 Redistricting was appointed by four Republicans and the Alaska Supreme Court Chief Justice.  There was almost no bickering in public meetings.  (There was some at the end but among Republicans and it was minor.)  The Supreme Court Chief Justice's appointee essentially looked after Native issues and as long as they were taken care of, she was fine with everything else.  And since that Board needed to get preclearance from the Department of Justice to assure Alaska Native power was not being diminished, the Board took care of that first.  Any partisan actions decisions could be made without conflict - such as putting half of Bettye Davis' district into Eagle River, which ended up costing both a minority Senate seat and a Democratic Senate seat.  


This time we have a bit more division and the Democratic appointed member is a lot more protective.  In terms of backgrounds, the seemingly most partisan member, really I think ideological is a better descriptor, but it translates to partisan on the Board, would appear to be Bethany Marcum who is the Executive Director of the Alaska Policy Forum whose values listed on their website are far right, libertarian ones, and the organizations goals are to promote the passing of laws that embrace those values.  It would make sense that her role on the Board would be to  help get that done by skewing the seats toward Republicans.  

Nicole Borromeo is  the Executive Vice-President & General Counsel of the Alaska Federation of Natives.  This organization's values and mission are to support the interests of Alaska Natives.  It doesn't the same explicit partisan goals as the Alaska Policy Forum, but often they align with more Democratic values and support Democratic candidates.  But they were also instrumental in getting Sen. Lisa Murkowski reelected in 2010.  They've maintained good relations with all the Alaskan Congressional delegation who have been, for the most part Republicans.  

800 People

Today there was what I'd call a long ping pong match where the ball went back and forth between Borromeo and Marcum.  It actually began yesterday when Marcum argued strongly for valuing compactness over deviation when mapping districts.  (Compactness being about keeping the districts as compact as possible and giving them as smooth and straight boundaries as possible. Marcum seemed to be playing whack-a-mole with any protrusions from straight lines.  I wrote about compactness with illustrations in yesterday's post.)  Borromeo would hit the ball back over the net swatting it hard with an anti-deviation paddle. (Deviation referring to how much - in people and in percent - a district deviates from the ideal district size which is 18,335.  That number is the result of dividing the 2020 official Census population of Alaska by 40, which is the number of seats in the state house.)  Borromeo was making the point that the Matsu districts as a whole were under populated - they had fewer than the 18,335 people.  In the end the Board deviated from a guideline they had adopted, to keep all the boroughs whole if possible.  Some are too small to be stand alone districts, but as much as possible they didn't want to divide boroughs.  But then they decided to move 800 people from south Knik (in the Anchorage borough) into Matsu borough.  

Today, the ping pong game was about those 800 people.  Borromeo argued strenuously against them being pulled from Anchorage and that this violated the goal of keeping boroughs whole.  Marcum argued strongly to move them into Matsu.  

There was far more time and passion devoted to this debate than, on the surface, it seemed to deserve.  There was clearly something more going on.  I talked to people who attended the meeting - there are people working on alternative maps there paying close attention.  One theory that seems possible is this:  

By moving 800 people out of north Anchorage, you cause a need for more people in those districts.  You end up with a ripple effect and you have to move people up the district north until you get to the more urban areas of Anchorage.  Then you can pull out 800 out of the east Anchorage Muldoon area that Senator Bill Weilochoski represents, either putting him in a district with a lot more conservative voters, or pairing his district with an Eagle River district.  The last Board did this with Senator Bettye Davis last time - moving one of her house districts to Eagle River and got her voted out of the Senate.  My quick look at the maps tonight made it hard to tell exactly what they'd done with Weilochoski's district.  Partly it's hard because there's a green district that seems to be partly in the Anchorage map and partly in the Eagle River map.  I can't verify this theory, but I'm putting out there because so far it's the best explanation I can find for the battle over the 800 people.  And it echoes what happened in the last round.  But also look at the maps of Anchorage to see what happened there.  Marcum was arguing that people had been telling her that they wanted Anchorage to be more horizontal than vertical.  That seems to have happened.  And I'm guessing the result is to have Democratic legislator in the north and midtown being put in districts where incumbents would be running against each other.  There may be the same affect in the south of Anchorage where there are Republican incumbents.  

Early on the Board chose not to have political party or incumbent information in the data they had to make maps.  The point was to avoid doing just such things.  I was reminded of this when, at the end of the meeting today, Board  executive director  Peter Torkelson, speaking to third parties submitting alternative plans, reminded them not to have any partisan information in their maps.   But I also know that both the Democratic and Republican advisors to Board members have that information.  In the previous Redistricting Randy Ruedrich who coordinated a third party called AFFER (Alaskans for Fair and Equitable Redistricting) had most of this data in his head and wasn't shy about sharing it with Board members during breaks and after meetings.  On the other side Tom Begich, now state Senator Begich, also had that information and he worked with various groups making alternative plans.  I'd note that Sen. Begich called in to give  public testimony and shared maps with the Board today.  


Clearing the Air in Public

Another critical event happened today just before lunch.  Board member Borromeo asked the chair, John Binkley,  to take time to raise an issue that she'd asked him to let her discuss yesterday, I think, in Executive Session.  But since he said he didn't think it met the requirements for Executive Session that they should do it in public session.  So she wanted to do it them.  And he agreed.  Basically it was a list of complaints about how the Chair was running the meetings.  Some people got kept to a short 3 minute time limit for public testimony and others, like Sen Begich that morning, were given a lot more time to present his maps.  It's best, I think for me to just post my notes here.  As always, I was typing as fast as I could, but that's not fast enough to get it verbatim or even to capture it all.  But you can get a sense of this unusual public airing of grievances by a public body.  I'd note that I was impressed by a) the respectful way it was presented  b) the respectful way the Chair acknowledged that he was guilty of some of the charges and would work hard to correct them and c) that they did this in full public view so that the world could evaluate.  There was nothing hidden under the rug. (Well probably there are lots of other things we don't know.)  

r-l  Chair Binkley, Member Borromeo,
Exec Director Torkelson at 11:05am during break

So here are my notes from today.  The video and transcript might be up soon.  This happened just before the lunch break.

"Nicole:  Thank the Board for hard work.  We talked yesterday about a discussion that I thought should be on Executive Session.  You said to do it on the record.  

When we first met, both our names were put out for chair.  But different perspective.  I think Board Chair presides over the sessions, but all members are equal.  Don’t mean to be critical.  Don Young says bring solutions.  I’m bringing solutions.  When it comes to public testimony there were allowances.  When Bethany wanted Eric to talk about Valdez and when I wanted something, there was no time to do it.  When Sen. Begich testifies, there was no time limit, but when AFFR wanted to testify, they were limited to 3 minutes.

In executive session.  Yesterday we ate up a lot of time on procedural issues which might not be private.  I wanted to discuss.. ..  It was yesterday that Bethany and I worked on separate things and brought back to board.  I’d like to see more consistency.  I respect the role of the chair and not asking for changes.

Concerned about email that perhaps the Board should set broad policy and let the staff work on it - like where should we put Valdez.  As expert as they are - and I think they are - they aren’t Board members.  The clicking [on the mapping software] draws lines that we have to defend as board members.  People say, don't waste of time.  If that’s the case, we don’t need to work as a Board.  Working together we have expertise about where the lines would be drawn.

John:  Let me apologize if inconsistent.  I strive to be consensual  and sorry when I wasn’t.  My job is to chair, but we are all equl.  I serve at your pleasure.  Appreciate being able to serve but if Board wants to make change, that’s fine.  Not sure of all the details of your concern.  Agree with you 100% we are all equal???   And on e-mail you mentioned.  Happy to talk to you one on one to see how I can improve.  Important that we all have ownership of this.  But have to use the public's time well as well as ours.  Appreciate the constructive nature of your comments.

Nicole:  It's culturally jarring to have this conversation.  Don’t want to change the chair.  When I was in the Board's office and saw staff talking to staff and you, that it should have been a meeting.  My request going forward, whenever Matt [the Board's attorney] is going to talk to the Staff. . .  Melanie today said she wants all the emails from the districts.  Appearance that there are small group discussions going on should be avoided.

John:  I agree with all you say.  At the meeting we’d been doing things and slipped in.  I do think as uncomfortable as this is, I think it’s important not to hide behind executive session.  Only should have ES when legally required.

Nicole:  I agree.  Should be public.  This doesn’t end Friday.  We’ll get there.  As chair of my corporation board, I know the challenges.  I think unilateral actions taken.  Willing to speak with you.  Firm believer we can have open discussion and we all depart as friends.

Melanie:  couple of things, since I’m not there.[She had called in]  Reiterate yesterday, that Board and staff conversations that are deliberative be on the record.  No discussions that are about mapping at lunch breaks.  Yesterday I came back and there were conversations I wasn’t privy to.  When I was questioning Socio-economic issues, Board member said culture was not an issue to review.  Analysis pointed to website.  Want board to look at that.  We have Voting Rights Act to consider.  There are cultural issues, including predominantly Native communities.  Want public to be aware and it’s on the website.  And no side conversations.

John:  Thank you Melanie.  We talked about that this morning.  If more than two members present we cannot talk about anything related to this.  And appreciate your help with this.  Thanks for pointing that out now.  Peter is scrolling through some of these definitions  All these are available on the website.  

Peter:  We put a short blurb on all these terms with links to source material.  

John:  He put a lot of work into the website [I think he's referring to this page] and I think it’s phenomenal and I hope public finds it informative and easy to navigate.  OK, break.  Say 1pm?  OK"

This is getting kind of long and there are other issues to raise.  As I said above, there are no more meetings until Friday September 17, so I have some time to catch up in the next week.  

Alaska Redistricting Board Finishes Proposed Redistricting Plan Today [Update with Map Links]

Although the Board had scheduled meetings until tomorrow to get the plan done, they surprised everyone - themselves included I think - by agreeing to two maps.  That allows for two Anchorage versions and two Fairbanks versions.  

They had 30 days from receiving the official Census data to complete the job.  They also expect third parties to submit plans as well - some full state plans and some for specific areas.  Those are due in by next Friday.  

At this point the maps are in the staffs computers.  I was able to get a couple of pictures, but you can't see much detail, but I offer them here.

The whole state.


Anchorage area.



Fairbanks area. 


The Board should be posting individual maps for each district by Saturday, I think they said.  There was discussion about the time it takes to convert shape files to pdf files and they need to do 40 for each version.  Well, maybe they can do one version of most of the state (geographically) and then two sets for Anchorage's 22 districts and two sets for Fairbank's five or so districts.  

There was a lot of interesting interactions today that I'll discuss in another post.  I'm impressed with the Board's ability to work through conflicts and to do it on the record, not behind closed doors.  A lot of credit goes to the chair, John Binkley.  And also to the Board members who have the skills to air their concerns respectfully and clearly.  

More later.  

[UPDATE September 9, 2021 9:15 pm:  The Board has posted some maps that appear to cover all the new districts.  As I understood it there are two versions of Anchorage and Fairbanks.  You can see them all here.  They two versions are labeled "Board Composite 1" and "Board Composite 2."  What that refers to are the versions that were approved by the whole Board.  Other versions were done by individual Board members and had names of the person who did them.]

 

Wednesday, September 08, 2021

Alaska Redistricting Board Meeting - Compactness v Deviation And Other Issues

I had trouble with the online broadcasts yesterday and today again they kept dropping off.  So I got to the Board Meeting around 10:30.  Here's an overview of the post:

OVERVIEW

  • My observations of the day
    • What they were doing - mapping Matsu, Kenai, and Anchorage for initial proposal due Sept 10
    • Issues that Came Up 
      • Census Block Issues - 45,000 blocks in 2010, only in 2020
      • Balancing the State required criteria
        • Socio-Economic coherence
        • Compactness versus Deviation
          • Aesthetic compactness versus meaningful compactness
          • Deviation matters
    • A few other things to consider
  • My very, very rough notes of the meeting

My Observations

What they were doing - mapping Matsu, Kenai, and Anchorage for initial proposal due Sept 10

Background:  The State Constitution gives the Boar 30 days from the day they receive the official Census data from the Bureau of the Census to come up with the first draft proposal to present to the residents of Alaska.  This time the Bureau sent out data on August 12, but said it wasn't official yet.  Then later they said it was official.  Thus the Board lost a week or more while they were waiting for the official data.  

They didn't totally lose that time because they were training on the map software and the Board's staff was already working with the preliminary data (that turned out to be the official data).  But they were behind the 2010 Board which had their first big public meeting on the day they got the data on March 15, 2011. 

So the Board has tried to find a way to divide the parts of the state and have different members work on mapping them.  Apparently, yesterday, they agreed on much of the state, at least preliminarily, because today they were focused on Matsu, Kenai, and Anchorage.  

When I got to the meeting they were comparing different versions of Matsu prepared by Board Member Bethany Marcum and Member Nicole  Borromeo.  Later they moved on to Kenai which Board Member Budd Simpson had worked on with Executive Director Peter Torkelson.  And then they started looking at Anchorage - again maps from Bethany and Nicole.

Finally there was a Public Testimony - two people attending the Anchorage hearing live spoke - Robin  O’Donahue and Dave Dunsmuir  both from a group called Alaskans for Fair Redistricting that has  union and other support.  

Issues - Census Block problems
In the 2010 Census, Alaska was divided into 45,000 or so Census Blocks - the smallest units of geography as I understand it.  The 2020 Census divided Alaska into 28,000 Census Blocks.  So there are now fewer, but larger blocks for the Board to work with.  

Let me give you an example from Matsu - though for this example it doesn't matter where.  I was using the free public map making software available here on the Board's website.  

On the map below, the grey lines outline Census Blocks.  Some are much bigger than others.  Until you pick a block and add it to your map, you can't tell what the population will be.  So, I have picked  one fairly large block - colored in with blue.  On the right side you can get data.  Circled in red is where the population data goes.  But as you can see there is nothing there.  That means this census block has no population.  I'm guessing it's something like the Palmer Hay Flats.  It's a huge block with no population. 

Next, I've added a much smaller block - circled in red.  In the population column we've added 49 people.  


Now I've added to more small blocks (in the red circle) and now we have 261 people total of the four blocks.  



And now I've added this big squiggly block which added another 179 people for a total of 540.  



Now I've added one more block smaller than the last one (again circled in red) and that added 72 more people  and got the total to 712.


The point is that these census blocks are all sorts of shapes.  The Board staff says they're not sure how the blocks were drawn.  Small ones can have more people than much larger ones.  So when members are trying to make a smooth compact district that is as closely to the others in population, they are stuck with these odd shaped blocks that can make a district look weird to the average person.  Why is that jagged edge sticking out?  Well the answer could be - it was the only block we could pick that would get the right number of people into the district.  Remember, every district needs to be as close to 18,335 people as possible. (Total population divided by 40 districts.)

This final map looks at a much larger area than the previous maps.  You can barely see the districts I marked.   I did this to make the point that in the big picture, the blocks I picked out amounted to only 712 people out of a district that will need  18,335 people.  (This area which is mostly Matsu will have about six districts.)  And the Board will have to create 40 districts.  The real problems are where one district meets another.  That's when this sort of detailing has to happen.  

This is a very tedious process.  




Issues:  Balancing the State required criteri
    • Socio-Economic comparability,  compactness, contiguity, and deviation (how much a district deviates from the 18,335 number that is the ideal size per district (total population divided by 40 House seats.)
The State Constitution requires the districts to have socio-economic compatibility.  That means the people in the district should have interests in common - they live in the same town or city or borough.  They face the same geographical and economic issues. This might be indicated by where they shop (they're was testimony in an earlier meeting about "people in our community got to the Fairbanks Fred Meyer, not the one in Palmer" and "cold for us is -40˚, not 10˚. Basically a representative from this area would be representing people who face the same issues.  So the Board is trying to get rural communities together and urban communities together.  Matt Singer, the Board's attorney told them today that Court cases have agreed that people in the same city and borough have socio-economic compatibility. Everyone in Matsu meets this.  Everyone in Anchorage meets this.  And when Member Bethany Marcum wanted to add a little bit of the northern Anchorage area into Matsu, Singer said the courts had said Matsu and Anchorage have socio-economic compatibility.  

I don't think that's a problem when you include places like Eklutna with parts of Southern Matsu.  But it would be more troubling if you were adding Sutton to Fairview (which would be hard to do because they're so far apart.  

But I also think we have a new measure for whether boroughs have socio-economic compatibility - vaccination rates.  Anchorage, as of today, has 65% of people over 12 with at least one vaccination.  Matsu is 44%.  That means Matsu has 66% unvaccinated!  That's a big gap that probably says more about compatibility than a lot of traditional measures.  

Issue:  Aesthetic Compactness versus Meaningful Compactness

Members Bethany Marcum and Nicole Borromeo both made maps for Matsu and for Anchorage and when they presented them, the two gave different weights to these two criteria.  Marcum was constantly trying to get rid of gaps and protrusions.  


These protrusions I've circle in red from this map of Matsu is what I mean.  The ideal of compactness means that you wouldn't have any of these things sticking out.  The ideal maps would be a bunch of square districts.  But topography is shaped by rivers and hills and marshes.  And populations aren't evenly divided into neat squares.  

Pennsylvania 
districts
The point of compactness in part is to make sure people in a district are compatible.  It's easier for a representative to get around the smallest possible district.  But in Alaska with its small population and huge physical size makes this impossible.  We have districts off the road where representatives can spend thousands of dollars to get to a remote village and districts where the representative can walk from one end of the district to the other in less than a day.  
But another key reason for compact districts without weird protrusions is to prevent gerrymandering.

On the right are silhouettes of some Pennsylvania districts.  These were designed in 2010 to tilt a state with more Democratic than Republican voters so that had majorities in most of the districts.  You can do this by cramming most Democrats into a few districts so that Republicans are competitive or have a majority in all the others.  But to do that you have to make very weird districts.

The protrusions on the Matsu map are there because of geography, population, and odd shaped Census blocks.  Getting rid of all the bumps makes the maps more aesthetically pleasing, but doesn't have a meaningful outcome.  Alaska's warts - at least on the maps we saw today of Matsu are not an issue.  


Issue: Is Compactness More Important than Deviation?

The deviation standard derives from the US Constitution's requirement of one person - one vote.

Certainly it could be.  But in the maps we saw today, the answer is clearly no.  Deviation refers to deviation from the ideal district size of 18,335.  If all 40 districts have exactly that many people, then every representative and every senator would represent the exact same number of people.  Of course the Census' state population number was measured in 2020 and the population changes all the time (which is why the Census counts every ten years, so we can recalibrate.)
The deviation of any one district should not be more than 10%, and that's would be acceptable only in extreme cases.  Say a sparsely populated rural area where it was really hard to get enough people without grossly violating the other criteria of compactness, socio-economic, and contiguity.  (Contiguity didn't come up today.  It just means that all parts of the district have to be geographically connected to each other.)

The issue was that Matsu was about 2% under populated.  That means that six districts (Matsu has enough population with the Denali Borough to have six districts almost) will have the same number of representatives as six other districts but with a smaller population.  Two percent for any one district is well within the standards, but if you take a whole region that elects candidates of one party, it means other districts that are overpopulated aren't getting one vote per person.  It wasn't clear if the six districts in Matsu were cumulatively underpopulated by 2% or each district was 2% underpopulated. 

Issues - A Few Other Things to Remember

The maps the Board is now drawing will result in a proposed map for Alaska.  There will be several other maps submitted by other groups.  Then these maps will be shared with people around the state.  The Board will split up and travel around to meet with people and find out the issues that these maps present that are problems for local areas.    They have sixty days from September 10 to then develop their final proposed map.  

So there will be lots of feedback and lots of work before we get to the final proposed map.  Then they have to do things like pair up the 40 2House districts into 20  Senate districts.


NOTES

I did my best to record what people said.  I'm a reasonably good typist but I'm not court transcriber.  So there are lots of gaps and ??? where I wasn't sure.  And it's not verbatim.  But it will give you an idea of what was said.  I tried to put times in now and then.  When the tapes and transcripts come out, you  may have a better idea of what you're looking for.  

Ak Redistricting Board  Wed Sept 8, 2021


Arrived at 10:50



Taking about Denali Borough - only 1700?? People, has to be part of another district.


Which of the three Matsu’s should we use.  

Peter Tolkerson (Executive Dir)Matsu B would be under about 2%.  Reflects deviation  of Borough’s ??


Budd Simpson - all the community boundaries and local boundaries, ask Nicole that some of hers were not as tight. Otherwise easier to stick with these more compacts


Nicole - accepted city boundaries and didn’t let the rural creep into the city boundaries


Bethany - all had city boundaries in tact, but let some of rural in


Nicole - some rural areas  were put into cities

Bethany - you’ll see Wasilla and Palmer - green in between is a question of whether you add these to one side - core Matsu, suburban, not considered rural areas


Still feel Bethany’s version maintains socio-economic goals, cause hers seems more compact


Nicole - I think  our maps have more in common than not, she’s just gone out in a different direction to pull people in.  This is my first time looking at Bethany’s map.  Preliminary view I don’t see pitfalls, I get it, it looks prettier.


Peter:  This is a starting point and make adjustments from there


Nicole - wanted to be respectful of public testimony.  Heard from Delta Sutton area feel they are pulled in and they become Matsu Palmer seats and lose their distinction.  


Nicole - Way to overlay my map over Bethany’s?  


Peter:  Map overlay  [I had trouble figuring out what the map overlays showed]

John:  Within borders of borough, socio-economic ok, but next looking at compactness and one vote.

Nicole - I think my deviations are smaller than Bethany’s

John:  But compactness becomes important.  The more irregular looking, you potentially get into odd shapes that raise questions about compactness.  Within a percent or two of deviation, I think compactness becomes more important.  

Wraps around Wasilla

Nicole:  I see hers is more compact, Maybe I’m not seeing something.  Move on.

Nicole:  I’m fine with Bethany’s version.  And Anchorage creeps up into Matsu.

John:  When we put Denali Borough in, that won’t happen. 

Peter:  20 minute exercise to adjust it in, then wave of changes will probably touch every district.  

Palmer is one, Wasilla is one and Big Lake is one.  

John:  Let’s stand at ease.  20-30 minutes to integrate this into draft we’ve been working on.  Stand at ease.  


Break:  Bethany:  I like both of those better than the Anchorage stand alone.  Move ER, Eklutna up toward Matsu

11:16

Peter break  


45,292 census blocks to 28,000 blocks - makes fine tuning difficult.  Members want to add a little section and get some weirdly shaped block.  


11:42  Back in session

TJ:  Overview of Bethany’s map - added Denali B to Matsu, six districts 15, 16, 17 18, 19, 20


Added Anchorage north, but didn’t fill that out yet.  


SE, North, SW, Bristol Bay,  some discussion of inside Fairbanks, Finished Matsu area.  Haven’t discussed Kenai P. Or Gulf Coast, and Whittier is without a Borough.  


Peter:  Remaining:  reconcile new deviations by taking out Nenana and ????  - deviations have increased, B can refine those now or we can come back later for that.


5.92 districts - all will be under.  18 suffered loss when let Nenana go.  Equalize that loss when dealing with other district boundaries.  Does 18 abut to the north?  

That’s the Denali B line.  Stops around Houston.  

Bethany:  Where does Denali B. stop.  

Right here.  

John:  Greatest deviation?  A:  18 down 581  - they are all negative - [meaning they have more representation]


[They’re adding blocks to make things look cleaner - that is there aren’t strange spaces breaking up an area.  

19 and 20 deviation spread]

Bethany - we have that nice straight line though

Nicole, but if 

Made little change, doesn’t mess with compactness much.  Now they are just grabbing population and there is no consideration of neighborhoods being discussed.

John:  Let’s move on

Nichole:  Would like to see those numbers closer.  15 is too big.  Compared to 

Debate between Bethany and Nicole - Deviation is not part of the big three, 

John:  First look at socio-economical compatibility, then compact, then 

Melanie - we can still do this later.  

Attorney:  the change didn’t change compactness, but got more even deviation.  If you have odd shaped districts not good.  [Compact doesn’t mean smooth]

Peter:  

Bethany:  My preference.  Recommended not break B boundary in more than one direction.  South, including Whittier, still breaking to south

John:  I don’t recall that being critical importance

Bethany:  No problem with South Knik

Attorney:  Courts have said that Matsu and Anchorage are socio-economically the same.

Bethany:  Include Anchorage

Nicole:  John made strong argument for strong B boundary and here we have great deviation

John:  Difference between preservingAnchorage and Matsu with protecting Fairbanks

Nicole:  I don’t think so.  

Budd:  800 people leave in Anchorage or better used in Matsu.  

Peter:  word Better is something you can decide.  Anchorage is less underpopulated than Matsu.  

Budd:  Better area - it’s not in Anchorage Borough, nice line 

Bethany:  Equalization as opposed to deviations.

Attorney:  First is to have compact and then obligation one person one vote.  Where you feel that closer to equalize, create districts that are no longer compact.  

Bethany:  That last ??? completely changed compactness, but didn’t effect deviation that much.  Won’t be possible in Anchorage.  

Nicole:  Explain to me how that compactness.

Nicole:  The way that city is drawn is part of the problem.  

Melanie:  Time for a break, need to walk around even if lunch not here

12:11 

John - back, about 1pm  get finished by 3.   Lunch supposed to be here by now.

12:25 - everyone back in seats and discussing maps - CLEARLY this has become an illegal meeting and Peter is trying to scatter the Board members.  Several leave.  Now Budd is talking about coconut oil.  


Lunch arrived about 12:50

Back at 1:18


John:  Lunch late being delivered.  This room will have 3pm public meeting so we will get out by 3:45.  Should we move on to Anchorage?  Sounds like it.  Let’s move on

Peter:  Good to move to Anchorage, but we haven’t done Kenai and Anchorage will probably take a long time.

John:  Sounds ok.  

Peter:  Kenai Pen - goes to Yakatat Borough, Cordova.  Few members and I worked on this all day after last meeting.  Added additional members throughout following week.  Discovered the Cordova and Kodiak and NE Kachemak Bay have long time ties to Kodiak.  

Looking at 11, 12, 13, and 14.  Kenai-Cordova  3.3, 2.4   with Kodiak 4.09 districts.  Each is overpopulated by 1.2 to 2%.  Trying to spread that across the district.  Without Kachemak silo area, you can take city of Seward and give Kachemak back to Homer.  But then with Seldovia etc.  no one was happy.  But adding Cordova and Kodiak allows deviations that are reasonably close.   

This is just a starting point.  Could put Cordova with interior   or connect Seward and Homer.  Population comes out.  Kasilof Nikiski other options.  

Budd:  Comment, Peter and I spent a lot of time on this, seems really difficult coming up with rational explanation.  I think this is an elegant solution to difficult district.

Bethany:  Shape of appendage would be better if fixed.  Doesn’t change deviation.

Peter:  Want to improve that.  But hard to make a cleaner line.  Feature of underlying census geography government made.  

Melanie:  Socio-Economy pitfalls of this?  

Peter:  Critique Katchemak silo area, connections to Homer.  Not violating city boundaries, but just connections.  

Eric:  Fox River ???  Takes in several areas.

Bethany:  Part of map - 

Eric:  Katchemak Silo, ??? And ???  Not census blocks but are communities.

Bethany:  

Matt - North Kenai paired with Anchorage and that has passed Court rulings.  This Board seems to be going toward community boundaries.  Court has approved of Gulf Coast districts in the past.  Don’t see any show stoppers here.

John:  Let’s move on to Anchorage.

Peter:  How should we proceed.  We can show member versions.  

John:  Nicole?

Nicole:  Mine doesn’t work any more because I included Valdez.

Bethany:  I have one version.

Peter:  We can show the differences on the screen.  But merging, I think we should do tomorrow - long technical process.  Nicole’s Anchorage for her Northern portion 

TJ:  Bethany’s 


??  Bethany Markam on the left.  

Bethany:  Started with existing districts.  Then realized having existing districts in place misleading and then just turned them off.  I brought a map I’d worked on then kept getting odd shapes and still had a few appendages.  Let’s take this pop north and things would add up and get weird shape.  Then take it east and west instead.  Just by virtue of census block shapes that led to vertical rather than horizontal.  

Nicole - 

Bethany:  split east side and military.  Services and previous elmendorf and Richardson, split so they are socio-economic, not a big difference.  But also ER, trying to keep ER complete in one district instead of splitting it up.  Encompass ER, Chugiak, Eklutna - get more rural areas versus core of ER.  

TJ - two different maps - also Wasilla showed overlay one plan over the other.  Bethany versus Nicole Blue lines see differences.

District down 2%

Chukiak, Peters Creek, and ???  792 in there add to -256, added back to Matsu map.  

District 13  S. ER into one district

15 takes north and south forks with portion of east Anchorage.

Chugiak/Peters and majority of Fort Rich

Rest is self explanatory.  Nicole’s map on top

Nicole  - when I drafted didn’t have district boundaries and considering public testimony.  Didn’t get enough pop to make whole.  Wanted Chugiak, Peters whole without ER came down to border of ER proper and cover ER to be in own district.  Got much of base.  But service members all over community.

Inlet and Govt Hill (not Mt View) and tried to keep east districts in tact and not go into south Anchorage.  Census blocks made big differences.  West 17 and 15 are primary mid town districts and try to keep them east of Minnesota.  Then all the way over to Turnagain, Lake Hood, Spenard, then to Sandlake.  Follow creek boundaries.  14 needed to go into 15.  13 didn’t love this shape.  Once you get to end of mapping, have trouble.  Also, the way Census blocked this.  Some very wild census blocks.

10  big chunk of south Anchorage and hillside.  District 9 really deviates from map Board is producing.  Don’t look at 9.  Kitchen sink district.

John:  Hard for me.  I just don’t have an opinion on this.  Maybe Nicole and Marham work together and see what you come up with for those 16 seats.  OK    Do you want to take 20 minutes now.  We still have public testimony to hear.  In 20 minutes then get wrapped up to adjuourn.

Nicole:  I don’t think that’s realistic.  I think there’s a benefit for everyone participating.  

Fix Boundaries for Matsu and then 

Bethany:  Are we going to….

Matt Singer:  Going back to whether the 800 area of Knik.  AK Supreme Court said the two Boroughs are Socio-economically integrated.  If so, is moving those folks into Anchorage area to allow for less deviation is that practical.  We don’t combine communities where creates map that is not Socio-economically integrated.  So can’t use that as a strong justification for drawing the line.  Allow some blurring of line to get more population evenly distributed.  I know board focused on honoring political boundaries, but really one and the same. 

Peter:  Matsu districts are more underpopulated than Anchorage so moving that area to Matsu  improves the deviation.  Looking at the 22 seats rather than the 16 seats of Anchorage.

Matt:  I think that makes sense.  Try to balance pop among those 22 districts.  

Peter:  Will cause bringing Matsu district down into Anchorage because underpopulated.  

Bethany:  I’ve seen the court ruling that says Matsu and Anchorage are one socio-economic districts.  


Eric:  Anchorage, Denali Borough and Matsu together about 22 districts.  Every district down about 165.  

Peter:  But it will come up against compactness thing.  Still place for judgment.  We’re going to go south and get greater and greater underpopulation

John:  Let’s see what happens.  Let’s start at 18?

Matt:  Fair to say that board is being oversensitive to compactness when dealing with urban areas.  What’s a problem is weird corridors and appendages.  Intended to combat improper gerrymandering.  I’d say within these areas.  Is this generally a compact shape.  Does it make sense.  Not get overly caught up on jagged edge.  That’s a census block shape.  Wouldn’t concern yourself with that granular detail.  What’s troublesome, if you just focus on the numbers you can say, that looks like starfish or octopus.  Then courts say why.

John:  For the purpose of deviation we’re making them more odd shape.  Is it practicable to make odd shapes to get better numbers.  

Matt:  One side of the street or other side of street - does this make sense for the neighborhood.  If you’re down by 55 or 100 people that is a small deviation.  Good to make numbers match.  No court says you need exactly.  Why having computers do this versus experienced Alaskans.  A little more deviation ok.  

John:  Maybe this is a good time to take a break.  Need to get into public testimony.  Stop mapping for now.  Testimony until we need to vacate the room at 2:45.  


Testifying

Robin O’Donahue - Coordinate for Alaskans for Fair Redistricting and as life long Faribanksian.  

But Nicole’s question.  The split in Borough breaks community interest.  Does’t look at North south.  Ester, etc. connected to UA.  North Pole and ?  Are together.  Another way to think through school systems.  All feed to West Valley High School.  Don’t believe Chena Ridge and Salcha, you’d have to drive through all the others to get to that district.  Thank you.  

Nicole:  Is there anyway we can see your Fairbanks before next week?  If we have it in our binder before we finish.  

Robin:  Not bound to idea of keeping the Boroughs intact.  

John:  If asking AFFR giving us map early, then we should discuss with other groups.  

Peter:  If email map of just Fairbanks, in line with other groups

David Dunsmore:  Also AFFR, respectfully push back about historical ties of Kodiak to Kachemak .  The Old Believers split from New Believers.  Faced severe suppression and forced to Siberia.  Kodiak Island settled by Russians in 1784.  That split almost like Catholics and Protestants in Ireland.  The alternative would be Ninilchik.  Fox River has 634 Ninilchk has 845??  Ninilchik not a city but a census area.  Founded by Russians in 1700s.  

Peter:  Suggesting that old believers came over separately from Russians.  OB came in 1968 and founded Nikolias they shouldn’t be split into two different districts.  Stayed in Siberia until Soviet Union was oppressive, they moved to China, then Oregon, then Alaska. 

John:  There’s a good book on that 

Melanie:  Tried to find AFFR online  AKfariredistricting.org  Coalition of different orgs and individuals across the state.  AFL-CIO.  We’ve been internally meeting with Alaskans.  

2:39 - John:  No more testimony here or online.  Stand at Recess.