Friday, January 14, 2022

Redistricting Overload - Hearing Today Raises A Bunch Of Issues And Trove Of Court Filings

 Between updating my COVID page - another record high number of cases today (5321 over two days) - and a two hour pre-trial hearing on the Redistricting Board Cases -there's way too much to do.  I have to clean up my rough notes - to make them legible but also to help me clarify the key issues that came up.  I will say there were two big issues today:

  • Waiting on a ruling by the judge about how much of the Board's documentation is covered by attorney-client privilege and the Open Meetings Act.
  • How neutral would a presentation on the Board's software by the Board's executive director be?  The Board's attorney offered it so the judge and the people attending the trial would have a basic understanding of how it works.  But Valdez' attorney Robin Brena says he'd want his expert witness to be able to follow with a presentation on the "correct use" of the software, because how the Board used it wasn't correct
Meanwhile they were also talking about the depositions which will be used for the direct testimony - that is the witnesses' direct testimony will be profiled to the court in the form of depositions.  So, I'm thinking, how will the public know what the witnesses said in the first place when they are being cross examined?  

On Courtview, if you take the right path*, you can see a list of documents the various attorneys and the judge have filed.  But you can't open them.  PACER is a way to see documents in Federal Court.  

*On the link, there are tabs - go to DOCKET.  

So I emailed the judge's clerk to find out how the public and journalists can get access.  
She quickly responded that she'll get fuller answers to my questions, but that the documents in this case are being posted on the Court's "Most Requested Appellate Case Files" page.  There are three cases there.  
  1. Kohlhaas et al. v. SOA et al. - Proposition 2 (2020) constitutionality
  2. Short, Madilyn et al vs. Dunleavy, Michael J et al - Constitutional Budget Reserve Sweep - Higher Education Investment Fund and
  3. Wilson Felisa et al vs. Alaska Redistricting Board - Redistricting
The third one is the one of interest.  But as you look down the list of links, the latest one is December 29, 2021.  Today is January 14, 2022.  They are two weeks behind and the document I really want to see is the one about Attorney-Cleinte Privelege and the Open Meetings Act, which the judge said he'd rule on shortly.  

OK, that's enough of a preview.  Probably most of you would prefer I kept all posts this short.  I will add that the next court pretrial hearing is Sunday, January 16, 2022 at 1pm,  You can watch on Judge Matthews' YouTube channel.  

My life would be, of course, much easier without access to all that documentation - there are thousands of pages.  

The following is dessert for those who choose to indulge.  It is from the list of documents and is the proposed witness list for the Anchorage plaintiffs - challenging the Eagle River Senate Pairings.  Remember, this is proposed and over two weeks old now.  


"Holly C. Wells
Mara E. Michaletz
William D. Falsey
Birch Horton Bittner & Cherot 510 L Street, Suite 700 Anchorage, Alaska 99501 hwells@bhb.com mmichaletz@bhb.com wfalsey@bhb.com Telephone: 907.276.1550 Facsimile: 907.276.3680

Attorneys for Plaintiffs Felisa Wilson, George Martinez, and Yarrow Silvers

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT FOR THE STATE OF ALASKA

THIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT AT ANCHORAGE

) In the Matter of the ) ) 2021 REDISTRICTING PLAN. ) ) )

Case No. 3AN-21-08869CI

EAST ANCHORAGE PLAINTIFFS’ PRELIMINARY WITNESS LIST

COME NOW Plaintiffs Felisa Wilson, George Martinez, and Yarrow Silvers (the “East Anchorage Plaintiffs”), by and through undersigned counsel, and hereby file this Preliminary Witness List:
I. EAST ANCHORAGE PLAINTIFFS’ CASE-IN-CHIEF WITNESSES

A. Fact Witnesses

1. Felisa Wilson (via affidavit)
c/o Birch Horton Bittner & Cherot 510 L Street, #700
Anchorage, AK 99501
(907) 276-1550

Scope of Testimony: Ms. Wilson is a resident of House District 23. She is expected to testify regarding her experiences and participation in and observations of the 2021 redistricting process, and the dilution of East Anchorage voters within adopted House District 23, including that of her own influence regarding her legislative needs and her observations regarding the communities of interest at issue in this case. Ms. Wilson is also expected to testify regarding the Board member’s reliance and reference to her testimony regarding the proposed and/or adopted senate pairings.

2. Sean Murphy (via affidavit) 17906 Kantishna Drive

Eagle River, AK 99577 (907) 632-5307

Scope of Testimony: Mr. Murphy is a resident of House District 22. He is expected to testify regarding his experiences and participation in and observations of the 2021 redistricting process and the needs and interests he experiences as a resident of the Eagle River community of interest and House District 22. He is expected to testify regarding the differences between the needs and interests of the Eagle River community when compared to the East Anchorage communities of interest with which it is paired in the adopted plan.

3. Yarrow Silvers (via affidavit)   Attorney-Client Privilege
c/o Birch Horton Bittner & Cherot 510 L Street, #700
Anchorage, AK 99501
(907) 276-1550

Scope of Testimony: Ms. Silvers is a resident of House District 21. She is expected to testify regarding her experiences and participation in and observations of the 2021 redistricting process, and the dilution of East Anchorage voters within adopted House District 21, including that of her own influence regarding her legislative needs and her observations regarding the communities of interest at issue in this case.

4. David Dunsmore (via affidavit) 6321 Brown Tree Circle

Anchorage, AK 99507 (907) 830-4288

Scope of Testimony: Mr. Dunsmore is expected to testify regarding his experiences and participation in and observations of the 2021 redistricting process with emphasis on his observations of the November 8 and 9, 2021 redistricting meetings, including work sessions, and the Board member’s related conduct.

5. Kevin McGee (via affidavit)
President NAACP Anchorage Branch #1000 Post Office Box 200089
Anchorage, AK 99520
(907) 272-8717 naacpanchorage2017@gmail.com

Scope of Testimony: Mr. McGee is the President of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People Alaska Branch #1000 (“NAACP”). He is expected to testify regarding the NAACP’s mission and vision and the impact that the adopted senate pairings have on that mission and vision as well as the NAACP’s engagement and participation in the communities of interest implicated and impacted by the adopted senate pairings that include Eagle River.

B. Expert Witness

1. Chase Hensel
Morrow and Hensel Consulting 1674 Redfox Drive
Fairbanks, AK 99709
(907) 699-2107 cell chasehensel1@gmail.com

Scope of Testimony: Mr. Hensel is expected to testify as an expert witness for the East Anchorage Plaintiffs. He is expected to testify regarding the senate pairings adopted by the Alaska Redistricting Board, the contiguity of the pairings challenged by the East Anchorage Plaintiffs and other impacted districts. He will also testify regarding the communities of interest within the paired districts challenged by the East Anchorage Plaintiffs, and the dilution of the voting influence of voters in the East Anchorage Communities, as that term was defined in the East Anchorage Plaintiff’s Application.

II. DEFENDANT OR OTHER PLAINTIFF WITNESSES TO BE RELIED UPON AT TRIAL

  1. E. Budd Simpson
    c/o Schwabe, Williamson & Wyatt, P.C. 420 L Street, #400
    Anchorage, AK 99501
    (907) 339-7125

  2. John Binkley
    c/o Schwabe, Williamson & Wyatt, P.C. 420 L Street, #400
    Anchorage, AK 99501
    (907) 339-7125

I

  1. Bethany Marcum
    c/o Schwabe, Williamson & Wyatt, P.C. 420 L Street, #400
    Anchorage, AK 99501
    (907) 339-7125

  2. Melanie Bahnke
    c/o Schwabe, Williamson & Wyatt, P.C. 420 L Street, #400
    Anchorage, AK 99501
    (907) 339-7125

  3. Nicole Borromeo
    c/o Schwabe, Williamson & Wyatt, P.C. 420 L Street, #400
    Anchorage, AK 99501
    (907) 339-7125

Scope of testimony by Redistricting Board members: While the East Anchorage Plaintiffs do not have knowledge of the full scope of the testimony by Board members, the East Anchorage Plaintiffs will be focusing their examination of these witnesses on their deliberations, considerations, and/or the lack thereof regarding the “East Anchorage Communities” identified in the East Anchorage Plaintiffs’ Application and House Districts 22 and 24.

6. Randy Ruedrich (via deposition) 1515 West 13th Ave

Anchorage, AK 99501 (907) 586-8090

Scope of Testimony: While the East Anchorage Plaintiffs do not have knowledge regarding Mr. Ruedrich’s testimony beyond the description provided in the Calista Plaintiffs’ Witness List, the East Anchorage Plaintiffs intend to examine Mr. Ruedrich regarding his influence and participation in the 2021 redistricting process with an emphasis on his input on senate pairings proposed and/or adopted by the Alaska Redistricting Board, the political affiliation and voting patterns of the house districts at issue in the Application to Compel the Alaska Redistricting Board to Correct Its Senate District Pairings in Anchorage, and any other subject matters that arise during his deposition testimony as an expert for the Calista Plaintiffs.

III. EAST ANCHORAGE PLAINTIFFS’ GENERAL WITNESSES

1. Expert witnesses as they are determined to be necessary and identified during the course of discovery.

2. All witnesses necessary to authenticate documents to whose admissibility other parties are unwilling to stipulate.

3. All witnesses listed by other parties.

4. All witnesses identified in the course of subsequent discovery or

investigation

5. All witnesses whose depositions are taken in this case.

6.  All witnesses necessary for rebuttal purposes.

DATED this 28th day of December, 2021.

BIRCH HORTON BITTNER & CHEROT Attorneys for Plaintiffs

By: /s/ Holly C. Wells
Holly C. Wells, ABA #0511113 Mara E. Michaletz, ABA #0803007 William D. Falsey, ABA #0511099"


Thursday, January 13, 2022

The Difficult Life Of Flight Attendants And Passengers

When we waited for our plane in LA, there was a large group of men, say mid twenties through forties, maybe fifties.  They kind of invaded the waiting area and were speaking to each other in another language.  And they were less than fastidious about their masks.  I'd guess five to ten had their masks on their chins much of the time.  Others didn't have their noses covered. 

When we got on the plane, I mentioned this to one of the flight attendants at the entrance as a bit of a warning.  She said she'd already heard.  We sat down.  The lady next to us was handicapped and needed assistance getting up to let us pass to our seats.  She was agitated.  The men were still breathing mask free around us.  She said she'd told Alaska Airlines before we boarded.  She had health issues and was worried about getting COVID.  She got an attendant and explained her concerns and pointed out that the men around us had noses and mouths showing before the attendant arrived.  She even got the captain to come out and talk to her.  

It's not clear how good their English was (presumably some better than others) and if they could even understand the captain's announcement about keeping masks on.  But they did know they needed to be masked and did pull them up when an attendant was nearing.  This wasn't a political statement.  It just appeared to be avoidance of an inconvenience.  

The men pulled up their masks when asked to and then they would slip off again.  Around us there were four or five offenders.  We took off.  Soon the lady next to us got the attendant again and wanted to move.  We decided to just stick it out.  An American Airlines flight attendant soon replaced the woman who got assistance to move to another seat.  The attendant was headed to Anchorage to celebrate his birthday with friends and relatives.

Throughout the flight the masks went up when attendants came by and then down again.  

It's a tricky business when you are up in the air.  The flight attendant sitting next to us told us that it was something like three warnings and then you go on a no fly list.  But it didn't appear that was happening.  The flight attendant sitting with us left and then the original woman was back next to us.  

When we landed we were all told to stay seated while those who needed assistance got helped off.  An attendant was there to help the woman next to us and the nearest offender stood up and helped her get up too.  His mask was in place at that point.  

I'm just thinking about the calculations the airlines make.  This was a large group - maybe 20 or 30  good sized men.  Were they flying up to work on the Slope?  Fishing?  Who knows?  Was Alaska Airlines weighing the loss of a bunch of passengers against trouble in the air?  It was a five hour flight.  No one wanted to land midway and drop off anyone.  The attendants were clearly avoiding confrontations and the men didn't refuse to wear masks.  They complied when asked.  Alcohol was not an issue.  

I already had  concerns about flying on a plane full of masked people with Omicron spiking, when it turned out I'd be flying with some unmasked and partially masked passengers.  You could say that we're overreacting - most people who are fully vaxed and masked are less likely to get COVID and if they do, not likely to get too sick.  That's what I told myself.  

As a blogger, I know pictures pique people's interest.  But as a person, I'm not comfortable putting any pictures of these folks up.  

Just want to let everyone know that even the Airline that banned an Alaska State Senator is walking a fine line between enforcing the mask rules and looking the other way.  

To the person who wrote a letter to the editor (Anchorage Daily News)  yesterday complaining about the Airlines giving in to the unions and cutting back in-flight services, I'd say the flight attendants' lives are hard enough as it is without spending lots of time among the passengers.  And serving alcohol is clearly not a good idea. Sure, a lot of people would like a drink on a flight and for most it wouldn't be an issue.   If people really can't get through a flight without a drink, it would seem to be an indicator of a problem that needs attention.  Not having alcohol on board (and I'm not completely sure that's the case) keeps the skies a little calmer.  


Tuesday, January 11, 2022

Headed Home

 Now that we're at LAX waiting for our 7:20 pm non-stop back to Anchorage, we had the most beautiful day since we got here. Thanks to my mom's neighbor who drove us to the airport!   I did get in a bike-ride to the beach (stopping to duplicate some keys on the way).  

Not only was it warmer than it's been (low 70s) but clear too.  Though to the south you could see fog/clouds/haze.  This is looking north toward the Santa Monica mountains (really hills.)  I've been to a lot of places and I'm only now truly appreciating the great beaches of LA.  Not that I didn't always love the beach growing up, but I never appreciated the huge expanse of sand between the water and the buildings.  There's a lot of sand.  No rocks.  In the picture the water is to the left.  You can see a thin band of water between the sand and the sky.  


This African iris was sticking out from the wall of green between my mom's house and the neighbor's.  The plant itself was way inside, but the flower found the light.  It wasn't there yesterday.






These oranges were weighing down a tree in front of an apartment building in Beverly Hills. If people had more edibles in their gardens here they could feed a lot of people 




An oak tree across the street from friends we visited Sunday.

It's been a different, pandemic trip.  We've gotten take out, but haven't dined in any restaurants like we normally would.  

And the ceiling at our gate at LAX this evening.

This has been, until this week, a pretty chilly visit, for LA.  But it's been chilly for Anchorage too while we were gone.  Our house sitter reported that our kitchen sink pipes froze, but he was able to get that taken care of.  

Looking forward to being home for a bit.  


Sunday, January 09, 2022

The Wisconsin Senate Race: Ron Johnson Will Run Again Despite Limiting Himself To Two Terms

Johnson announced he was running again yesterday, from what I can tell, in a Wall Street Journal editorial.  But WSJ is pay-walled.   

I realized that the only thing I really knew about the Wisconsin Senate race this year is that Republican Senator Ron Johnson has:

". . . been a major disappointment since his re-election in 2016," said James Wigderson, former editor the RightWisconsin website who supported Johnson in 2010 and 2016. "Conservatives of good conscience should recognize that Johnson's conspiracy theories, his support for quack medicine, and his active support for undermining our democratic elections should disqualify Johnson from ever serving in public office again." [from Milwaukee Journal Sentinel]

He's been one of Trump's strongest supporters in the Senate.  He was one of seven GOP Senators and one Representative who made the infamous July 2018 trip to Moscow    


I wanted to know who was running against him.  Ballotopedia lists all those that have officially registered (Johnson isn't on their list yet.)  The show twelve Democrats running.  I'm going to highlight four and hope I'm not overlooking one I should be covering.  

The four top Democrats, according to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel article are an interesting group.  Actually Barnes appears to be the front runner and the other three aren't much ahead of the rest of the pack. 

1.  Lt. Governor Mandela Barnes  born 1986 (35)

Photo Ballotopedia


Barnes is a Milwaukee native and leading the field in early polling. He's been a member of the Wisconsin state assembly, lost a state senate race, and then came back to win the Lt. Governor position.

You can learn a lot more about him in this Jewish Insider piece.  I've found their profiles on this race to be in depth and wide ranging.  And there all very recent.





2.  Alex Lasky  - born 1984 (37)

Alex's father immigrated to the US and Morocco and became a hedge fund billionaire and is part owner of the Milwaukee Bucks and a big Democratic fundraiser, which might be one reason Alex landed a job in the Obama White House.  Alex moved from New York to Milwaukee to be senior vice president of the Bucks.  Another assist from his dad.   You might have guessed that his fundraising is doing well.  And one of the campaign videos I saw made him look really good.   But he also feels a lot like a Democratic Dan Sullivan - not necessarily on the issues, but in how he's moved to a new state, in this case to run his father's basketball team, and now is running for US Senate.  Here's the JI profile.


3.  Sarah Godlewski - Wisconsin State Treasurer - born 1981 (40)




Sarah Godlewski is the state treasurer, so she's won statewide office in Wisconsin, but that was her first race.  Another Jewish Insider profile.      Here Wikipedia profile offers more details of her interesting international experience.




4.  Tom Nelson -  Born 1976 (45)  


"Tom Nelson was born in St. Paul, Minnesota. He earned a bachelor's degree from Carleton College in 1998 and a graduate degree from Princeton University in 2004. Nelson's career experience includes working as the county executive of Outagamie County. He has been associated with the Christ the King Lutheran Church, Loaves and Fishes Food Pantry, Nichols Historical Society, Outagamie County Democratic Party, and the Seymour Historical Society.[1][2]"

From another JI Insider profile, this assessment of Nelson from a progressive in Wisconsin:

“Most people think of us as two states: a red state and a blue state, and never the twain shall mix,” he told JI via email. “Tom Nelson is a Democratic county executive with great values, who has been elected and reelected in a large, generally Republican-voting county. That is the kind of candidate that can win statewide.”

But he's got to win the primary first.




The best overview of the race I found was the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel's piece linked above.

Friday, January 07, 2022

AK Redistricting Court Hearing: 1) Each Case Separate or Group? 2) Faster Transcripts

 The pretrial hearings are moving fast and things get changed quickly.  The last hearing was supposed to be Wednesday, but got postponed to today.  In part, I think this was because the Supreme Court gave the Superior Court two extra weeks to get the case done.  




There were three basic issues today:

1.  Schedules for getting Direct Testimony and Opening Statements to the judge

They'd already decided the direct testimony would be done before the trial via depositions - if I understand this right - and in court they will focus on cross examination and redirect.  The judge wants to get materials as quick as possible so he has time to read things and the plaintiffs want as much time as possible to get depositions done and review transcript.  

Both sides seemed reasonable.  The plaintiffs and the Board wanted the weekend to get things done and the judge said, he like the best products possible so they'd be easier to read, and agreed to first thing Monday morning.  (I've got Tuesday, January 18 written down, so I'm guessing it means next weekend.)


2.  Structure of Trial:  Option A: Case by Case  or Option B:  All the cases together

The judge said that what he got shows the plaintiffs what Option A - each case heard separately- and the Board wants Option B all the cases together.  

The judge said he leaned toward option A

Matt Singer (the Board's attorney) argued that all together would be much less of a burden for the Board members three of whom live outside of Anchorage.  If the cases were all together they'd only have to be in Anchorage for one week instead of two and they wouldn't have to repeat their testimony in different trials.

They were, he said, appointed public servants, volunteers.  Five separate trials would be 'unfairly burdensome' to the Board members.  He mentioned that member Marcum had a vacation that was schedule a year ago and would not be back until Jan 31.  She also has trouble reading documents on a screen and needs hard copies to read.  

[I'd note that a year ago, Marcum already was on the Board and already knew that the Census data would be late and that every redistricting board has had court challenges and thus there was a good chance for a court challenge.  There was also a pandemic going on.  So if she made vacation plans she knew there was a risk.  Plus Alaska Airlines allows people to change tickets and even cancel without penalties.]    

He also mentioned the extra COVID exposure of coming into the office so often.  

Tanner Amdur-Clark - representing the Doyon Coalition as an intervenor on behalf of the Board in the Mat-Su case said he supported the Board on this.  He pointed out that the House cases (disputes about how House lines were drawn) are all interconnected.  Valdez and Mat-Su both don't want to be paired with the other, and if you change either, that will have a cascading effect on many other districts.  

Eva Gardner (an attorney with the Calista challenge) - Took exception to Matt Singer's characterization of the excessive burden of the Board.  "That's what they signed up for and argued for five separate cases.  Singer's characterization of the Board members as volunteers was misleading since they are getting paid and she came up with a rough estimate of how much they might be getting paid - I think it came to $45,000.  She acknowledged this is less than what they might get at their regular jobs, but it was still substantial.  [I recall that Bahnke and Borromeo said something about their pay going to the Native Corporations they work at, but don't remember the exact details.]  She said they could all be vaccinated and where good masks and she could recommend good air filters if Mr. Singer needed that.  

Robin Brenna (attorney for Valdez and Skagway cases)  - said he'd just gotten off a case with law firms and witnesses spread over five locations around the country and they had no trouble.  If they want to avoid COVID issues, why need to bring Board members to Anchorage?  The trial itself will be done via Zoom.  Favored Option A.  He also argued five separate cases would make a cleaner record for the judge and the Supreme Court.  

Judge Matthews then decided to go for Option A (though he said Option B two our of three mentions and when this was pointed out he made it clear he meant Option A.)

3.  Transcripts

Brenna complained that transcripts from early November Board meetings still aren't available and they need transcripts of the meetings before they do the depositions.  Given the delays he was concerned about transcripts for depositions.

Matt Singer said there were video and audio tapes of all the Board meetings available and he's been trying to get the transcription company moving faster.  There were also problems because of errors in the transcriptions so they had to be corrected and sent back. 

The judge decided Singer should contact the company and in the meantime, send the draft transcripts over to the plaintiffs.  

[I'd note that I've done some transcripts of some of the hearings.  They are time consuming because often the Board members are difficult to hear - they aren't near enough to a mic, they talk softly, or they talk very fast.  Additionally, I heard from a transcriber last time (2011 Board) that they had audio tapes and couldn't tell which Board member was talking.  

But I'd also say that I have done some transcribing from the videos for some of my blog posts.  I don't have transcribing equipment that lets me stop the tape then rewind it easily while I type.  I don't don't type at transcriber speeds.  If I can do it, professional transcribers should be able to do it much more quickly.  

Other issues:  Brenna had other issues but only mentioned one, saying there wasn't enough time for the others.  He wanted to know what a typical court day would look like under Option A - each case separately.  In the end, it seems like what he really wanted to know was how much time would be allocated to each side.  The judge said six hours for each side.  [I'd note that judges do allocate time to each side of a case and the time is tracked and it's possible for one side to run out of time.  That happened in a case I was involved in.  There were disputes about how much time was used by objections of the other side's attorney.  In the end the judge added more time.]


The next status hearing is scheduled for January 14, 2022 at 10am.  You can watch it here.  Though be warned, they've been canceling and changing hearings.  The trial looks like it's starting on January 21, 2022.

Thursday, January 06, 2022

Biden's Speech Did A Number Of Things Right

He outlined the lies about the election and the evidence they were lies.

He made it clear this was not tourists in the capital, but an insurrection.  

He talked about saving democracy.  


But I wanted more.  

As long as Democrats think of half of the population as deplorables, they will act that way. I wanted him to reach  out to those who didn't vote for him, and acknowledge their anger.  He talked about the Big Lie that convinced them.  

I wanted him to tie that Big Lie to the Republican/Conservative propaganda machine and remind people that we have the First Amendment so there can have free and open debate about how government is doing. But that in a democracy debate is with words, not swords or guns.  

And that free debate won't work if people only listen to news that tells them just one side of the story.  Or worse, only tells them lies.  That they have to listen to various points of view so they can better judge what is truly happening.  

And how those lies and the resulting conflict make it hard for people to even know what is true about other important issues.  

I understand that this was a speech focused on January 6, but again, I wanted him to show how it was connected, through the many big lies,  to climate change, to race relations, to COVID prevention, to immigration.  The same propaganda machine that brought these people to the Capitol spreads lies to divide the nation, to divide people with common needs and goals, so they won't look at the injustice of our economic system and how the profits of capitalism go disproportionally to the wealthy

He talked about the danger still there for the US democracy, but he didn't give people concrete steps they could take to help keep that democracy.  He didn't ask people to start with listening to the feelings and the beliefs of family members with whom they disagree politically.  He didn't tell his supporters they have to get politically involved and get as many people out to vote as possible.

So, yes, what he said was important.  But what he didn't say was also important.


And one little pet peeve I have as our nation has evolved from one single election day to a much longer period in which people can vote early in person or by mail.  

Biden said in his speech: 

"Over 150 million Americans went to the polls and voted that day."

150 million people didn't vote on that day.  The Pew Research Center writes:

"A slim majority of voters (54%) say they voted in person this November, compared with 46% who voted by absentee or mail-in ballot. About one-quarter (27%) report having voted in person on Election Day, and an identical share say they voted in person before Election Day."

News people and politicians have to wean themselves from the term "election day."  "Election period" is the first term to come to mind as a substitute."

Wednesday, January 05, 2022

Today Is The Last Time January 6 Was Less Than A Year Away [UPDATED]

Today is the last time we can say, it hasn't been a year yet since January 6.  Many people are criticizing Attorney General Merrick Garland because there haven't been any big names arrested or tried yet.  Garland spoke today on this, but I see people calling for action in addition to words.

My biggest concern is "as long as it takes" maybe longer than he'll be attorney general.


I wasn't alive when Pearl Harbor was attacked, but from my parents' account, it was one of those life changing days.  Before that Sunday, there was a strong anti-war movement, in part fueled by people who supported Hitler.


The country shut down for several days after John Kennedy was shot and people were glued to their televisions.  The commissions that studied the assassination seemed to last forever and it seems like the term 'conspiracy theory' came out of that experience. [It appears that that was, indeed the case.  My problem with the term is that there are, in fact, conspiracies.  But now the term itself applies "crackpot" or "delusional" even.]

9/11 was an even more shocking event.  As people began to realize the first plane into the World Trade Tower wasn't an accident.  And that there were more planes out there.  Air travel was shut down for several days.  It was quiet.  The only flights were high ranking Saudis that George W. Bush allowed to leave - even though 15 of the 19 plotters were Saudis.  And there were, as of Sept 11, 2021, still 39 prisoners still at Guantanamo.  

Here's from a 2010 Report on 9/11 from the New York University School of Law:

Main Conclusion:

Since 9/11, the Department of Justice’s understanding of terrorism cases has grown exponentially in terms of its patience in building a case, its understanding of the threats posed by terrorists, and its willingness to focus on terrorism and other serious charges. The early practice of making high-profile arrests, while prosecuting few terrorism charges – which brought into question the capacity of the DoJ to try terrorism-related crimes – has largely been addressed.

Other conclusions follow as well:

• The number of announced arrests has declined and the proportion of indictments and convictions has steadily grown.

• Most prosecutions of international terrorists involved no allegations of specific targets, and where specific targets were alleged, the targets were usually outside the U.S.

• The DoJ effected a successful strategy for convincing defendants to cooperate. Three notable examples of cooperators are Iyman Faris, whose cooperation may have ultimately led to six other high-level prosecutions; Mohammed Mansour Jabarah, who provided details on al Qaeda training camps and methods; and Bryant Neal Vinas, who reportedly began cooperating immediately upon arrest, providing information leading to overseas prosecutions and domestic alerts.

• Neither Miranda requirements nor the challenges of preserving classified information have proven to be insurmountable obstacles in terrorism cases. The rate of conviction, nearly nine in 10, compares favorably to those involving other serious charges.

This is all to put some perspective on how long these things have taken in the past.  

Right now there is a sense of urgency.  A belief that serious justice has to take place before next December when members of Congress are sworn in. Because 
  • people fear Republican voter suppression and gerrymandering will make it hard for Democrats to keep Congress
  • people fear Trump led challenges to the elections if Democrats win
  • and with a new Congressional majority, the Congressional investigation will end
  • and even though Biden has two more years after the 2022 election, a Republican Congress would attack whatever the attorney general does relentlessly
More than any time in my lifetime - and I've been around a while - our democracy is in serious danger. (Yes, people will tell you we already don't have a democracy.  But democracy isn't binary - it isn't either we do or don't have one.  It's a continuum from very democratic to not at all.)

This is the year that people who have sat back and let other folks get involved in politics will need to get out of their comfort zone and work to elect people who believe in democracy.  Germany did come back as a democracy after WWII, but a lot of people died before that happened.  

I hope I'm wrong.  I hope the family members of people who died of COVID will feel that Republicans betrayed them and wake up. I hope those who I hope that Trump's influence over Congressional Republicans weakens.  I hope those who stormed the Capitol a year ago tomorrow are sobered up by their trials.  I hope Congress passes a meaningful Voting Rights bill that overrides that many attempts to subvert our elections in November. 

But I'm not going to count on all that happening.  We've got a lot to lose.  More than most people imagine.  Things people take for granted.  But I've lived in non-democratic countries and I know how good we've had things and how bad it can get.  

So I beseech my readers to find ways they can become actively involved in making sure what we take for granted isn't snatched away.  

Some key areas where you can give money, time, and ideas include organizations that:

  • Fight for fair elections
  • Fight disinformation 
  • Fight dismantling foundational institutions (Anchorage folks are seeing this happening first hand - libraries, health departments, universities, elections, etc.)
  • Fight mob intimidation of elected officials and citizens
This list comes from an organization called Protect Democracy.  I don't know them personally, but the list (and I only picked some things) is right on the mark.

Readers:  let me know organizations in Anchorage, in Alaska, and nationwide that are fighting the good fight.  
You've got about ten months left to the November 2022 election.  Use every day as if someone were trying to take away your democracy.  Because someone is.  

[UPDATE:  I got some suggestions of organizations by email:

"Postcards to Voters are friendly, handwritten reminders from volunteers to targeted voters giving Democrats a winning edge in close, key races coast to coast."
"STRATEGY
We meet people where they are – via phone, text, postcard, social media, and soon at in-person, Covid-safe voter drives! 
 
Armed with Voterizer.org, the only custom-built app just for registering Democrats, we track down every good-hearted eligible voter we can, and get them on the voter rolls where they belong. And sign them up to vote from home!"
Chop Wood, Carry Water  - This one has daily reminders of things to do to support democracy.

"Pay for cable or satellite TV? You’re subsidizing Fox News whether you watch it or not.

Your cable or satellite TV provider pays a subscriber fee to carry Fox News. That cost is passed directly on to YOU.

Every network charges cable and satellite providers a small fee per subscriber; the one for Fox News is extraordinarily high. A typical household pays Fox News almost $2 per month—about $20 per year— via their cable or satellite provider, regardless of whether they actually watch the channel.

In 2021, a wave of big contracts between Fox News and TV providers for subscriber fees are set to expire. These contracts make up about 65% if Fox News’ subscriber fee revenue. If we want to stop paying the Fox News “tax,” now is the time to act."

It says new contracts in 2021, but if you do get cable and pay for FOX even if you don't watch it, you should read this.  

 


"Find ways to make a real impact on the elections that determine the balance of power in our country."]

Monday, January 03, 2022

Alaska Redistricting: The Valdez Challenge Part 2 - Looking At Valdez' Allegations and Claims

This is a follow up to The Valdez Challenge Part 1.  The items with the red checks below were covered in  Part 1.  In this post I'll try to address items 2 and 3.  NOTE: I've been working on this a while and it probably needs some more proofing, but it also probably needs to get up sooner than later.  So I reserve the right to look through this later and fix typos, add links, or whatever else needs to be done.  Substantive changes will be noted.]


#3 - The Board's Discussion Of Valdez

The Board didn't spend much time talking about the pairing of Valdez with Mat-Su - not quite 14 minutes.. The attorney said the Supreme Court hadn't objected to Valdez being paired with Mat-Su in one case and with Anchorage in another.  

The discussion I found took place on the afternoon of November 4, 2021.  It's the first thing discussed on this video.  The video starts with a discussion of Valdez at 1pm.  (They had been in Executive Session all morning so nothing of that is on the tape.)  They spent about 15 minutes discussing pairing Valdez with either Anchorage or Mat-Su..  It's possible that they talked about Valdez at a different point, but I don't have any notes.  Their minutes are combined from November 2- 4.  When I did a search for Valdez there was only one mention - it merely mentioned there was a public hearing in Valdez. I'd note that originally their agenda for  Monday [Tuesday] November 1  [2] as overly ambitious and they thought it might have to be stretched out over the rest of the week.  

Below is the video of that meeting.  As I said, it starts the video and goes for 15 minutes.  I've also done a rough transcript.  (A rough transcript is much better than my rough notes at a meeting because I can play it over and over.  But still, Board member Marcum seems a bit further away from a mic and talks really fast.  Member Simpson speaks slower but in a low voice and is the hardest to hear.  But I think I've captured the key points reasonably accurately.  And you have the video here to double check. 

Joint Redistricting Board, 11/4/21, 9am Part 1 from AlaskaLegislature.tv on Vimeo.

Rough Transcript of Video

0:35  Binkley:…  [Discussion of what to do next]  Did we wrap up Kenai? So then the only area left.  So, should we go into Anchorage?


Marcum:  I would like to raise something if I could

Binkley:  OK

Marcum: [?????? Something about Anchorage, then Valdez.]  How far does it go? My understanding is that Valdez had been paired with Anchorage in the past and … was not keen on going with the Mat-Su.  The current iteration that we’re looking at would not allow Valdez to ?? With D36, D35?? Is also full.  So maybe Anchorage is still a consideration and I would [like us?] to discuss that possibility.

Binkley:  Have you tried mapping Valdez and Anchorage?

Marcum:  ???? [This just occurred to me?] last night, but looking at the history, I know it’s been done in the past. . .  Peter, do you have a  number . . [although?] we are in Anchorage . . . fitting Valdez and 

Peter Torkelson, Board Executive Director:  Anchorage is 15.88 districts, so it needs about .12, so it needs about 2000 people roughly.  Valdez is 4000.  [Voices  - about 2000 over???]

Binkley and Marcum:  The same going in the other direction..

Marcum:  ???Obviously significant    how these [??affect Anchorage districts??]  But we have to have this conversation.  [???] all of the Valdez possibilities.

Binkley:  I don’t think it hurts to explore the possibilities.


3:05  Binkley:  See what options are out there.  Matt (attorney Matt Singer), could you remind us what happened when Valdez was in with Anchorage . . .

Singer:  Well, it was litigated, I believe it was litigated to the Supreme Court in the 2001 plan and the Court ruled that it was constitutional socio-economically because Valdez and Anchorage ...  including the air service, oil industry connections, connections with the University, so, there’s a legal pre…there’s a case at the superior court affirming that pairing.  What I don’t recall in 2001 is whether Valdez stayed in the ultimate Proclamation Plan or if it came out as a consequence of other? changes.  The court was ok with the Valdez-Anchorage pairing, but not ok with the entire plan so then . . . I just have to pull up the 2001 Proclamation Plan . . .

And then in the litigation about the current pairing of Valdez with Mat-Su mostly focused on issues of compactness and the superior court affirmed the district in which Mat-Su and Valdez are paired.  

There’s been a lit . . I believe Valdez has been …… The reason Valdez comes up is it has a large population in an isolated part of the state with significant industry, it doesn’t have any sisters nearby with similar attributes

Marcum:  So you’re saying pairing Valdez with either Anchorage or Matsu would overpopulate both of those districts and therefore they would be underrepresented. Is that ??? understanding of the numbers? [NOTE:  That isn’t at all what he said, he merely spoke to the fact that they were accepted by the courts in previous proclamations.]

Binkley:  I guess to what extent . . .

Marcum:  ?? We’ve done the Anchorage and Mat-Su ???? And the numbers were 2-2.5 % over, right?, and as I said it would be about the same for Anchorage

Bahnke:  The difference between the two to me though is a matter of compactness and contiguity.  It makes more sense to me to pair Valdez with the lesser of the two options.  Difficult options I guess.  And we have to look at compactness and contiguity

Marcum:  I think that ???

Bahnke:  deviations are …

Marcum:  ??? Compactness and contiguity in the past, right?,

Singer:  The Superior Court in 2001 allowed. . . My recollection of …. There was Valdez, across Prince William Sound and a path sort of following the caribou route out past Whittier and on into South Anchorage.  The Court allowed that district.

[I think he's mixing this up with a ruling about Valdez and Palmer.  To my knowledge there is no caribou route from Valdez to Whittier to Anchorage. But there are caribou along the Glenn Highway between Tok and into Mat-Su.]

Bahnke:  And the courts allowed for both ?

Singer:  [Nodding his head[ and Valdez is currently paired with Mat-Su.

Bahnke:  So when you compare the two, since they’ve both already been identified as being compact and contiguous and socially-economically integrated, the deviations are similar, 

7:30 

but pairing them with Mat-Su is more compact and contiguous than with Anchorage, am I correct?

Singer:  I’m not comfortable giving on the fly a legal opinion about which of the two options better meets the constitution.  I’d have to look.   I think what I would say is they’re both  likely constitutionally permissible options.  I’m not sure I could grade one, without really looking but they are both available options to the Board, so the Board should be considering  relative population and the relative socio-economic, pattern of socio-economic integration that results, so what is the [ripple?] effect of one choice over another.  Makes sense to the rest of the Board’s plan?  

Marcum:  I had a question but then I lost it.

Borromeo:  Mr. Chairman

Binkley:  Yes, Nicole.

Borromeo: Thank you.  I've actually drawn a map early on that would do exactly what Bethany asked, about pairing Valdez with Anchorage.  It is possible.  It is also very difficult to absorb that population into the districts of Anchorage, keep neighborhoods,  school districts,  etc. tight as they are, might not be …  It sacrifices compactness and also at the end it really came to a policy call in terms of Valdez having no road to Anchorage , connectedness isn’t there in the same way it is to the Valley.  Yes you can drive down into Anchorage.  But when you look at that district, District 9, Bethany, and how it would be over to Valdez, there is no road between D9  … and Valdez.  You would have to drive through 18 other districts at least to get to there, so I believe that contiguity piece and that compactness piece weighs  more heavily in favor of pairing Valdez with the Mat-Su.

10:12

Marcum:  ??????   I know we have testimony from the City of Valdez in terms of a resolution from their elected officials and then we have testimony from their attorney saying they oppose having  Mat-Su with them.   Do we have anything from Anchorage addressing the possibility of Valdez being combined with Anchorage?

Borromeo:  Not to my knowledge, but again in none of these six plans did we ever presented as an option so I don’t see that they would have known to be commenting on it.

Marcum:  It wouldn’t hurt to ..  something combining?? Anchorage and Valdez

???:  There is testimony from Mat-Su about ???  

Bahnke:  Did Valdez at all about being paired with Anchorage?

Marcum:  They were 100% unanimous about not being paired with Mat-Su

11:43

Borromeo:  

Marcum:  I’ll just say that I’m not ???  Making decisions on Anchorage until ??? These other things that might influence Valdez.

Simpson:  I feel that ???? Get Anchorage squared away… Valdez …..

Borromeo?:  I like that plan.

Binkley:  I know this relates? To Fairbanks.  Nicole and I didn’t have enough time.  Looking at Fairbanks … comfortable… solidify Fairbanks and move on to Anchorage.

So they then went to Anchorage.

14:55




So, basically, the discussion was about what courts have said about the constitutionality of pairing Valdez with either Anchorage or Mat-Su (attorney Matt Singer said both had been ok with previous courts) and Marcum raises the issue of the unanimous testimony against the pairing from the Valdez government and people.  The fact that no one really responded to Marcum about Valdez' opposition to being paired with Mat-Su somewhat belies their claim to having listened to the public.  It might also reflect their conclusion that Singer said out loud, that Valdez is a difficult community for redistricting Boards.  


#2 LIST OF VALDEZ ISSUES AND EVIDENCE

The lawsuit's paragraphs are numbered consecutively.  There is a list of 28 allegations in the Allegation section (14-42).  Then later there's a list of specific claims Valdez is making against the Board.  It would be easier for the average reader to have the evidence presented in the Allegations section more directly linked to the Claims section.  I've gone through the Allegations and grouped them for you.  (Well for me, so I could make sense of them.)

# 14 is procedural - includes the previous paragraphs into the allegations

#15-20 discuss the Board's constitutional requirements and steps it took to implement them - and up to Map v3, Valdez had no problems

#21-22 Map v4 - Valdez surprised to be paired with Valdez and cut out of Richardson Highway and submitted Valdez Option 1 map to the Board

Then we get different allegations - 

#23  claims the Board did not fulfill its obligations to inform the public and solicit feedback and listen to feedback

[My comment:  Most of the allegations seem accurate to me.  But this one is hard for me to swallow.  This Board posted far more information on its website than the previous Board and Board's before that didn't even have websites.  The Board made all meetings available on line or by phone.  All the maps were posted on line as soon as they were available to the staff.  The previous Board brought physical maps to their public hearings around the state which the local folks didn't see until they were pinned to the wall.

The one point that I would agree with, as it relates to Valdez, is not listening to feedback.  This is true about Anchorage and West Fairbanks too, among other places.  But looking at the comments made by Valdez residents that are posted online, it's clear they had no effect on the Board's final decision.]

#24 No opportunity to comment on Senate pairings and truncation  [True for everyone.  Even some of the Board members' comments were ignored rather than discussed.]

#25 Notes that Board did Final Proclamation plan and links to district Valdez ended up in connected to Mat-Su and disconnected from Richardson Highway communities.  [It's true]

#26-41 list all the connections Valdez has with the Richardson Highway corridor up to (in some cases) Fairbanks - the Oil Pipeline, DOTPF headquarters, deep water and small boat harbors that serve business and recreational needs, electricity and phone utilities, PWS community college, KCHU public radio  [This is a powerful argument about socio-economic integration between Valdez and the Richardson Highway communities and even up to Fairbanks.  It would seem the Board would have to prove these aren't true or that there are roughly equal ties to Mat-Su.  But the Board has to balance three main criteria - SE Integration is just one.  But they talk about the others below.[

#42 points out that Valdez has none of these socio-economic connections with Palmer

[It seems that the Board has to show at least some important connections to Mat-Su to counter this.]

So that gets us to the specific claims Valdez makes:

As I said, this is a little tricky because the suit itself has a section on Allegations with 28 allegations (14- 42).  Valdez does include all these with the specific claims but you have to make the connections between the allegations and the claims yourself.  One has to go through these 28 allegations and match them to the specific claims.  I’ll try.  

First Claim - Violation of the Open Meetings Act

43-48     http://www.touchngo.com/lglcntr/akstats/statutes/title44/chapter62/section310.htm

43. Paragraphs 1 through 42 are incorporated as if fully set forth herein.   [See Above]

44. The Board, as a governmental body of a public entity of the state, is subject to the requirements of AS 44.62.310-320 (“Opening Meetings Act”). The deliberations and decisions of the Board are activities covered by the Open Meetings Act. [Undisputed]

45. Upon information and belief, the Board has violated the Open Meetings Act in the following ways:

(a) It conducted deliberations in secret.  [There are two ways this seem to have happened:

1.  The Board had very lengthy Executive Sessions at different times.  Executive session may (by law) only be held for a few issues.  Those are the only things that can be discussed in ES. They aren't legally allowed to stray into topics that should be on the public record.  It seems hard for me to believe that the lengthy executive sessions they had at the end didn't stray into areas that should have been discussed in public.  Even attorney-client privilege is not so far reaching that everything an attorney tells their client should be confidential.  And, in this case, an argument can be made that all Alaska residents are clients of the Board's attorney.

2.  It is seems very likely that at least two of the three GOP appointed Board members had meetings with members of the public to get help in making their maps.  When I requested Board members publicly declare who helped them with the maps, only Borromeo and Bahnke stood up in public and said they only got help from staff and other Board members.  Binkley, Simpson, and Marcum should be asked under oath who they got help from making their maps.]

(b) It failed to properly conduct votes. [Things got a little loosey-goosey toward the end.  Any semblance of Robert's Rules of Order fell apart as I've specifically described on this blog in terms of the allocation of terms after truncation.  The motion wasn't ever a proper sentence.  As I pointed out, after the vote, if all the Board members had been asked, separately, to write down what the motion was and how it would be implemented, they'd have all written down something different.]

(c) It conducted a serial meeting. [I'm guessing here that 'serial meeting' refers to the five day meeting November 1-5.  The Board posted an agenda for Monday.  When I talked to the Board's Executive Director (a staff person) about how ambitious that seemed, he agreed and said what they didn't get done that first day, they'd do the rest of the week.  That was the agenda for the rest of the week, which included work sessions -which you could watch and sometimes hear - where the Board worked on making maps.  It also included lengthy Executive Sessions, and the 15 minutes they spent talking about Valdez at 1pm on the 4th.  That discussion is not reflected in the minutes (also just one set of minutes for five days), but you can see it on the video.  But finding it is not easy.  I was able to find it quickly because I had taken notes of most of the meetings and searched them for Valdez.]

(d) It withheld documents from the public that were used in formulating the final redistricting plan. [I'm not sure about what they are talking about here exactly.  However, Marcum's pairing of Eagle River House districts with downtown Anchorage and south Muldoon instead of with each other came out of the blue.  And clearly there had to be some planning in order to get the allocation of Senate terms to work out as they did. Perhaps they're referring to where v4 came from - the map that paired Valdez with Mat-Su.]

(e) It failed to clearly and with specificity state the subject(s) of each executive session or its reasons for addressing the subject(s) in executive session. [This is something I've mentioned on the blog various times.  Early on - like December 2020 or January 2021, the Board just went into Executive Session without saying why.  I emailed the Board Chair and at the next meeting when they went into Executive Session they carefully cited the law to explain why they went into Executive Session and what the topic was.  But as time went by they got sloppier.  They'd cited the whole law, not the specific part that was related to that particular Executive Session, and they didn't identity the topic or why it was covered by the law.  And the last couple of days they spent hours in Executive Session without us clearly knowing why - vaguely Attorney-Client privilege.]

46. Plaintiffs and others have been harmed by these violations.  [That goes beyond my reporting on the Board.  I've thought about - when the AFFR map cut my neighborhood in half - exactly how I might be harmed if that were adopted.  If Valdez were separated from the Richardson Highway districts, one could argue they would have access to their representative and also to the representative for the Richardson Highway district.  We just assume all these interests should be together.  But, of course, at some point, geographical distance and many competing communities make it hard for representatives to represent their district well. More important though than my opinion is the Alaska constitution which requires districts to be socio-economically integrated.]

47. As a result of these violations, the actions of the Board resulting in adoption of the final redistricting plan including senate pairings, should be voided.

48. The Board’s proclamation of redistricting should similarly be voided, as it was based solely upon the redistricting plan.

My Comments:  


Second Claim - Violation of Article VI, Section 6

49 - 55  [I've copied that section of the Constitution below;]

§ 6. District Boundaries

The Redistricting Board shall establish the size and area of house districts, subject to the limitations of this article. Each house district shall be formed of contiguous and compact territory containing as nearly as practicable a relatively integrated socio-economic area. Each shall contain a population as near as practicable to the quotient obtained by dividing the population of the state by forty. Each senate district shall be composed as near as practicable of two contiguous house districts. Consideration may be given to local government boundaries. Drainage and other geographic features shall be used in describing boundaries wherever possible.


[Rereading this now, I recall how AFFER used a lot of geographic featureas - like Campbell Creek - in its maps.  But the Constitution doesn't actually say they should be used in determining the districts, but rather in describing the districts, which is done when the Board staff wrote up the metes and bounds.   I suspect the Valdez attorneys will argue that their district is neither compact nor contiguous - given that they have to go through another district to get to the rest of their district in Mat-Su.  That will also be an argument against the Anchorage Senate pairings with Eagle River.  But I suspect that the Board will argue that Valdez districts that stretch up around Fairbanks are hardly compact either.  The map that Valdez offered the Board is more compact, but will require remapping a lot of other districts.  But given all the other challenges, that could happen anyway.  The Board will also argue that they had pressure from the Doyon Coalition to get Native villages aligned with the other villages from their Regional Corporations.]



Third Claim - Violation of Article VI, Section 10

56 - 59  

(a) Within thirty days after the official reporting of the decennial census of the United States or thirty days after being duly appointed, whichever occurs last, the board shall adopt one or more proposed redistricting plans. The board shall hold public hearings on the proposed plan, or, if no single proposed plan is agreed on, on all plans proposed by the board. No later than ninety days after the board has been appointed and the official reporting of the decennial census of the United States, the board shall adopt a final redistricting plan and issue a proclamation of redistricting. The final plan shall set out boundaries of house and senate districts and shall be effective for the election of members of the legislature until after the official reporting of the next decennial census of the United States.

(b) Adoption of a final redistricting plan shall require the affirmative votes of three members of the Redistricting Board. [Amended 1998]


[The Board did this - I'm not sure what is different here from the other claims they made.  While Valdez complains in allegations 20-22 that they didn't respond after v3 came out because it was fine, they were surprised by v4.  But v3 and v4 came out at the same time and there were 60 more days to complain.]



Fourth Claim - Violation of Article I, Section 1 (Equal Protection)

60-62

§ 1. Inherent Rights

This constitution is dedicated to the principles that all persons have a natural right to life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness, and the enjoyment of the rewards of their own industry; that all persons are equal and entitled to equal rights, opportunities, and protection under the law; and that all persons have corresponding obligations to the people and to the State.


[I'm not sure how Valdez intends to use this in the case - except maybe to say their equal rights are being violated somehow by the way their district was drawn.  But it is useful to be reminded of the final clause that says all persons have corresponding obligations to the people and to the State.]


Fifth Claim - Violation of Article I, Section 7 (Due Process)

64 - 68

§ 7. Due Process

No person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law. The right of all persons to fair and just treatment in the course of legislative and executive investigations shall not be infringed.


[I suspect they are going to argue here that the lack of an open process has deprived residents of Valdez their due process to influence the shaping of their district.  Clearly the Board did not heed the unanimous opinion of the Valdez commenters that they wanted to be with Richardson Highway and not with Mat-Su.]



RELIEF

WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs pray that this Court:
1. Enter a judgment declaring the Board’s redistricting plan promulgated pursuant to the proclamation dated November 10, 2021, to be in violation of the Open Meetings Act, Article VI, Sections 6 and 10 of the Alaska Constitution, and the equal protection clause and the due process clause of the Alaska Constitution; 

2. Enter a judgment declaring the Board’s redistricting plan promulgated pursuant to the proclamation dated November 10, 2021, to be null and void; 

3. Enter an order enjoining the State Division of Elections and the State of Alaska from conducting any primary or general election for state legislative office under the Board’s redistricting plan, or otherwise taking any step to implement the plan; 

4. Enter an order requiring the Board to promulgate a new redistricting plan consistent with the requirements of the Alaska Constitution or, in the alternative, enter an order correcting errors in the Board’s redistricting plan;
5. Enter an order declaring Plaintiffs to be public interest litigants as constitutional claimants and awarding costs and attorney’s fees;
6. Enter an order for such other and further relief as may be just and reasonable. DATED this 10th day of December, 2021. 

[Valdez isn't simply asking the Board to fix Valdez' district.  They are asking that the whole redistricting process be thrown out and started over.  Given the 90 day process we just went through, if this were to happen, the new maps wouldn't be ready in time for the 2022 election and the law requires that the election use the current map which, theoretically, the courts would have declared invalid. At least that's what has happened in the past.  But here's what the Constitution says: 

 "The final plan shall set out boundaries of house and senate districts and shall be effective for the election of members of the legislature until after the official reporting of the next decennial census of the United States."

But one could argue that it says "the final plan" and if the court requires the Board to redraw the maps, the first proclamation map drawn wouldn't be the final plan.  Further, one could argue if it were the final plan, it would have to be used until the next decennial census and thus, a new final plan couldn't be drawn up until then.  But you could also argue that the whole point is to reapportion the districts so they are all equal size and thus the Board's proclamation plan does make the districts more equal in size than the 2011 plan.

If this were the only challenge to the Board, I would say that the courts would, if they find Valdez' arguments compelling,  at best, require the Board to get Valdez into the Richardson Highway district and whatever other changes would be needed as a consequence of changing that district.  But there are other challenges so a larger change may be called for.  Though I think the Anchorage Senate pairings could be remedied without consequences outside of Anchorage.  We'll see.  Wednesday is the next court hearing.  My granddaughter and her parents will be gone by then and I shouldn't forget it this time around.]

BRENA, BELL & WALKER, P.C. Attorneys for Plaintiffs 

By
Robin O. Brena, ABA No. 8511130 Jake W. Staser, ABA No 1111089 Laura S. Gould, ABA No. 0310042