despite nearly unanimous opposition from members of the public at Saturday’s public meeting.
The boundaries of the city’s wards — there’s Greenville , Bergen-Lafayette , Downtown , Heights , West Side and Journal Square — are adjusted every 10 years, after the Census results are announced, to make the districts equal in population. New Ward F Councilman Frank Gilmore testified that the proposed boundaries of his ward were not compact and did not conform to natural boundaries. The changes would be “extremely puzzling” to people who voted for him as their representative and are now in a different ward.
Other speakers criticized the process leading up to the meeting. The ward commission’s public hearing was originally scheduled for Jan. 14, but it was postponed to Jan. 20 when a number of people were blocked from joining the online hearing. The hearing was then moved to Jan. 22 when a legal notice advertising the new date was not posted in time because of the Martin Luther King Day holiday.
Eric Dawson, a Hamilton Park resident, told the council that “this process has not been transparent.” He said that he was opposed to an earlier map that would have split up Hamilton Park. The Hamilton Park Neighborhood Association mounted a campaign against the initial map proposal that included a petition. Dawson is pleased the new map keeps the neighborhood together, but still criticized what he called a lack of transparency.
JC can gerrymander with the best of them.
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