FINAL BILL REPORT
HB 1890
C 126 L 90
BYRepresentatives R. Fisher and Anderson
Changing provisions concerning redistricting.
House Committe on State Government
Senate Committee on Governmental Operations
SYNOPSIS AS ENACTED
BACKGROUND:
State law currently divides the state into 51 legislative (or representative) districts and 49 senatorial districts. Two senatorial districts, the 19th and the 39th, each contain two single-member representative districts. All other senatorial districts contain two-member representative districts.
Article II, Section 43 of the state's constitution requires the appointment of a Redistricting Commission to divide the state into congressional and legislative districts. It requires the state's Supreme Court to develop a redistricting plan if the commission should fail to do so in a timely manner. It also prohibits the commission, which will be activated for the first time in 1991, from providing a number of legislative districts that is different than the number established by the Legislature. A provision of the enabling law enacted with that section of the constitution requires the commission's districting plan to establish representative districts uniformly so that if one senatorial district is divided in the formation of representative districts, all senatorial districts are so divided.
SUMMARY:
Any redistricting plan adopted by the Redistricting Commission or, should the commission fail to adopt a plan in a timely manner, by the Supreme Court must provide for 49 legislative districts. Two members of the House of Representatives and one member of the Senate must be elected from each district. The two members of the House must run at large within each district.
VOTES ON FINAL PASSAGE:
House 62 26
Senate 42 5 (Senate amended)
Senate 35 10 (Senate amended)
House 89 4 (House concurred)
EFFECTIVE:June 7, 1990