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Darien Times - The News of Darien

The Darien Times

State district map drawn with ‘perfect population equality’

Darien-4th-district-Map2A special master appointed by the state Supreme Court to resolve Connecticut's redistricting stalemate submitted a final proposal Thursday, Jan. 19, that will keep Bridgeport in the 4th Congressional District, which includes Darien.

The plan also retains New Britain in the 5th District and requires only minor changes to equalize district populations, a constitutional mandate following the 2010 Census.

District 4, which was the most underpopulated in the existing plan, was redrawn to move 8,079 people in Shelton from District 3, which achieved "perfect population equality," said Nathaniel Persily, the master.

District 3 was then moved farther into District 1's Middletown, gaining an additional 5,369 people.

After inviting interested parties to submit reports by Jan. 18, Persily concluded that the Draft Report & Plan are "in order" and require no revision.

The four parties who submitted comments to the clerk's office on Jan. 18 included Democrat and Republican members of the Reapportionment Commission, the Coalition for Minority Representation and Robert S. Poliner, town counsel of Durham.

Persily's report comes after two completed plans — one from Republican members of the Reapportionment Commission and one from the Democratic members — were submitted before Jan. 9.

"The Republican proposal shifts more population, land, and towns than is reasonably necessary to comply with one person, one vote," Persily said in his report.

He said his proposal takes into account "all submitted proposals, historic redistricting maps, briefs submitted to (him) by this court, and testimony received at the Special Master's hearing on Jan. 9."

According to Persily, the state district map was drawn first with respect to District 2.

The federal census revealed District 2 had an overpopulation of 14,952. "Perfect population equality can be achieved merely by adjusting the borders of (Durham and Glastonbury)," Persily said in his proposal.

Lastly, the proposal addressed the imbalance between Districts 1 and 5.

District 5 requires the "least alteration to comply with the law," Persily said, and required only minor adjustments: 524 people were moved to District 1 from District 5.

The districts are now virtually identical in population size, with Districts 2, 3 and 4 each comprised of 714,819 people, and District 1 and 5 each of 714,820.

Attorney David Rosen, representing the Coalition of Minority Voters, said he is pleased with the outcome, and the controversial Republican initiative to move Bridgeport and New Britain from the 4th and 5th, respectively, would have only diluted minority representation in the state.

The final report included the testimony of Rosen and members of the coalition.

"Our perspective was that the special master shouldn't try to do anything more than necessary," Rosen said. "What we were advocating was pretty clear cut."

Concerned parties must submit objections to the court by Wednesday, Feb. 1; oral arguments will be held on Monday, Feb. 6, and the court will file its final plan with the secretary of the state on Feb. 15.



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