Across the political spectrum, every member of the Spokane City Council unanimously voted to put City of Spokane Measure 2 on the ballot. If passed, the city will rewrite parts of the charter provision to offer greater representation to the community and remove ambiguous language, ensuring Spokane's districts are impartially created. The measure would create a seven-member Council Redistricting Commission—expanding it from the current three members—consisting of city residents. It would also establish a decennial (every ten years) redistricting process.
The commission would be filled with three appointments from the mayor from each existing district, three appointed by the city council, and one nonvoting chairperson appointed by these six members.
The measure is written to put boundaries and restrictions on special interest groups and political influence, require more public participation on map proposals, and prioritize the boundaries of neighborhoods and communities of shared interests. It also prevents the city council from modifying the decisions of the Redistricting Commission. After public hearings, the council could either adopt the submitted plan or send it back to the commission for changes. Deadlocks on the commission would be decided by the municipal court.
The new process should give residents more assurance that the redistricting process remains politically impartial. Vote Yes On City of Spokane Measure 2.
Across the political spectrum, every member of the Spokane City Council unanimously voted to put City of Spokane Measure 2 on the ballot. If passed, the city will rewrite parts of the charter provision to offer greater representation to the community and remove ambiguous language, ensuring Spokane's districts are impartially created. The measure would create a seven-member Council Redistricting Commission—expanding it from the current three members—consisting of city residents. It would also establish a decennial (every ten years) redistricting process.
The commission would be filled with three appointments from the mayor from each existing district, three appointed by the city council, and one nonvoting chairperson appointed by these six members.
The measure is written to put boundaries and restrictions on special interest groups and political influence, require more public participation on map proposals, and prioritize the boundaries of neighborhoods and communities of shared interests. It also prevents the city council from modifying the decisions of the Redistricting Commission. After public hearings, the council could either adopt the submitted plan or send it back to the commission for changes. Deadlocks on the commission would be decided by the municipal court.
The new process should give residents more assurance that the redistricting process remains politically impartial. Vote Yes On City of Spokane Measure 2.