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Pasadena: Plan could change school district elections

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  • Pasadena: Plan could change school district elections

    Pasadena Sun, CA
    Jan 6 2012


    Plan could change school district elections
    Zones could mean open seats, incumbent against incumbent.

    Joe Piasecki, [email protected]

    January 6, 2012 | 4:40 p.m.
    Plans to elect school board members from separate geographic districts
    might force several incumbents to battle each other at the polls and
    could open at least two seats to newcomers.

    Four preliminary district maps, each slicing the Pasadena Unified
    School District into seven distinct zones, are now up for public
    debate.

    Under one scenario, four of the seven current board members - Ed
    Honowitz, Elizabeth Pomeroy, Tom Selinske and Kim Kenne - would find
    themselves boxed into a single district that stretches from Altadena
    to the Foothill (210) Freeway.

    In another, board allies Scott Phelps and Ramon Miramontes would have
    to battle for the same seat in the 2013 elections in a district
    bordering La Caņada Flintridge.

    Either map would force voters to choose between Selinske and Kenne
    when their terms end in 2015, assuming both choose to run again. The
    two most current maps under consideration can be viewed at
    www.pasadenasun.com.

    With proposed district lines subject to change after a series of
    public hearings, incumbents are hesitant to announce re-election plans
    and are holding back strong opinions.

    Forcing out incumbents `would seem regrettable,' said Pomeroy, `but
    the decision is ultimately about what is best for the community.'

    `You don't know who's going to run again and where the [final] lines
    will be drawn. We'll have to see how it plays out,' said Honowitz.

    Board members currently occupy seats voted on district-wide.

    Pasadena officials began studying district maps after other California
    school districts were sued under the California Voting Rights Act for
    disenfranchising minority voters. Nearly 60% of PUSD students are
    Latino.

    Districts would go into effect only if a majority of voters in
    Pasadena, Altadena and Sierra Madre approve a charter change in the
    June 5 election.

    The nine-member PUSD Districting Task Force needed to create districts
    of 28,911 residents each, and then drew lines factoring in education
    and income levels of residents, followed by ethnic makeup, fluency in
    English and established school attendance zones.

    `We realize school achievement is not so much about race as it is
    about economics,' said task force member Diana Peterson-More, an
    attorney and business consultant.

    At least two proposed Northwest Pasadena districts would increase the
    voting power of minority and poor residents, said task force chair Ken
    Chawkins.

    But wealthier voters also get grouped together.

    Residents in areas where few public school students live, including
    the southwest and eastern portion of the city, will get two or three
    districts.

    `I'm going to go with the will of the electorate, but one of the
    troublesome things is you almost guarantee school board seats to parts
    of the community that generally don't support public education, that
    don't send their kids to public schools,' said Board President Renatta
    Cooper, a Northwest Pasadena resident who under current maps would not
    share a district with another incumbent.

    Voting Rights Act compliance, said Chawkins, `doesn't concern which
    kids go to which schools, but equal representation of voters.'

    Miramontes said districting creates an opportunity for the school
    board to more accurately reflect the ethnic makeup of the city.

    `I'm more concerned that communities of color don't get diluted,' said
    Miramontes. `If [minority district] candidates don't have to have a
    war chest to run citywide, then you're bringing democracy within
    reach.'

    Cooper said one benefit of districting could be a zone exclusively
    representing Altadena, where no current board member resides and where
    two elementary schools have been closed in recent years.

    At least one task force member is concerned that the proposed maps
    water down the influence of one ethnic group.

    `This is clearly not giving the Armenian community any chance at
    office,' said Chris Chahinian, who objects to maps that would split
    Armenian residents between Hill and Altadena avenues along Washington
    Boulevard. Armenians, considered Caucasian under the U.S. Census, do
    not have Voting Rights Act protections.

    Task force members will host two Saturday forums to collect public
    comments. The first is from 1 to 3 p.m. on Jan. 28 at the Altadena
    Public Library, 600 E. Mariposa St., and the second is from 10 a.m. to
    noon on Feb. 4 at Westminster Presbyterian Church, 1757 N. Lake Ave.,
    Pasadena.

    The task force's next regular Tuesday meetings are scheduled for 6
    p.m. on Jan. 17 at Mountain View Cemetery, at 2400 N. Fair Oaks Ave.
    in Altadena, and 6 p.m. on Feb. 7 at the Western Justice Center, 55 S.
    Grand Ave. in Pasadena.

    The outcome, said task force member Roberta Martinez, `all depends on
    the conversation and the community being actively involved.'

    http://www.pasadenasun.com/news/tn-pas-plan-could-change-district-elections-20120106,0,5471679.story

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