Roseville Independent Redistricting Commission to develop Council district boundaries for 2022 election

Updated June 08, 2020

Beginning with the 2022 election, Roseville City Council district boundaries will be created by an Independent Redistricting Commission following a unanimous vote of the Roseville City Council at its June 3 meeting.   

In November 2019, the City Council voted to move from at-large to district-based elections starting in 2020. 

The district boundary map for the 2020 election was created by the City Council using the most recent census data, which was from 2010, as required by law.  The district boundaries for the 2022 election will use 2020 census data.

Applications for the Independent Redistricting Commission will be made available early 2021.   The Commission will consist of eleven members and five alternates. In a public setting, the City Clerk will randomly select the initial eight members of the commission from the qualified applicants, two each from four geographic quadrants of the city. Applicants must be 18 years of age and be a resident of the City for at least three years immediately preceding the date of application.

The eight commissioners selected shall then select three at-large commissioners and five at-large alternates from the remaining applicants. 

Residents not eligible to serve include current City Council members and their families, candidates for City Council and their families, employees of partisan elected officials, paid political consultants, employees of any redistricting contractor and current members of the Placer County Board of Supervisors.  Those who are serving or have served on the Placer County Central Committee of either the Democratic or Republican Party during the past eight years or residents who contribute five hundred dollars in a year to any seated councilmember or current council candidate are also ineligible to apply. 

As an independent body, the Commission will be empowered to adopt the district boundaries, without City Council approval. The district map developed by the Commission must follow all state and federal laws, including having Council districts which are substantially equal in population and are geographically contiguous.

The Commission will be required to hold five public hearings, one in each council district, as they are developing the district boundaries.  Maps drawn by the Commission will be available for 30 days for public review before the Commission votes on adoption.

Other cities and counties that have established redistricting commissions include Berkeley, Chula Vista, Escondido, Modesto, Oakland, Sacramento, San Diego, San Jose, San Francisco, Los Angeles County and San Diego County.

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