What criteria are used to create City Council electoral districts?

Many factors may be considered, but population equality is required. Other factors include:

1.   Federal Laws

  • Equal Population (based on total population of residents as determined by the most recent Federal decennial Census and adjusted by the State to reassign incarcerated persons to the last known place of residence)
  • Federal Voting Rights Act
  • No Racial Gerrymandering

2.   California Criteria for Cities (to the extent practicable and in the following order of priority)

  • Geographically contiguous (areas that meet only at the points of adjoining corners are not contiguous. Areas that are separated by water and not connected by a bridge, tunnel, or ferry service are not contiguous.
  • Undivided neighborhoods and “communities of interest” (Socio-economic geographic areas that should be kept together for purposes of its effective and fair representation)
  • Easily identifiable boundaries
  • Compact (Do not bypass one group of people to get to a more distant group of people)
  • Prohibited: “Shall not favor or discriminate against a political party.”

3.   Other Traditional Redistricting Principles

  • Minimize voters shifted to different election years
  • Respect voters’ choices / continuity in office
  • Future population growth

Show All Answers

1. What is districting?
2. What are by-district elections?
3. What is the City's current City Council election process?
4. What is “racially polarized” voting?
5. What criteria are used to create City Council electoral districts?
6. What are Communities of Interest?
7. What if I have questions or want to voice my opinion throughout this process?
8. What do the common acronyms in districting mean?