Anaheim on Tuesday approved a settlement in a voting rights lawsuit that challenged its citywide elections as unfair to the city’s Hispanic majority. Under the settlement, the plaintiffs’ claims will be dismissed and Anaheim residents will vote in November on whether to change the city charter to a district system, which supporters and judges have said is more fair to minority voters, the city announced in a statement. The city didn’t admit in the deal that its current system violates the California Voting Rights Act, under which the American Civil Liberties Union brought the lawsuit on behalf of three residents. City Attorney Michael R.W. Houston said it will allow changes to the system to be decided by voters, “not through court-ordered mandates and judicial oversight of the City’s electoral system.”
Under the proposed district model, council members would be elected only by residents of a district, not by the city at large. Currently, more than half of Anaheim residents and 32 percent of its electorate are Hispanic, but the entire City Council is white.
The settlement agreement requires the council at its February meeting to call for a measure on the November ballot where city voters can establish electoral districts, and another measure to increase the number of council members from four to six. The measures, if approved, will take effect for 2016 elections. The mayor would still be elected at-large.
Full Article: Anaheim settles minority voting rights lawsuit; residents will weigh in on electoral changes (1/8/14 12:46 am).