Brewer touts federal grant…
Stegeman embarrassed himself by straying from his areas of expertise
The Wit and Wisdom of John Huppenthal (Part Duh)
Today’s Gatewood: a Bachmann/Perry tie
Pearce Recall Update
AIRC chooses starting point ‘grid’ map
(Update) Prison-based gerrymandering of districts
Posted by AzBlueMeanie:
I spoke with Peter Wagner from Prisoners of The Census (prisonersofthecensus.org) who recommended that those of you concerned about this issue use the tools his organization provides at its web site. http://www.prisonersofthecensus.org/data/
2010 data and tools
- Correctional Facility Locator (2010) Annotations and correctional facility counts by block, searchable by county.
- Our database of annotations of each block that contains a correctional facility and the demographic breakdown of each will be accessible at the URL http://www.prisonersofthecensus.org/data/2010blocks/$geoid/ where $geoid is the 15 digit state-county-tract-code of a block with a correctional facility, ie http://www.prisonersofthecensus.org/data/2010blocks/361219702001024/
- Point shapefile with the group quarters (including correctional facilities) populations
For those of you who have the technical knowledge to know how to use the census data bases, I am told this "point shapefile" tool is most useful (particularly for the AIRC if you are reading this).
For the nontechnical, like me, you can use the "correctional facility locator" tool, select "state name," type in Arizona and hit search, which will bring up a list of census tract/blocks/correctional population.
The key to your testimony at Arizona Independent Redistricting Commission (AIRC) public hearings is to request that the AIRC flag these census tract/blocks for prisons in their reports and identify incarcerated populations on the draft district maps under discussion so that they are readily identifiable to the public. This will facilitate knowledgeable public discussion, and will build a public record for Department of Justice Voting Rights Section preclearance of district maps, and a public record for any potential litigation.
For our state legislators who have been remiss in correcting this serious flaw in federal and state law, Prisoners of the Census has Model state legislation "with some guidance on how to customize it for your state."
To help you understand this issue better, here is a video that Prisoners of the Census did for the state of Massachusetts.
Script for the video is below the fold. Many thanks to Prisoners of the Census.
