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A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
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AN ACT
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relating to requirements for reapportionment of congressional |
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districts. |
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BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS: |
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SECTION 1. Subtitle A, Title 3, Government Code, is amended |
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by adding Chapter 307 to read as follows: |
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CHAPTER 307. CONGRESSIONAL REDISTRICTING |
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PRINCIPLES AND PROCEDURES |
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Sec. 307.001. DEFINITIONS. In this chapter: |
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(1) "Census" means the most recent federal decennial |
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census. |
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(2) "District" means a proposed or enacted |
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congressional district. |
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(3) "Ideal district population" means the population |
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calculated by dividing the total state population according to the |
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census by the total number of congressional districts apportioned |
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to this state. |
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(4) "Plan" means a proposal or enactment that |
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establishes or modifies the state's congressional districts. |
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Sec. 307.002. REDISTRICTING PLAN REQUIREMENTS. (a) A plan |
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must comply with state and federal constitutional and statutory |
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requirements, including the federal Voting Rights Act of 1965 (42 |
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U.S.C. Section 1973 et seq.). |
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(b) The districts in a plan must be equal in population as |
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nearly as practicable. |
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(c) The districts in a plan may not deviate from the ideal |
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district population by one percent or more. Any deviation from the |
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ideal district population must be in furtherance of a legitimate |
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state objective or policy established by this chapter. |
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Sec. 307.003. REDISTRICTING PLAN PRINCIPLES. (a) A plan |
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must be based on the following principles to the extent practicable |
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and authorized or required by law: |
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1. A plan shall avoid unnecessarily dividing counties and |
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municipalities in the formation of districts. District lines shall |
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be coterminous with the boundaries of these political subdivisions. |
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Municipal boundaries, which may be highly irregular, shall not be |
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given priority over retaining a community of interest intact. |
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2. A plan shall keep intact any discrete and insular |
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communities of interest that are readily identifiable, based on |
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actual shared and relevant interests and common concerns. |
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Communities of interest shall be defined by social, economic, |
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racial, ethnic, cultural, industrial, commercial, and geographic |
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commonalities. |
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3. A district shall be composed solely of undivided census |
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tracts as the smallest unit of redistricting. |
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4. A district shall be geographically compact, composed of |
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convenient contiguous territory, and based on a sense of community |
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enabled by reasonable availability and facility of transportation |
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and communication between population centers and other inhabited |
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areas. A district shall not be considered non-compact due solely to |
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irregular natural geographic or political boundaries. A district |
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is not contiguous unless all areas are joined by whole census |
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tracts; areas that connect only at the points of adjoining corners |
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are not contiguous. |
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5. A plan shall be drawn totally and absolutely without |
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regard or reference to partisan political effect or consequences of |
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any kind. The following data are strictly prohibited and excluded |
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from use in establishing districts: partisan data of any type, |
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voting history and electoral data, and locations of the residences |
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of incumbents, candidates, or any other specific persons. |
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(b) These principles are intended to recognize the primacy |
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of recognizing communities of interest, from regional to local, in |
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redistricting. Although population equality is the primary goal of |
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redistricting, adjustments to equalize populations should be made |
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with minimal disruption to communities of interest as articulated |
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by these principles. |
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(c) The principles established by this section are |
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interdependent, interrelated, and compatible. A conflict between |
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principles when applied must be resolved in favor of the principle |
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or set of principles that produces a district that most fairly and |
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effectively reflects the affected communities of interest. |
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Sec. 307.004. REGIONAL HEARINGS. (a) The legislature |
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shall conduct public hearings regarding congressional |
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redistricting in the various geographical regions of the state |
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beginning in the year in which the census is taken. |
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(b) At least one public hearing must be conducted within the |
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boundaries of each regional planning commission whose |
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participating local governments have a total population equal to or |
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greater than the ideal district population. |
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(c) Notice of a public hearing must be made in a manner that |
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ensures notice to the public. Notice must include the principles |
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established by Sections 307.002 and 307.003. |
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(d) A public hearing must be designed to promote public |
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participation by providing citizens the opportunity to testify, |
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especially regarding local and regional communities of interest. |
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(e) Each person testifying at a public hearing shall be |
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treated equally. A public official or other person may not be given |
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special treatment at a hearing because of the person's official |
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status, and the testimony of a public official may not be given |
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special consideration. Testimony must be received in the order the |
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witnesses appeared and registered to testify. |
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Sec. 307.005. LEGISLATIVE SESSIONS AND REDISTRICTING. (a) |
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A plan must be enacted by the legislature as provided by law, but |
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not later than the 120th day before the date a person is required to |
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file to be a candidate in a primary election in the year following |
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the release of the census. |
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(b) A legislative redistricting committee of either house |
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must hold public hearings to consider legislation proposing a plan. |
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The public must be allowed to provide testimony at a hearing under |
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this subsection. A person may submit information to a |
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redistricting committee that identifies boundaries of communities |
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of interest. A person may submit a plan to a redistricting |
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committee at any time if the plan is based on census counts, |
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conforms to the requirements of Sections 307.002 and 307.003, and |
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provides relevant explanations for why each district is drawn as it |
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is. |
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Sec. 307.006. TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE. (a) The Texas |
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Legislative Council shall develop compactness tests based on |
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prevailing optimal compactness models to measure relative |
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compactness of individual districts and alternative plans. |
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(b) The Texas Legislative Council shall establish objective |
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models to measure a plan's compliance with Sections 307.002 and |
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307.003. For that purpose, the council shall prepare a comparative |
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analysis and establish a qualitative rating for plans considered by |
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a legislative redistricting committee or a house of the |
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legislature. Each analysis and rating must be made available to the |
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public for comment. |
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Sec. 307.007. CHALLENGES TO PLAN; COURT-ORDERED PLANS. (a) |
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Except as provided by federal law, the Supreme Court of Texas has |
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original jurisdiction of a legal challenge to a plan enacted by the |
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legislature. |
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(b) The Texas Legislative Council shall forward to the |
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Supreme Court of Texas the five highest-rated plans presented to or |
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considered by the legislature as determined under Section |
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307.006(b), and the highest-rated plan created by an individual who |
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is not an employee or officer of the state, if an enacted plan is |
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declared by the court to be invalid. The court shall, not later |
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than the 30th day after the date the court receives the plans, adopt |
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a submitted plan in its entirety as the state's official plan. |
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(c) The legislature may not redistrict this state's |
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congressional districts more than once following each census except |
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to replace a plan ordered by a court with a plan enacted by the |
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legislature. |
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(d) It is the intent and will of the legislature that any |
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plan ordered by a state or federal court comply with the standards |
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and principles established by Sections 307.002 and 307.003 to the |
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extent practicable. |
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SECTION 2. This Act takes effect immediately if it receives |
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a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each house, as |
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provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution. If this |
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Act does not receive the vote necessary for immediate effect, this |
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Act takes effect September 1, 2011. |