Moon v. Meadows Attachments to Defendant-Intervenors' Brief
Public Court Documents
November 4, 1994
Cite this item
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Brief Collection, LDF Court Filings. Moon v. Meadows Attachments to Defendant-Intervenors' Brief, 1994. dc14899c-be9a-ee11-be36-6045bdeb8873. LDF Archives, Thurgood Marshall Institute. https://ldfrecollection.org/archives/archives-search/archives-item/a5989d6d-cede-4440-80a8-3ee978270a62/moon-v-meadows-attachments-to-defendant-intervenors-brief. Accessed November 19, 2025.
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IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA
Richmond Division
DONALD MOON
and ROBERT SMITH,
Plaintiffs,
v.
M. BRUCE MEADOWS,
No. 3:95 CV 942
Defendant,
and
CURTIS W. HARRIS; JAYNE W. BARNARD;
JEAN PATTERSON BOONE; RAYMOND H. BOONE;
WILLIE J. DELL; HENRY C. GARRARD, SR.;
WALTER T. KENNEY, SR.; MELVIN R. SIMPSON;
and GERALD T. ZERKIN,
Defendant-Intervenors.
ATTACHMENTS TO DEFENDANT-INTERVENORS’
BRIEF IN OPPOSITION
TO MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
STEPHEN B. PERSHING
Virginia Bar No. 31012
American Civil Liberties Union Foundation of Virginia, Inc.
6 North Sixth Street, Suite 400
Richmond, Virginia 23219
(804) 644-8080
MARY WYCKOFF
American Civil Liberties Union Foundation
132 West 43d Street
New York, NY 10036
(212) 944-9800
Other counsel for defendant-intervenors listed on inside front cover
M. LAUGHLIN McDONALD
NEIL BRADLEY
MAHA S. ZAKI
American Civil Liberties
Union Foundation, Inc.
44 Forsyth Street, N.W.
Suite 202
Atlanta, GA 30303
(404) 523-2721
J. GERALD HEBERT
Virginia Bar No. 38432
800 Parkway Terrace
Alexandria, Virginia 22302
(703) 684-3585
ELAINE R. JONES
Director-Counsel
THEODORE M. SHAW
NORMAN J. CHACHKIN
NAACP Legal Defense and
Educational Fund, Inc.
99 Hudson Street
Suite 1600
New York, New York 10013
(212) 219-1900
PENDA HAIR
CASSANDRA BUTTS
NAACP Legal Defense and
Educational Fund, Inc.
1275 K Street, N.W., Suite 301
Washington, DC 20005
(202) 682-1300
PAMELA S. KARLAN
580 Massie Road
Charlottesville, VA 22903
(804) 924-7810
TABLE OF ATTACHMENTS
Attachment 1 Consent judgment and decree,
United States v. City o f Newport News,
No. 4:94 CV 155 (E.D. Va. Nov. 4, 1994)
(Newport News City Council)
Attachment 2 Consent judgment,
Harris v. City o f Hopewell,
No. 82-0036-R (E.D. Va. Jan. 5, 1983)
(Hopewell City Council)
Attachment 3 Consent decree and consent agreement,
Watkins v. Thomas,
No. 87-0709-R (E.D. Va. May 20, 1988)
(Lunenburg County Board of Supervisors)
Attachment 4 Consent decree and consent agreement,
Person v. Ligon,
No. 84-0270-R (E.D. Va. Jan. 12, 1988)
(Emporia City Council)
Attachment 5 Consent decree,
Feggins v. Horne,
No. 88-0865-R (E.D. Va. Jan. 16, 1989)
(South Hill Town Council)
Attachment 6 Consent decree,
Brunswick County League fo r Progress v.
Town Council o f Lawrenceville,
No. 3:91 CV 0091 (E.D. Va. Nov. 5, 1991)
(Lawrenceville Town Council)
Attachment 7 Consent decree,
King v. Blalock,
No. 88-0811-R (E.D. Va. June 6, 1989)
(Mecklenburg County Board of Supervisors)
Attachment 8 1996 Virginia Legislative Guide
Attachment 9
Attachment 10
Attachment 11
Attachment 12
Attachment 13
Attachment 14
Attachment 15
Attachment 16
U.S. Bureau of the Census, P.L. 94-171 data,
adjustments to Virginia House of Delegates districts,
effective Jan. 1, 1995
U.S. Bureau of the Census, P.L. 94-171 data,
adjustments to Virginia Senate districts,
effective Jan. 1, 1995
U.S. Bureau of the Census, P.L. 94-171 data,
adjustments to Virginia Congressional districts,
effective July 1, 1993
Virginia Department of Health,
1994 Annual Report of Vital Statistics,
December 1995 (excerpts)
Interim consent decree,
Taylor v. Forrester,
No. 89-0777-R (E.D. Va. May 17, 1990)
(Lancaster County Board of Supervisors)
Transcript of proceedings,
Virginia House and Senate Committees
on Privileges and Elections,
Public hearing on Congressional redistricting,
Richmond, October 11, 1991 (excerpts)
Transcript of proceedings,
Virginia House and Senate Committees
on Privileges and Elections,
Public hearing on Congressional redistricting,
Annandale, November 7, 1991 (excerpts)
Transcript of proceedings,
Virginia House and Senate Committees
on Privileges and Elections,
Public hearing on Congressional redistricting,
Norfolk, November 8, 1991 (excerpts)
2
Attachment 17 Transcript of proceedings,
Virginia House and Senate Committees
on Privileges and Elections,
Public hearing on Congressional redistricting,
Richmond, November 13, 1991 (excerpts)
Attachment 18 Transcript of deposition
of plaintiff Donald Moon, Moon v. Beyer,
No. 3:95 CV 942 (E.D. Va., April 18, 1996)
(excerpts)
Attachment 19 Transcript of deposition
of plaintiff Robert A. Smith, Moon v. Beyer,
No. 3:95 CV 942 (E.D. Va., April 19, 1996)
(excerpts)
Attachment 20 "Legislative History of 1991 Virginia
Congressional Redistricting,"
Attachment 15 to Virginia’s 1991 Section 5 Submission
to U.S. Department of Justice
Attachment 21 Letter from Dennis Dimsey, Esq., to
J. Gerald Hebert, Esq., April 3, 1996
Attachment 22 Declaration of William S. Cooper,
May 6, 1996
Attachment 23 U.S. Commission on Civil Rights,
The Voting Rights Act: Unfulfilled Goals
(September 1981) (excerpt)
Attachment 24 Center for Public Service,
University of Virginia,
Virginia Statistical Abstract, 1994-95 Edition
(1994) (excerpt)
3
! NOV - 41994
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
EASTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA
NEWPORT NEWS DIVISION
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff,
v . CIVIL NO. f T w c v z / c r c
CITY OF NEWPORT NEWS, VIRGINIA; )
NEWPORT NEWS CITY COUNCIL; )
BARRY E. DUVAL, Mayor and )
Member of the City Council; )
CHARLES C. ALLEN, AUBREY H. )
FITZGERALD, JOE S. FRANK, )
VINCENT T. JOSEPH, TERRENCE K. )
MARTIN, and MARTIN E. )
WILLIAMS, Members; )
NEWPORT NEWS ELECTORAL BOARD; )
INETTIE EDWARDS, MARY P. DOXIE, )
and C.E. BARNHART, Members; )
VICKY V. LEWIS, Newport )
News General Registrar, )
ANDREA D. PEGRAM, ELDER SIMON E.
Defendants.
RICHARDSON, LINDA E. BATCHILLER,
and DAVID REDDEN,
Plaintiffs,
v . CIVIL NO. 4:94000 79
CITY OF NEWPORT NEWS, VIRGINIA;
CITY COUNCIL OF NEWPORT NEWS;
BARRY E. DUVAL, Mayor of the
City of Newport News; CHARLES
C. ALLEN, AUBREY FITZGERALD,
JOE S. FRANK, VINCENT T. JOSEPH,
TERRENCE K. MARTIN, and MARTIN
E. WILLIAMS, members of the City
Council of Newport News; CITY OF
NEWPORT NEWS ELECTORAL BOARD;
C.E. BARNHART, MARY P. DOXIE,
INETTIE EDWARDS, members of the
City of Newport News Electoral
Board, and VICKY V. LEWIS, City
of Newport News Voting Registrar,
Defendants.
CONSENT JUDGMENT AND DECREE
Plaintiffs Andrea D. Pegram, Elder Simon E. Richardson,
Linda E. Batchiller and David Redden (collectively the "private
plaintiffs") commenced this action on July 12, 1994, pursuant to
Sections 2 and 12(a) of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, as
amended, 42 U.S.C. §§ 1973 and 1973j(d), and 28 U.S.C. § 2201, to
enforce rights guaranteed by the Thirteenth, Fourteenth and
Fifteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. The
private plaintiffs are black citizens and registered voters in
Newport News, Virginia, and allege that the at-large method of
electing the City Council of Newport News denies or abridges
their right to vote on account of race or color, in violation of
Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1973, and the ■
United States Constitution.
Plaintiff, the United States, has filed a separate action
similarly alleging that the at-large method of electing the City
Council of Newport News denies or abridges the rights of
minorities in Newport News to vote on account of race or color,
in violation of Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, 42 U.S.C.
§ 1973, and the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments to the United
States Constitution. (The United States and the private
plaintiffs will hereinafter be referred to collectively as
"plaintiffs.")
The parties, through counsel, have conferred and agree that
these actions should be settled without protracted, costly and
potentially divisive litigation. Accordingly, the parties have
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entered into the following agreement as an appropriate resolution
of these actions.
Factual Stipulation of the Parties
The parties stipulate as follows:
1. Defendant City of Newport News is a political
subdivision of the Commonwealth of Virginia, chartered in 1896 by
an Act of the Virginia General Assembly, Act No. 64 (1896).
2. Defendant City Council of Newport News is the governing
body of the City of Newport News, established pursuant to the
laws of the Commonwealth of Virginia.
3. Defendant Barry E. DuVal is the Mayor of the City of
Newport News, Virginia, and a member of the City Council.
Defendants Charles C. Allen, Aubrey H. Fitzgerald, Joe S. Frank,
Vincent T. Joseph, Terrence K. Martin and Martin E. Williams are
members of the City Council.
4 . Defendant City of Newport News Electoral Board is
responsible for exercising certain powers and duties associated
with the conduct and administration of elections for the City of
Newport News, including elections for the City Council of Newport
News. Defendants C. E. Barnhart, Mary P. Doxie, and Inettie
Edwards are the members of the Newport News Electoral Board.
5. Defendant Vicky V. Lewis is the Newport News General
Registrar and is responsible for exercising certain duties and
powers associated with the conduct and administration of
elections in the City of Newport News, including elections for
the City Council.
- 3 -
*5. According to the 1990 Census, the City of Newport News
has a total population of 170,045, of whom 57,077 (or 34 percent)
are black. The voting age population of the city is 123,379, of
whom 38,146 (or 31 percent) are black.
7. The City Council of Newport News is comprised of seven
members, elected at large to four-year, staggered terms in non
partisan elections.
8. Plaintiffs could present evidence sufficient to
establish a prima facie showing that the black population of the
City of Newport News is sufficiently large and geographically
compact to constitute a substantial majority in a single-member
district or districts.
9. Plaintiffs could present evidence sufficient to
establish a prima facie showing that black voters in Newport News
are politically cohesive, and that racially polarized voting
patterns prevail in elections for City Council.
10. Plaintiffs could present evidence sufficient to
establish a prima facie showing that white voters in Newport News
vote sufficiently as a bloc usually to defeat the candidate of
choice of black voters in elections for the Newport News City
Council.
11. Plaintiffs could present evidence sufficient to
establish a prima facie showing that black citizens in the
Commonwealth of Virginia and in Newport News have suffered from a
history of official racial discrimination in voting and other
areas, such as education, employment, and housing, adversely
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affecting their ability to vote and to participate equally with
white citizens in the political process.
12. Notwithstanding the foregoing, defendants could present
evidence that they have, over the course of the past several
years, taken remedial and corrective actions designed to
counteract the present effects of any past official racial
discrimination. These actions include, but are not limited to,
the adoption of a new electoral scheme for the election of the
City's School Board which fairly reflects minority voting
strength, and certain actions specifically targeted to the
predominately African American portion of the City, which
includes funding of a new recreational facility, a new high
school and various street improvements, new homeownership and
housing rehabilitation programs, an anti-crime initiative
designed to provide added police protection, and development of
an interdisciplinary program designed to address youth related
problems.
13. The Commonwealth of Virginia and its subdivisions,
including Newport News, are subject to the preclearance
requirements of Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, 42 U.S.C.
§ 1973c ("Section 5”). Section 5 requires that any "voting
qualification or prerequisite to voting, or standard, practice,
or procedure with respect to voting" different from that in force
or effect in Newport News on November 1, 1964, may not be
lawfully implemented unless Newport News obtains a declaratory
judgment from the United States District Court for the District
- 5 -
of Columbia that the change does not have the purpose and will
not have the effect of denying or abridging the right to vote on
account of race or color, except that such change may be
implemented without such judgment if it has been submitted to the
United States Attorney General, and the Attorney General has not
interposed an objection within sixty days. 42 U.S.C. § 1973c.
14. In 1989, a timely objection was interposed by the
Attorney General pursuant to Section 5 to proposed changes in the
method of electing the Mayor and City Council of Newport News.
The objection letter stated that city council elections were
characterized by a pattern of racially polarized voting and that
black voters have had only limited success in electing candidates
of their choice to office under the at-large method of election.
15. In 1992, the City Council proposed to adopt an at-
large method of electing the Newport News School Board. On
February 16, 1993, on behalf of the Attorney General, the Acting
Assistant Attorney General interposed a Section 5 objection to
the proposed adoption of an at-large method of electing the
Newport News School Board. The objection letter stated that
racially polarized voting in Newport News had intensified, and
again noted that black voters largely have been unsuccessful in
electing candidates of choice to the City Council under the at-
large system.
16. On November 23, 1993, the City Council enacted a new
gystgpn for election of the School Board, which consists of three
two-member districts and one at-large seat, and a districting
- 6 -
plan. Newport News Ordinance No. 4541-93. One of the districts
(Ward 3) is 58 percent black in voting age population, and
another district (Ward 1) is 28 percent black in voting age
population. The at-large seat is elected from the city as a
whole in which blacks constitute 31 percent of the voting age
population. This election system was precleared under Section 5
on February 22, 1994. Attachment A to this Consent Judgment and
Decree is a map of the districting plan for the School Board.
Attachment B provides demographic information for each district
and the city as a whole.
17. Based on the foregoing, the parties agree that wliile
the plaintiffs could present sufficient evidence to establish a
prima facie case under Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act and
defendants could present evidence towards establishing a
meritorious defense, the interests of the parties and of the
citizens of Newport News are best served by entering into this
Consent Judgment and Decree and thus avoiding protracted, costly
and potentially divisive litigation.
18. The parties further agree that the action filed by the
private plaintiffs and the action filed by the United States
should be consolidated pursuant to Rule 42(a) of the Federal
Rules of Civil Procedure.
Accordingly, it is hereby ORDERED, ADJUDGED and DECREED
that :
1. This Court has jurisdiction over these actions pursuant
7
to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1343(a)(3) and (4), and 1345, and 42 U.S.C.
§ 1973] (f) .
2. The above-captioned actions filed by the private
plaintiffs (Pegram v. City of Newport News) and the United States
(United States v. City of Newport News) are hereby consolidated
pursuant to Rule 42(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
3. The at-large method of electing the City Council of
Newport News, operating in the totality of circumstances,
violates Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1973,
and the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments to the United States
Constitution.
4. The defendants, their agents, successors in office, and
all persons acting in concert with them, are permanently enjoined
from administering, implementing or conducting future elections
for City Council under the present at-large method.
5. The defendants shall implement, pursuant to the
schedule set forth below (also set forth in Attachment C), the
same districting plan that was adopted by the City Council for
use in Newport News School Board elections. See Paragraph 16 of
the Factual Stipulation. Defendants shall implement the plan
under the following election schedule: In May 1996, the
defendant city authorities shall hold a special election for two
council seats in Ward 3, the majority minority district, to be
designated Seat A and Seat B, as well as an at-large election for
Mayor. One of the members elected to the City Council from
Ward 3 in the May 1996 election shall serve a two year term
- 8 -
(Seat B), and the other shall serve a four year term (Seat A).
The Mayor, elected at-large, shall serve a two year term. In May
1998, the city shall hold elections for five council seats and
for Mayor. The council seats open for election in May 1998 shall
be a four-year seat in Ward 3 (Seat B), a four-year seat in Ward
2 (Seat B), a two-year seat in Ward 2 (Seat A), a four-year seat
in Ward 1 (Seat B), and a two-year seat in Ward 1 (Seat A). The
at-large mayoral election in May 1998 shall be for a four-year
team. Beginning in May 2000, the councilmanic elections shall be
held on the same schedule as elections for the School Board, all
terms being for four years.
6. The defendants shall, within twenty (20) days after
entry of this Consent Judgment and Decree, submit to the Attorney
General for preclearance under Section 5 of the Voting Rights
Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1973c, the voting changes occasioned by this
Consent Judgment and Decree.
7. Within twenty (20) days of the Section 5 determination
of the Attorney General of the United States, the defendants
shall file with the court, with copies to counsel for plaintiffs,
a copy of the Attorney General's determination.
8. The defendants shall take all steps necessary to
implement the terms of this Consent Judgment and Decree.
9. The defendants shall pay unto private plaintiffs, as
prevailing parties, reasonable costs and attorneys' fees pursuant
to 42 U.S.C. § 1973.1(e) and 42 U.S.C. § 1988, in the amount of
$44,561.84 .
- 9 -
10. The court shall retain jurisdiction over this matter
until December 31, 1998, to ensure full compliance with the terms
of this Consent Judgment and Decree. *
Entered this __ day of^&efcofaer, 1994.
Approved as to form and content: U.
ATTORNEYS FOR THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA:
JOHN K. TANNER
REBECCA J. WERTZ
MATTHEW G. OLSEN
Civil Rights Division
Department of Justice
P.O. Box 66128
Washington, D.C. 20035-6128
(202) 514-4838
MICHAEL A. RHINE
Virginia Bar No. 1266
Assistant U.S. Attorneys
101 W. Main Street
Suite 8000
Norfolk, Virginia 23510
(804) 441-6331
ATTORNEYS FOR PEGRAM, et al.:
LAUGHLIN MCDONALD
NEIL BRADLEY
MARY WYCKOFF
Southern Regional Office
American Civil Liberties Union
Foundation, Inc.
Suite 202
44 Forsyth Street, NW
Atlanta, Georgia 30303
(404) 523-2721
-10-
STEPHEN B. PERSHING
American Civil Liberties Union
of Virginia
6 North Sixth Street
Richmond, Virginia 23219
(804) 644-8080
(703) 684-3585
Virginia Bar No. 17062 /
Attorney at Law
Harbour Centre
2 Eaton Street, Suite 708
Hampton, Virginia 23669
(804) 722-4068
EWS, et al.:
JAMES B. COMEY
Virginia Bar No. 36713
THERENCE 0. PICKETT
DANA J. FINBERG
McGuire, Woods, Battle & Boothe
901 East Cary Street
Richmond, Virginia 23219
(804) 775-1000
OSCAR H. BLAYTON
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CITY OF NEWPORT NEWS
SCHOOL BOARD ELECTION DISTRICTS
ATTACHMENT B
NEWPORT NEWS SCHOOL BOARD DISTRICTS
TOTAL POP. BLACK POP. % BLACK VAP
DISTRICT 1 57,195 30.2 28.2
DISTRICT 2 58,747 10.1 9.2
DISTRICT 3 54,103 61.5 57.8
CITY-WIDE 170,045 33.6 30.9
ATTACHMENT C
ELECTION SCHEDULE FOR NEWPORT NEWS CITY COUNCIL
1996 city council election
1998 city council election
2000 city council election
2002 city council election
District 3 (the majority black
district)
Seat A (four-year term)
Seat B (two-year term)
At-large seat (two-year term)
District 1
Seat A (two-year term)
Seat B (four-year term)
District 2
Seat A (two-year term)
Seat B (four-year term)
District 3
Seat B (four-year term)
At-large seat (four-year term)
District 1
Seat A (four-year term)
District 2
Seat A (four-year term)
District 3
Seat A (four-year term)
District 1
Seat B (four-year term)
District 2
Seat B (four-year term)
District 3
Seat B (four-year term)
At-large seat (four-year term)
•VI/
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA
RICHMOND DIVISION
THE REV. CURTIS R. HARRIS, et al. , ___.....
1 \ i J
Plaintiffs,
v.
CITY OF HOPEWELL, VIRGINIA, et al. ,
Defendant.
Civil Action
No. 82-0036-R
CONSENT JUDGMENT
Plaintiffs having filed this action challenging at-large
municipal elections for the Hopewell City Council for unlawful
dilution of black voting strength, and defendants having filed
their answer denying the material allegations of the complaint,
and the parties having reached a settlement of the issues
presented and having consented to the entry of this judgment,
but not having admitted fault or liability, it is, with the
consent of the parties hereto,
ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND DECREED:
1. Defendants, their officers, agents, employees,
successors in office, and all persons in active concert
and participation with them, are hereby permanently re
strained and enjoined from conducting or holding any further
municipal elections for members of the City Council for
the City of Hopewell under which all seven members of the
City Council are elected on an at-large basis, and shall
henceforth provide for the election of the seven members
of the Hopewell City Council on the basis of a city council
redistricting plan under which five members of the Hopewell
City Council shall be elected from single-member districts,
or wards, and two members shall be elected at-large.
2. Defendants shall adopt and put into effect the
attached redistricting plan, Exhibit A attached, providing
for five single-member districts, or wards, for the election
of five members of the Hopewell City Council by wards. This
plan shall remain in effect unless and until the results of
the 1990 Census or any subsequent Census show that the five
wards are unconstitutionally malapportioned.
3. All seven incumbent city council members will be
permitted to serve out their present terms of office.
4. Three city council members shall be elected in
the 1984 city council elections. One of these three
members shall be elected on an at-large basis for a term
of four years; one of these three members shall be elected
from ward 3 for a term of two years; and one of these
three members shall be elected from ward 5 for a term of
two years.
5. Six city council members shall be elected in the
1986 city council elections. One of these six members shall
be elected on an at-large basis for a term of two years.
Five of these six members shall be elected in 1986, and every
four years thereafter, from each of the five wards for a term
of four years.
- 2 -
6. Two members shall be elected on an at-large basis for a
term of four years in the 1988 city council election and every
four years thereafter.
7. Defendants shall pay to counsel for the plaintiffs
the sum of $15,000 in full settlement of all of plaintiffs'
claims for reasonable attorneys’ fees, necessary expenses
of the litigation, and taxable court costs of the litigation.
ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED on this the £'" day of
January, 1983.
Agreed to and approved by:
Frank R. Parker
Attorney for Plaintiffs
Stephen W. Bricker
Attorney for Plaintiffs
- 3 -
WARD 1
Beginning at Randolph Road (State Route 10) and the
northern Hopewell City Limits south to Riverside Avenue,
then west along the center line of Riverside Avenue to North
21st Avenue, then south along the center line of North 21st
Avenue to West Broadway, then east along the center line of
West Broadway to North 16th Avenue, then south along the
center line of North 16th Avenue to Atlantic Street, then
west along the center line of Atlantic Street to South 17th
Avenue, then southeast along the center line of South 17th
Avenue to the Norfolk & Western Rail Road, then southwest
along the Norfolk & Western Rail Road to the Seaboard Air
line Rail Road, then southeast along the Seaboard Airline
Rail Road to Winston Churchill Drive, then east along the
center line of Winston Churchill Drive to LaPrade Avenue,
then north and east along the center line of LaPrade Avenue
to Main Street, then north along the center line of Main
Street to the Norfolk & Western Rail Road, then east along
the Norfolk & Western Rail Road to Randolph Road (State
Route 10), then southeast along the center line of Randolph
Road to the City Limits, then east and north and west along
the City Limits around City Point to the point of beginning.
The voting place for Ward 1 is Patrick Copeland School.
EXHIBIT A
-4-
WARD 2
Beginning at Spring Road and the Hopewell City Limits
east along the center line of Spring Road to Davis Lane,
then north along the center line of Davis Lane to Court
House Road, then east along the center line of Court House
Road to Berry Street, then east along the center line of
Berry Street to Sunnyside Avenue, then north along the
center line of Sunnyside Avenue to Boston Street, then east
along the center line of Boston Street to High Avenue, then
north along the center line of High Avenue to Winston Churchill
Drive, then east along the center line of Winston Churchill
Drive to LaPrade Avenue, then north and east along the
center line of LaPrade Avenue to Main Street, then along the
center line of Main Street to the Norfolk & Western Rail
Road to Randolph Road (State Route 10), then southeast along
the center line of Randolph Road (State Route 10) to the
City Limits, then follow City Limits west to the point of
beginning.
The voting place for Ward 2 is Carter Woodson School.
-5-
WARD 3
Beginning at Randolph Road (State Route 10) and the
northern Hopewell City Limits south to Riverside Avenue,
then west along the center line of Riverside Avenue to North
21st Avenue, then south along the center line of North 21st
Avenue to West Broadway, then east along the center line of
West Broadway to North 16th Avenue, then south along the
center line of North 16th Avenue to Atlantic Street, then
west along the center line of Atlantic Street to South 17th
Avenue, then southeast along the center line of South 17th
Avenue to the Norfolk & Western Rail Road, then southwest
along the Norfolk & Western Rail Road to the Seaboard Air
line Rail Road, then west along the Seaboard Airline Rail
Road to Mesa Drive, then north along the center line of Mesa
Drive to River Road, then west along the center line of
River Road to the Seaboard Airline Rail Road, then north
along the Seaboard Airline Rail Road to the City Limits at
the Appomattox River, then east along the City Limits to the
point of beginning.
The voting place for Ward 3 is Dupont School.
- 6 -
WARD 4
Beginning at the intersection of the Norfolk & Western
Rail Road and the western City Limits, then north along the
Norfolk & Western Rail Road to Miles Avenue, then northwest
along the center line of Miles Avenue to Oak Lane, then
northeast along the center line of Oak Lane to Richmond
Street, then northeast along the center line of Richmond
Street to the Seaboard Airline Rail Road, then west along
the Seaboard Airline Rail Road to South Mesa Drive, then
north along the center line of South Mesa Drive to River
Road, then west along the center line of River Road to the
Seaboard Airline Rail Road, then north along the Seaboard
Airline Rail Road to the City Limits at the Appomattox
River, then west and south along the City Limits to the
point of beginning.
The voting place for Ward 4 is Hopewell High School.
-7-
WARD 5
Beginning at the intersection of the Norfolk & Western
Rail Road and the western City Limits, then north along the
Norfolk & Western Rail Road to Miles Avenue, then northwest
along the center line of Miles Avenue to Oak Lane, then
northeast along the center line of Oak Lane to Richmond
Street, then northeast along the center line of Richmond
Street to the Seaboard Airline Rail Road, then east along
the Seaboard Airline Rail Road to Winston Churchill Drive,
then west along the center line of Winston Churchill Drive
to High Avenue, then south along the center line of High
Avenue to Boston Street, then west along the center line of
Boston Street to Sunnyside Avenue, then south along the
center line of Sunnyside Avenue to Berry Street, then west
along the center line of Berry Street to Court House Road,
then west along the center line of Court House Road to Davis
Lane, then south along the center line of Davis lane to
Spring Road, then west along the center line of Spring Road
to the City Limits, then west along the City Limits to the
point of beginning.
The voting place for Ward 5 is Woodlawn School.
"b l\ K 0MAY 2 ; ]38l
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA
RICHMOND DIVISION
REVEREND H.R. WATKINS et al.
Plaintiffs,
v.
RICHARD W. THOMAS, et al..
Defendants.
) F I
MAY 2 0 1288
C U K A , U.S. DiSrRJC? COUft'
RKMMQNQ, VJI
CA. NO. 87-0709-R
CONSENT DECREE
Plaintiffs initiated this action under the First,
Thirteenth, Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments of the
Constitution of the United States and Section 2 of the
Voting Rights Act of 1965, 42 U.S.C. Section 1973, as
amended, and prayed for declaratory and injunctive relief
concerning the method of electing the members of the Board
of Supervisors of Lunenburg County, Virginia.
The plaintiffs and defendants are desirous of resolving
this action and have agreed to a method to be used in future
elections for the members of the Board of Supervisors. This
Court has jurisdiction, of the parties and subject matter of
this action, and the parties have agreed to the entry of
this Consent Decree. Based upon the inherent equitable
powers of this Court, the consent of the parties hereto, and
the agreement entered into by the parties on file with the
Court, the future members of the Board of Supervisors of
Lunenburg County, Virginia, shall be elected in accordance
with the provisions of this Consent Decree.
Pursuant to the agreement of the parties, and without
admitting any liability under the claims of the complaint,
the defendants have adopted a plan for the election of
members of the Board of Supervisors of Lunenburg County,
Virginia, which provides plaintiffs, as black residents of
Lunenburg County, and all the black voters of Lunenburg
County, a greater opportunity than previously existed to
elect candidates of their choice through the creation of
seven single-member districts. This replaces the current
system under which four members are elected from single
member districts and one member is elected at-large from the
entirety of the County.
The plan includes the following aspects:
(a) All candidates are required to reside in and be
elected by the voters residing in a particular district.
(b) The plan will be implemented immediately.
(c) Because the implementation of this plan is
dependent upon preclearance under Section 5 of the Voting
Rights Act of 1965, 42 U.S.C. Section 1973c, the parties
have agreed to cooperate in seeking expeditious
preclearance. The parties have jointly requested the
issuance of this consent decree. Therefore,
2
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, ADJUDGED and DECREED:
- 1 -
That the terms of the consent agreement on file with
the Court are due to be implemented.
- 2-
The positions on the Board of Supervisors shall be
filled as follows:
(a) A special election shall be held on November
8, 1988 to fill Board of Supervisors positions in Districts
5 and 6. One supervisor shall be elected from each district
to serve a three year term commencing on January 1, 1989 and
ending December 31, 1991. The deadline for filing
declarations of candidacy shall be 5:00 p.m. on August 26,
1988 ;
(b) An election shall be held in November, 1989
to fill Board of Supervisors positions in Districts 1, 3,
and 7. One supervisor shall be elected from each district
to serve a four year term ending December 31, 1993;
(c) An election shall be held in November, 1991,
to fill Board of Supervisors positions in Districts 2, 4, 5,
and 6 for terms ending December 31, 1995.
(d) Each Supervisor now in office shall complete
the term to which he/she was elected, even though this will
result in an eight member Board for a short period of time.
3
-3-
That the terms of this Consent Decree shall be binding
upon defendants, their successors, officers, agents and
servants.
-4-
That the defendants shall submit the relevant terms of
this Consent Decree for preclearance under Section 5 of the
Voting Rights Act of 1965, 42 U.S.C. Section 1973c, as
amended, as expeditiously as possible.
-5-
The defendants agree to pay plaintiffs' costs and
attorney's fees.
2 0 M AY 1983
SO ORDERED, this the _______ day of __________ , 19__.
Agreed and Consented to by:.
Counsel for Plaintiffs
Susan L. Quig-Terry
Gerald T. Zerkin
Counsel for Defendapt^
Russell Slayton-
Carter Glass, IV
© ( f O W i f :
• i\'t •5 .[3
CLERK. U.S. DISTRICT COuHT
RICHMOND. VA
4
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA
RICHMOND DIVISION
REVEREND H.R. WATKINS et al. , )
)Plaintiffs, )
)
V. ) CA. NO. 87-0709-R
)RICHARD W . THOMAS, et a l . , )
)Defendants. )
CONSENT AGREEMENT
Plaintiffs initiated this action under the First,
Thirteenth, Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments of the
Constitution of the United States and Section 2 of the
Voting Rights Act of 1965, 42 U.S.C. Section 1S73, as
amended, and prayed for declaratory and injunctive relief
concerning the method of electing the members of the Board
of Supervisors of Lunenburg County, Virginia. By agreeing
to the terms herein, defendants do not admit liability in
the suit, but rather seek to resolve the dispute without
further expensive litigation.
The plaintiffs and defendants being desirous of
implementing a solution to the. subject matter of this action
for purposes of resolving this dispute and establishing a
method to be used in the future elections for the members of
the Board of Supervisors of Lunenburg County, have entered
into the following agreement.
- 1 -
ACLU 8046448080 04/12/96 4:36PM Job 13 Page 11/16
F L _ l r
I | MAY 2 01988
CLERK, U S. DISTRICT 1-. RICHMOND. VA
The Court has jurisdiction of the parties and subject
matter of this action, and the parties shall jointly pray
Sent by: ACLU 8046448080 04/12/96 4:37PM Job 13 Page 12/16
that this agreement be implemented by Consent Decree entered
by the United States District court for the Eastern District
of Virginia.
—2 —
The Board of Supervisors of Lunenburg County shall be
increased in size from five (5) members to seven (7).
-3-
Mexnbers of the Board of Supervisors shall be elected
from single member districts. All candidates shall be a
residents of the district from which they run, and shall be
elected solely by the voters of that district. Each such
district is particularly described and shall be as set forth
in Exhibit A attached hereto and made a part hereof, and
each such district shall be as drawn in Exhibit B attached
hereto and made a part hereof. In the event of any
inconsistencies between Exhibit A and Exhibit B, Exhibit A
shall govern.
-4-
The pertinent demographic information for the Board of
Supervisors/ districts contained in Exhibits A and B is as
follows:
2
Sent by: ACLU 8046448080 04/12/96 4:37PM Job 13 Page 13/16
DISTRICT TOTAL
POP. WHITE
POP. [%) BLACK
POP.
[%] DEVIATION
ONE 1733 1690 97.52 40 2.31 + 1
TWO 1784 1390 77.91 386 21.64 + 52
THREE 1672 721 43.12 949 56.76 -60
FOUR 1738 1192 68.58 542 31.19 + 6
FIVE 1721 633 36.78 1086 63.10 -11
SIX 1717 556 32.38 1160 67.56 -15
SEVEN 1759 1147 65.21 601 34.17 + 27
TOTAL 12124 7329 60.45 4764 39.29
IDEAL DISTRICT SIZE= 1732
-5-
The positions on the Board of Supervisors shall be
filled as follows:
(a) A special election shall be held on November
8, 1988 in Districts 5 and 6. One Supervisor shall be
elected from each district for a three year term commencing
on January 1, 1989 and ending December 31, 1991. The
deadline for filing declarations of candidacy shall be 5:00
p.m. on August 26, 1988;
(b) An election shall be held in November, 1989
in Districts 1, 3, and 7. One Supervisor shall be elected
from each district for a four year term ending December 3 1 ,
1993 ;
(c) An election shall be held in November, 1991
in Districts 2, 4, 5, and 6. One Supervisor shall be
3
Sent D y : ACLU 8046448080 04/12/96 4:38PM Joo 13 Page 14/1
elected from each district for a term ending December 31,
1995.
(d) Each Supervisor now in office shall complete
the term to which he/she was elected, even though this will
result in an eight member Board for a short period of time.
- 6 -
The polling place for District 1 shall be located at
the Victoria fire and rescue squad building.
The polling place for District 2 shall be located at
the rescue squad building in Kenbridge.
The polling places for District 3 shall be located at
Parham's store and McCoy Ghee's store.
The polling places for District 4 shall be located at
Haag's Electric store located at the intersection of Routes
40 and 626, and the Arrowhead Gun Club.
The polling places for District 5 shall be located at
the Peoples Community Center on Mecklenburg Avenue in
Victoria and the Lunenburg County Landfill.
The polling place for District 6 shall be located at
the Kenbridge Primary School.
The polling places for District 7 shall be located at
the Meherrin Fire Department and the building which was
formerly Allen's Store and is located on Route 49, just
north of the corporate limits of Victoria.
-7-
Any vacancy on the Board of Supervisors shall be filled
under the appropriate provisions of state law; any persons
4
Sent by: AC LI1 8046448080 04/12/96 4:39PM Job 13 Page 15/16
seeking to fill a vacancy on the Board shall reside within
the district in which the vacancy exists. If, however, at
any time between January 1, 1990 and December 31, 1991, a
vacancy occurs in the seat on the Board elected at large at
the 1987 general election, such vacancy shall not be filled.
- 8 -
Except as they conflict with provisions of this Consent
Agreement, the laws of the State of Virginia shall continue
to govern elections for the Board of Supervisors of
Lunenburg County and the laws of the State shall continue to
govern and prescribe the powers and duties of said
officials.
— 9 —
It is understood between the parties that a different
apportionment of the County may become necessary or
desirable in the future because of the one person-one vote
requirement and/or demographic changes within the county as
indicated by the latest decennial census, and/or other
reasons. Such apportionment is contemplated by this
agreement, and it shall not be necessary for the defendants
to seek modification of this agreement or of the consent
decree, but rather it may be accomplished pursuant to
applicable state and federal law.
- 1 0 -
The terms of this consent Agreement shall be binding
upon defendants, their successors, officers, agents and
servants.
Sent by: ACLU 8046448080 04/12/96 4:39PM Job 13 Page 16/16
- 1 1 -
The defendants shall submit the relevant terms of this
Consent Agreement to the Attorney General of the United
States for federal preclearance under Section 5 of the
Voting Rights Act of 1965, 42 U.S.C. Section 1973c, as
amended. The plaintiffs agree to support the submission for
preclearance by the Attorney General.
- 1 2 -
Defendants agree to pay plaintiffs' costs and
attorneys' fees in the amount of $5,428.16.
Agreed and Consented to by:
Counsel for Plaintiffs
Susan L. Quig-Terry
Gerald T. Zeirkin
Russell Slayton
Carter Glass, IV
6
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA
RICHMOND DIVISION
THOMAS M. PERSON, et al.,
Plaintiffs
vs ) Civil Action No. 84-0270-R
WILLIAM H. LIGON, etc., et al
Defendants
| JAN I 2 1988
CONSENT DECREE CLERK, U.S. OiSIRILl CuliKf RICHMOND. VA
i
4
Plaintiffs initiated this action under the First,
Thirteenth, Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments of the
Constitution of the United States and §2 of the Voting Rights Act
of 1965, 42 U.S.C. §1973, as amended, and prayed for declaratory
and injunctive relief concerning the method of electing the
members of the City Council of Emporia, Virginia.
The plaintiffs and defendants are desirous of resolving this
action and have agreed to a method to be used in future elections
for the members of the city council. This Court has jurisdiction
of the parties and subject matter of this action, and the parties
have agreed to the entry of this Consent Decree. Based upon the
inherent equitable powers of this Court, the consent of the
parties hereto, and the agreement entered into by the parties on
file with the Court, the future members of the City Council of
Emporia, Virginia; shall be elected on the basis of and in
accordance with the provisions of this Consent Decree.
Pursuant to the agreement of the parties, and without
admitting any liability under the claims of the complaint, the
defendants have adopted a plan for the election of members of the
City Council of Emporia, Virginia, which provides plaintiffs, as
black residents of the City of Emporia, and all the black voters
of the City of Emporia, a greater opportunity than previously
existed to elect candidates of their choice through the creation
of three single-member districts and two multi-member districts,
and the reduction in the size of the city council from nine to
eight members. This replaces the current system under which all
nine council positions are elected at-large from the entirety of
the city.
The plan includes the following aspects:
(a) All candidates are required to reside in and be elected
by the voters residing in a particular district.
(b) The districting plan is for the entirety of the City of
Emporia, including the area approved for annexation by a state
court order of December 4, 1987, said annexation became effective
under Virginia law on January 1, 1988.
(c) The plan will 'be implemented by the May, 1988,
elections at which time all eight council positions will be up
for election.
(d) Because the implementation of this plan is dependent
upon the preclearance of the annexation itself by the Attorney
General of the United States pursuant to his authority under
Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, 42 U.S.C. §1973c, as
well as the preclearance, of this agreement, the parties have
-2-
agreed to cooperate in seeking expeditious preclearance of the
annexation and of this agreement. The parties have further
agreed upon procedures to be followed in the event that the
Voting Rights Act procedures prevent the districting plan from
being implemented as contemplated in the May, 1988 election.
The defendants intend to request that the local legislative
delegation obtain an amendment to the charter of the City of
Emporia at the 1988 legislative session of the General Assembly
to authorize a reduction in the size of the city council from
nine to eight members and to authorize election of council
members from districts. Because the parties desire the agreement
to be implemented in the May, 1988 election and because a change
in the method of election of a municipal government in Virginia
is not ripe for submission to the Attorney General until adopted
by the legislature or embodied in a consent decree, the parties
have jointly requested the issuance of this consent decree.
Therefore,
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, ADJUDGED and DECREED:
- 1 -
That the terms of the consent agreement on file with the
Court are due to be implemented.
- 2 -
The elections for the City Council of Emporia currently
scheduled for May 10, 1988, shall not be held under the at-large
format.
-3-
- 3 -
That the terms of this Consent Decree shall be binding upon
defendants, their successors, officers, agents and servants.
-4-
That the defendants shall submit the relevant terms of this
Consent Decree to the Attorney General of the United States for
preclearance under Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, 42
U.S.C. §1973c, as amended, as expeditiously as possible.
-5-
That the matter of plaintiffs' costs and attorney’s fees is
expressly reserved.
SO ORDERED, this the
Agreed and Consented to by:
Counsel for Plaintiffs j
Thomas M. Person, Elmo/Roberts,
Barbara G. Mason, Daniel- D. Smith,
Steve J. Eason and James Edwards
Counsel for Defendants
William H. Ligon, J. Henry Evans,
F.T. Lee, II, George B. Ligon, Jr.,
Nancy B. Squire, Samuel W. Adams, III,
Stuart G. Keedwell, H. Lee Townsend,
Julian P. Mitchell, Julia L. Jones,
Stanford L. Vassar, Frances L. Grizzard,
Norris M. Dickerson and Sarah B. Harris
- 4 -
A P R . - I i’ 56 ;THli 12:33 T E L :523 ’21 P C O
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA
RICHMOND DIVISION
THOMAS M. PERSON, at al.f )
)Plaintiffs, }
)
va* ) Civil Action No. 34-0270-R
WILLIAM H. LIGON, etc., et al, )
)Defendants. )
CONSENT AGREEMENT
Plaintiffs initiated this action under the First, Thir
teenth, Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments of the Constitution
of the United States and §2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, 42
U.S.C. §1973, as amended, and prayed for declaratory and injunc
tive relief concerning the method of electing the members of the
City Council of Emporia, Virginia. By agreeing to the terms
herein, defendants do not admit liability in the suit, but rather
seek tc resolve the dispute without further expensive litigation.
The plaintiffs and defendants being desirous of implementing
a solution to the subject matter of this action for purposes of
resolving this dispute and establishing a method to be used in
the future elections for the members of the City Council of the
City of Emporia, have entered into the following agreement.
APR. - I T 96 :THl; 12: A C 1 U F T E L : 52 32^21 P. CO*
The Court has jurisdiction of the parties and subject matter
of this action, and the parties shall jointly pray that this
agreement be implemented by Consent Decree entered by the United
States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia.
- 2 -
The City Council of Emporia shall be decreased in size from
nine (9) members to eight (8).
- 1 -
-3-
Future elections for the City Council shall be conducted on
the basis of districts. Candidates for city council member shall
be residents of the district for which they qualify to run, and
shall be elected solely by the voters of that district. Each
such district is particularly described and shall be as set forth
in Exhibit A attached hereto and made a part hereof, and each
such district shall be as drawn in Exhibit 3 attached hereto and
made a part hereof. In the event of any inconsistencies between
Exhibit A and Exhibit B, Exhibit a shall govern. The mayor of
the City of Emporia shall continue to be elected at-large from
the entirety of the city.
- 2 -
A P R . - I T 9 5 ( T H U I 12 3 3 A C L L F T E L : 5 2 3 2 " 2 1 P. 094
“4-
The pert inent demographic information for the city council
districts contained in Exhibits A and S is as follows:
District Total Deviation White White % Minority Minority'
1 718 -2.0 156 21.7 562 78.3
2 73 8 +0.7 35 4.7 703 95.3
3 1,523 + 3.9 1,284 84.3 239 15.7
4 2,135 -2.7 1,048 86.6 287 13.4
5 748 +2.0 79 10.6 669 89.4
Totals! 5,862 6.6 2,402 58.0 2,460 42.0
-5-
One council member shall be elected from each of Districts
1, 2 and 5. Three council members shall be elected from District
4 and two council members shall be elected from District 3.
- 6-
All eight council positions shall be filled at the next
regularly scheduled municipal election in May, 1988. To the
extent possible consistent with this agreement, this and future
elections shall be held in accordance with Virginia law.
Specifically, election shall be by plurality and the terms of
council members shall be staggered.
-3 -
F TEL:5232"21 ? 005
At the May, 1988 election, four council members shall be
elected to two year terras and four council members shall be
elected to four year terms. Such terras of office shall begin on
July 1, 198Q. At the municipal election next preceding the
expiration of the two year terms, the persons elected to fill the
expiring terms shall be elected to four year terms. Thereafter,
all council members for all positions shall be elected to four
year terms.
A P R . - 1 1 ' 9 6 ( T H U S 1 2 : 3 4 A 0 L U
-7-
- 8 -
At the May 1968 election, the person elected from District
2, the two persons receiving the two highest vote totals in
District 4, and the person receiving the highest vote total in
District 3 shall be elected to serve terms ending June 30,
1992. The persons elected in Districts 1 and 5, the person
receiving the third highest vote total in District 4 and the
person receiving the second highest vote total in District 3
sharl be elected to terns ending June 30, 1990. The position of
mayor shall also be elected at the May, 1988 election.
—9—
The boundaries of the election districts shall also
constitute the boundaries of the voting precincts for the City of
Emporia.
The polling place for Precinct l shall be located at the
Greensville Rescue Squad Building.
-4-
? 0 0 6A P R . - ! ! ' 9 5 ; T H i ; 1 2 : 3 4 A T E L :
The polling place for Precinct 2 shall be located at the
Training School.
The polling place for Precinct 3 shall be located at the
Municipal Building.
The polling place for Precinct 4 shall be located at the
Emporia Elementary School.
The polling place for Precinct 5 shall be lgcated at the
building behind the Chesapeake Auto Supply Company.
- 1 0 -
Because the above described apportionment plan includes area
recently annexed to the city, and said annexation is currently
under submission to the Attorney General of the United States for
preclearance under Section Five of the Voting Rights Act, the
parties recognize that it is possible that the annexation may not
be precleared sufficiently in advance to prepare for the election
called for hereunder.
In the event that the preclearance process for either the
annexation or this agreement would interfere with allowing
residents of the annexed area to vote in the municipal election
scheduled for May 10, 1988, the parties agree that the following
schedule should control.
A. If the annexation and this agreement are precleared by
and including April 8, 1988, this agreement shall be
implemented in the May 10, 198Q election, and the
apportionment plan contained in Exhibits A and B shall
-5-
A P R . - I T 96 i THU! 1 2 35 A C L l1 F T E L : 5 2 3 2 " 2 1 F. 30 '
\
become effective.
B. If either the annexation or this agreement is not
precleared by and including April 8, 1988, the regularly
scheduled municipal election shall not be held on May
10, 1988.
C. (1) If the annexation is not precleared by and
including June 1, 1988, but Exhibit C to this agreement
has been precleared by that date, then the apportionment
plan attached hereto as Exhibit c for the city
boundaries as they existed prior to annexation shall be
implemented in a special election held July 19, 1980.
To the extent possible, this election shall be held
utilizing the structure outlined in Paragraphs 2, 3, and
6 above. The deadline for filing notices of candidacy
shall be 5s00 p.m. on June 20, 1988. Candidates shall
be residents of their districts and shall be elected
solely by the voters of their districts. The candidates
receiving the largest number of votes in each of
Districts 1, 3 and 4 shall be declared elected, and the
five candidates receiving the largest number of votes in
District 2 shall be declared elected. The position of
mayor shall also be elected at large at the special
election. The terms of office of all candidates elected
at the election held pursuant to this paragraph shall
commence on August 18, 1988 and shall expire upon the
- 6 -
A P R , - ! ! ' 9 6 ! T H U 5 1 2 3 5 A C L U F TIT! ■ JlU-l:U L ' » • P. 9 0 8
D.
election of their successors in the special election
called for below.
(2) The boundaries of the election districts shall also
constitute the boundaries of the voting precincts. The
polling places for this special election shall be
located as follows;
Polling place for Precinct It Municipal Building;
Polling place for Precinct 2; Emporia Elementary School;
Polling place for Precinct 3t Training School;
Polling place for Precinct 4: Department of Social
Services Building.
(3) It is the intent of the parties that Exhibit C shall
be a contingent, interim plan, to be utilized only for
one special election if necessary.
If at any time between April 9, 1988 and June 1, 1988,
inclusive, the annexation and this agreement become
precleared, then the special election called to be held
on July 19, 1988 shall implement the apportionment plan
for the entirety of the city including the annexed area
as outlined in Paragraphs 2 through 9 above. The
position of mayor shall also be elected at large at the
special election. The terms of office of all candidates
elected at such election shall begin on August 18, 1988.
If at any time between June 2, 1988 and July IQ, 1988,
inclusive, the annexation becomes precleared, the special
election called for in Paragraphs C and D above shall not
be held. Instead, a special election implementing the
-7-
T E L 15 2 3 2 " ’2: P. 0 0 9
apportionment plan for the entirety of the city,
including the annexed area, shall be held on August 30,
1988, as outlined in Paragraphs 2 through 9 above. The
position of mayor shall also be elected at large at the
special election. The deadline for the filing of
declarations of candidacy shall be 5;DO p.m. on August 1,
1988. The terms of office of all candidates elected at
such election shall begin on September 29, 1988.
F. If the annexation is precleared between July 19, 1988 and
September 22, 1988, inclusive, then the special election
shall be held on July 19, 1988, as provided for in
Paragraph C above using the apportionment plan for the
Xcity boundaries as they existed prior to annexation.
Thereafter, however, a special election shall be held on
November 8, 1988, to implement the apportionment plan for
the entirety of the city including the annexed areas, as
outlined in Paragraphs 2 through 9 above. The position
of mayor shall also be elected at large at the special
election. The deadline for filing declarations of
candidacy shall be 5:00 p.m. on August 26, 1988. The
terms of office of all candidates elected, at such
election shall begin on December 8, 1988.
G. The terms of office of the mayor and councilmembers
elected at a special election using the apportionment
plan attached hereto as Exhibit C for the city boundaries
as they existed prior to the annexation shall expire at
the first Emporia City Council meeting held subsequent to
A P R . - 1 r 9 6 ; T H U ) 1 2 : 3 6 A C L L F
- 8 -
APR.-i] 96 i THU I i 2 36 L U F ,'5233 P. 010
\px
a special election implementing the apportionment plan
for the entirety of the city including the annexed
area- The terms of councilmenbers elected at a special
election implementing the apportionment plan for the
entirety of the city shall expire as called for in
Paragraphs 7 and S above as if they had been elected at
the regularly scheduled election in May, 1988, and the
term of the mayor so elected shall expire June 30, 1992.
H. Petitions of qualified voters filed by candidates for the
May 10, 1988 election implementing the apportionment plan
for the entirety of the city, including the annexed area,
shall be valid for any future election held in 1988
implementing such plan, in the event the May 10, 1988 or
other special election ordered hereunder are cancelled as
provided above. Nothing herein shall preclude additional
candidates from filing declarations of candidacy and
petitions of qualified voters in the event the May 10,
1988 or latar special elections are cancelled as long as
they are filed by the dates specified in Paragraphs C, E
and F above for the filing of declarations of
candidacy.
X. It is the intent of the parties that this agreement shall
control the setting of the date of the implementing
election, leaving no further discretion in the setting of
the date, such that the submission of this agreement
includes the setting of any special election.
A P R . - 1 1 ' 9 6 ! T H U I 1 2 3 ' A C L U F T E L : 5 2 3 2 " 2 1
\
P. 0
- l l -
Pursuant to the requirements of state law, the secretary of
the electoral board of the City of Emporia shall cause public
notice to be given of the special election(a) ordered hereunder to
be held May 10, 1988 or a later date. A copy of this court order
shall not be published, but rather the notice shall identify the
date of the election to be held and the deadlines for filing
declarations of candidacy.
- 12-
Any vacancy on the City Council shall be filled under the
appropriate provisons of state law; however, any persons seeking
tc fill a vacancy on the council shall reside within the district
in which the vacancy exists.
-13-
Except as they conflict with provisions of this Consent
Agreement, the laws of the State of Virginia shall continue to
govern elections for the City Council of Emporia, and the laws of
the State shall continue to govern and prescribe the powers and
duties of said officials.
. »-14-
It is understood between the parties that a different
apportionment of the City Council may become necessary or
desirable in the future because of the one person-one vote
requirement and/or demographic changes within the city as
10 -
APR. - i l ' 96(THU) 12 37 A C L l: F TEL:5232'2l P. 0
indicated by the latest decennial census, and/or other reasons.
Such apportionment is contemplated by this agreement, and it shall
not be necessary for the defendants to seek modification of this
agreement or of the consent decree, but rather it may be
accomplished pursuant to applicable state and federal law*
-15-
The terms of this Consent Agreement shall be binding upon
defendants, their successors, officers, agents and servants.
-16-
The defendants shall submit the relevant terms of this
Consent Agreement to the Attorney General of the United States for
federal preclearance under Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act of
1965, 42 U.S.C. §1973c, as amended. The plaintiffs agree to
support this agreement and the submission of the annexation for
preclearance by the Attorney General.
- 11 -
- 1 7 -
The matters of plaintiffs1 costs and attorney's fees are
expressly reserved.
Agreed and Consented to by:
i
Counsel for Plaintiffs
Thomas M. Person, Elmo Roberts,
Barbara G. Mason, Daniel D , Smith,
Steve J. Eason and James Edwards
H Z '
Counsel for Defendants
William H. Ligon, J. Henry Evans,
F.T. Lee, II, George B. Ligon, Jr.,
Nancy B. Squire, Samuel W. Adams,
III, Stuart G. Keedwell, H. Lee
Townsend, Julian P. Mitchell,
Julia L. Jones, Stanford L. Vassar,
Frances L. Grizzard, Norris M.
Dickerson and Sarah B. Harris
y
- 1 2 -
Z'
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
v .
EARL HORNE, et als.,
Defendants.
CONSENT DECREE
CA-88-0865-R
SL AYTO N , B A I N & C L A R Y
p O BOX 580
LAWPENCCVILLE. VA 22068
Plaintiffs initiated this action under the First,
Thirteenth, Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments of the
Constitution of the United States and Section 2 of the Voting
Rights Act of 1965, 42 U-S.C. Section 1973, as amended, and
prayed for declaratory and injunctive relief concerning the
method of electing the members of the Town Council of South
Hill , Virginia.
The plaintiffs and defendants are desirous of resolving
this action and have agreed to a method to be used m future
elections for the members of the Town Council. This Court has
jurisdiction of the parties and subject matter of this action,
and the parties have agreed to the entry of this Consent Decree.
Based upon the inherent equitable powers of this Court, the
consent of the parties hereto, and the agreement entered into by
the parties on file with the Court, the future members of the
- 1 ■i I 6
( (
11
jj
:Town Council of South Hill/ Virginia, shall be elected in
;i accordance with the provisions of this Consent Decree.
(j
;| Pursuant to the agreement of the parties, and without
/admitting any liability under the claims of the complaint, the
11 defendants have adopted a plan for the election of members of
1 the Town Council of South Hill, Virginia, which provides
plaintiffs, as black residents of South Hill, and all the black
/voters of South Hill, a greater opportunity than previously
, existed to elect candidates of their choice through the creation
of one two-member ward and two three-member wards. This
replaces the current system under which there are six Town
Council members who are elected at-large without any
geographical residency requirement.
The plan includes the following aspects:
(a) All candidates are required to reside in and be
. elected by the voters residing in a particular ward.
(b) The first election which will be conducted under the
new plan will be the general election scheduled for November 7,
1989, and the Defendants shall forthwith commence to take all
action necessary to insure that the general election on November
7, 1989, shall be conducted under the new plan. Any election
held prior to the general election on November 7, 1989, whether
for local, state or federal office, shall be conducted under the
SLAYTON, B A I N a C L A R Y
p O BOX 580
2
(
k
plan in effect immediately prior to the implementation of the
plan hereby ordered.
(c) Because the implementation of this plan is dependent
upon preclearance under Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act of
1965, 42 U.S.C. Section 1973c, the parties have agreed to
cooperate in seeking expeditious preclearance. The parties have
jointly requested the issuance of this consent decree.
Therefore,
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, ADJUDGED and DECREED:
(1 )
That the terms of the consent agreement on file with the
Court are due to be implemented.
( 2 )
The positions on the Town Council shall be filled as
follows:
(a) The first election under the new plan will be held in
May of 1990. At that time two Town Councilmen will be elected
from Ward I. The candidate receiving the highest number of votes
will serve a four year term of office, commencing on September
1, 1990. The candidate receiving the second highest number of
votes will serve a two year term of office also commencing
September 1, 1990. Three Town Councilmen will be elected from
S L A Y T O N . B A I N a C L A R Y 3 -
P O BOX 500LAwnCN-r. VILLE. VA
»
( V
Ward II, each to serve a four year term of office commencing
■ September 1, 1990.. 1
p (b) In May of 1992, the Mayor will be elected by at-large!j
i; vote to serve a four year term of office commencing September 1,
I :I:
p 1992. One Town Councilman will be elected from Ward I, to
I succeed the Councilman elected in 1990 to a two year term of
office. The candidate receiving the highest vote total in Ward
I will serve a four year term commencing September 1, 1992. Also
: in May of 1992, three Town Councilmen will be elected from Ward
III, each to serve a four year term of office commencing
: September 1, 1992.
(3)
That the Court and the parties to this litigation
recognize that redistrictings and reapportionments will become
necessary in the future on account of numerous reasons,
including, although not limited to, any future decennial
census. Such future reapportionments and redistrictings have
been contemplated by all parties, and it shall not be necessary
for this Court, as a part of this litigation, to approve any
future reapportionments or redistrictings, or any other changes
affecting voting rights of the citizens of the Town of South
Hill. Instead, such reapportionments, redistrictings and other
changes must be accomplished in compliance with applicable state
and federal law.
SLAYTON. B A I N & C L A R Y
p o BOX 5 8 0
4 -
\>~r-
(l
That the terms of this Consent Decree shall be binding
upon defendants, their successors, officers, agents and
|servants.
j
(5)
That the defendants shall submit the relevant terms of
this Consent Decree for preclearance under Section 5 of the
'Voting Rights Act of 1965, 42 U.S.C. Section 1973c, as amended,
as expeditiously as possible.
(6 )
; (4)
The defendants agree to pay plaintiffs' costs and
attorneys' fees.
1 9 JUN 1989SO ORDERED, this the _____ day of __________ , 1989.
Sl a y t o n , b a i n a c l a r y
p O BOX 580
La w r e n c e v !l Le . v a 23868
5 -
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT [$5 j i r“
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA) | .-- '---
Richmond Division | l”3 1
1 NOV-51991
BRUNSWICK COUNTY LEAGUE
FOR PROGRESS, et al., CLERK, U.S. DISTRICT COURT RICHMOND, n
Plaintiffs,
v. Civil Action No.
3:91CV00091
0-
f f
TOWN COUNCIL OF LAWRENCEVILLE, )
et al., )
)Defendants. )
CONSENT DECREE
This action was initiated as a challenge to the at large
method of electing the members of the Town Council of the Town of
Lawrenceville, Virginia, under Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act
of 1965, as amended, 42 U.S.C. § 1973, and the United States
Constitution. The Town Council, without admitting liability,
voluntarily rescinded the at large election method and announced
its intention to implement a district-based election system by a
resolution unanimously adopted on April 23, 1991.
The parties have advised the Court that they have now
reached agreement on a new method of election, more fully
described in Exhibit 1 to this Decree, which creates two
multimember election districts. District 1, from which three
members are to be elected, consists of a 65 percent black
population. District 2, from which four members are to be
elected, is composed of a majority white population.
Upon joint motion of the parties, and for good cause shown,
it is hereby DECREED that:
lfc(j OCT 2 5 1991
util_________
CLERK, U.S. DISTRICT C o .
RICHMOND. VA
(1) Elections for members of the Town Council of the Town
of Lawrenceville are to be conducted in accordance with the
provisions of the proposed Charter amendment recited in the
Resolution attached as Exhibit 1.
(2) Counsel for the Town is to take the steps necessary to
obtain preclearance of the new election system from the United
States Department of Justice in accordance with Section 5 of the
Voting Rights Act of 1965, as amended, 42 U.S.C. § 1973c. The
preclearance submission is to include a copy of this Decree.
(3) Once the preclearance process is completed, the Town is
to take the steps necessary pursuant to Va. Code §§ 15.1-833—
15.1-835 to have the General Assembly enact an amendment to the
Town's Charter implementing the new election system.
(4) Any future change in the method of electing
Lawrenceville Town Council members, including changes in
boundaries, shall be accomplished in accordance with applicable
federal and state law. It shall not be necessary for this Court
to approve any future reapportionment, redistricting, or other
change in voting plans or practices of the Town as part of this
case, provided that nothing in this Decree shall preclude the
initiation of a separate civil action against any change from the
plans and practices to be effectuated hereunder.
(5) If for some reason not now anticipated the Town is
unable to implement the voting plan described in Exhibit 1, the
plaintiffs may petition this Court for such additional relief as
may be appropriate.
2
(6) The payment of attorney fees and costs in this action
will be governed by a separate order of the Court addressed to
that issue. This Decree does not embody the consent of the
parties with respect to the content of such order.
(7) Except as noted in paragraph 6, this Decree fully
resolves all of the issues raised in this civil action.
Let the clerk send a copy of this Decree to all counsel of
record.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Dated: N O V - 5 1991
Consented to by:
Counsel for Plaintiffs
Counsel for Defendants
3
RESOLUTION
The purpose of this Resolution is to adopt a new method of
electing the members of the Town Council of Lawrenceville. The
new method of election will replace the at large election system
which was rescinded by a resolution unanimously adopted by the
Town Council on April 23, 1991.
The Mayor and Town Council, after consultation with counsel,
have determined that the interests of the citizens of
Lawrenceville as a whole are best served by an election system
which is district-based, which enhances the opportunity of
minority residents to elect representatives of their choice, and
which can be implemented in the next regular scheduled
councilmanic elections, to be conducted on the first Tuesday in
May, 1992. The Mayor and Town Council have concluded that the
election system described in this Resolution satisfies those
criteria and, in addition, that it complies with the requirements
of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, as amended, 42 U.S.C. § 1971.
The implementation of the new election system in May, 1992
is made possible by the gracious agreement of three incumbent
members of the Town Council to resign effective August 31, 1992,
even though, the terms of office to which they were elected do not
expire until August 31, 1994. The voluntary resignations of
these three council members make it possible to fill all seven
council seats established by the new system in the May, 1992
election.
In order to implement the new election system, it is
necessary to amend Section 5 of the Charter of the Town of
Lawrenceville by following the procedures set forth in Va. Code
§ 15.1-833 - § 15.1-835. In compliance with these requirements,
notice of the proposed charter amendment has been published in
newspapers of general circulation in the area, and a public
hearing has been conducted at which citizens had an opportunity
to be heard on the proposal.
Now therefore, having fully complied with all applicable
legal requirements, the Mayor and Council of the Town of
Lawrenceville hereby resolve and direct as follows:
1. That Section 5, "Elections," of the Charter of the Town
of Lawrenceville shall be amended by deleting the existing text
and by substituting in its place the following language:
5. Elections.
At the regular municipal election to be held on the
first Tuesday in May, nineteen hundred ninety-two, a
treasurer and seven council members shall be elected in
the following manner. The treasurer shall be elected for
a term of four years. The seven council members shall be
elected from two election districts, known as Election
District 1 and Election District 2. The boundaries of
the two election districts shall be as enacted by the
Town Council. Residents may cast votes only for council
seats for the Election District in which they reside.
Candidates may seek election only to council seats for
the Election District in which they reside.
Three members of council shall be elected from
Election District 1 and four members of council shall be
elected from Election District 2. The two candidates
receiving the greatest number of votes in Election
District 1 shall be elected to four year terms of office
and the candidate receiving the third highest number of
votes in Election District 1 shall be elected to a two
year term of office. The two candidates receiving the
greatest number of votes in Election District 2 shall be
elected to four year terms of office and the candidates
receiving the third and fourth highest number of votes in
Election District 2 shall be elected to two year terms of
office.
2
At the regular municipal election to be held on the
first Tuesday in May, nineteen hundred ninety-four, and
every four years thereafter, the mayor, one council
member from District 1 and two council members from
District 2 shall be elected for a term of four years
each. At the regular municipal election to be held on
the first Tuesday in May, nineteen hundred ninety-six,
and every four years thereafter, the treasurer, two
council members from District 1 and two council members
from District 2 shall be elected for a term of four years
each.
The mayor, treasurer, and council members elected
under this section shall enter upon the duties of their
respective offices the first day of September succeeding
their election.
2. That the boundary lines of the two election districts
created by the charter amendment shall be as follows:
Election District 1 shall consist of the territory
bounded as follows: From the point where the northern
Lawrenceville Town Limit meets Windsor Avenue, the line
proceeds southeast along Windsor Avenue to Belt street;
then southwest on Belt Street to Maple Street; then
southeast and south on Maple Street to 1st Avenue; then
west on 1st Avenue to Belt Street; then southwest on Belt
Street to 2nd Avenue; then east on 2nd Avenue to Maple
Street; then south-southwest on Maple Street to 3rd
Avenue; then west on 3rd Avenue to Belt Street; then
southwest on Belt Street across the railroad tracks to
4th Avenue, then east-southeast on 4th Avenue to Walnut
Street; then south-southwest along Walnut Street to 5th
Avenue; then west-northwest on 5th Avenue to an alley
between Beach Street and Walnut Street; then south-
southwest on said alley to Belt Street; then along Belt
Street to Hicks Street (business Route 58); then
northeast along Hicks Street to 5th Avenue; then
northwest on 5th Avenue to South Street; then north-
northeast on South Street to the railroad tracks; then
west along the tracks to an alley between Park and High
Streets if that alley intersected the tracks; then north
along said alley to New Street; then west on New Street
to Park Street; then north on Park Street to 3rd Avenue;
then east on 3rd Avenue to the alley between Park Street
and High Street; then north on said alley to 2nd Avenue;
then east on 2nd Avenue to High Street; and north on High
Street to Windsor Avenue.
3
From there the line continues southeast on Windsor Avenue
to Church Street; then east on Church Street to Sharp
Street; then south on Sharp Street to New Hicks Street;
then east on New Hicks Street and Hicks Street to Main
Street; then south on Main Street to Railroad Street,
just south of the tracks; then east and east-northeast
along Railroad Street to Minola Street; then south and
east on Minola Street to Walker Street; then north on
Walker Street to Railroad Street; then east on Railroad
Street to its intersection with the eastern boundary of
the Town of Lawrenceville; then north and west along the
Town Boundary to the point of beginning.
Election District 2 shall consist of the remaining
territory within the corporate limits of the Town of
Lawrenceville.
3. That the Town Manager and the Town Attorney, or their
designated representatives, shall take all steps necessary to
obtain preclearance of the new method of election pursuant to
Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, 42 U.S.C. § 1973c.
4. That the Town Manager and the Town Attorney, or their
designated representatives, in compliance with Va. Code § 15.1-
833 - § 15.1-835, shall take all steps necessary to arrange for
passage of legislation by the General Assembly of Virginia to
amend the Charter of the Town of Lawrenceville in the manner
provided in this Resolution.
5. That the Town Manager and the Town Attorney, or their
designative representatives, shall serve as liaisons with the
Registrar and Electoral Board of Brunswick County and the State
Board of Elections to insure that the new method of election is
implemented in full compliance with state election laws.
6. That the map attached to this Resolution labeled "Map
of Election Districts," which reflects the boundaries of Election
4
District 1 and Election District 2 as created by the charter
amendment and as described in paragraph 2 above, shall be deemed
to be an integral part of this Resolution.
Unanimously adopted this 15th day of October,
A Certified True Copy:
Mabel if; Brewer, Clerk
1991.
5
i
Plaintiffs initiated this action under the First/
|j Thirteenth, Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments of the
| Constitution of the United States and Section 2 of the11
jj Voting Rights Act of 1965, 42 U.S.C. Section 1973, as
j i
'! amended, and prayed for declaratory and injunctive relief
ji
I concerning the method of electing the members of the Board
! of Supervisors of Mecklenburg County, Virginia.
p O BOX 500
l a w b e n c e v i l l e . va
\ \ o
The plaintiffs and defendants are desirous of
resolving this action and have agreed to a method to be
used in future elections for the members of the Board of
Supervisors. This Court has jurisdiction of the parties and
subject matter of this action, and the parties have agreed
to the entry of this Consent Decree. Based upon the
inherent equitable powers of this Court, the consent of the
- 1 -
j parties hereto, and the agreement entered into by the
| parties on file with the Court, the future members of the
!! Board of Supervisors of Mecklenburg County, Virginia, shall
|! be elected in accordance with the provisions of this
ii
j Consent Decree.
| Pursuant to the agreement of the parties, and
i
| without admitting any liability under the claims of the
I
I complaint, the defendants have adopted a plan for the
| election of members of the Board of Supervisors of
! Mecklenburg County, Virginia, which provides plaintiffs, as
j black residents of Mecklenburg County, and all the black
i voters of Mecklenburg County, a greater opportunity than
previously existed to elect candidates of their choice
through the creation of nine single-member districts. This
i replaces the current system under which six members are
|j elected from three separate two-member districts, and three
ij members are elected from single-member election districts.
j!
!j The plan includes the following aspects.
;| (a ) All candidates are required to reside in and be
l|
ji elected by the voters residing in a particular district.
ji
j! (b) The first election which will be conducted
j j under the new plan will be the general election scheduled
|| for November 7, 1989, and the Defendants shall forthwith
! i
:iii
ji - 2 -
>L A Y T O N , B A I N a C L A R Y !
p O BOX 580 . J
LAWRENCEVILLE. VA. 238 6 8 !'
I
:
||
■ i < j il' IiI!
;i
i
j
i
commence to take all action necessary to insure that the
general election on November 7, 1989, shall be conducted
under the new plan. Any election held prior to the general
election on November 7, 1989, whether for local, state or
federal office, shall be conducted under the plan in effect
immediately prior to the implementation of the plan hereby
ordered.
11 11
|l
(c) Because the implementation of this plan is
dependent upon preclearance under Section 5 of the Voting
Rights Act of 1965, 42 U.S.C. Section 1973c, the parties
have agreed to cooperate in seeking expeditious
preclearance. The parties have jointly requested the
issuance of this consent decree. Therefore,
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, ADJUDGED and DECREED:
!!
il (i)
■ i ■i
That the terms of the consent agreement on file
with the Court are due to be implemented.
il
(2)
Ij : i •I
That the positions on the Board of Supervisors
shall be filled as follows:
(a) A special election shall be held on November 7,
' I
i;!
J
j| 1989, to fill the Board of Supervisors position in Elections ij| District Four (4) of the new plan. The candidate receiving
the highest number of votes cast in that special election
| shall serve for a term commencing upon his or her
;j qualification, and continuing thence to and including
;li| December 31, 1991. The deadline for filing declarations of
I j
|j candidacy shall be 5:00 p.m. on August 25, 1989;j
iJ (b) Each Supervisor now in office shall complete
:| the term to which he or she was elected, even though this
will result in a ten-member Board of Supervisors until
| January 1 , 1992.
i
i (c) An election shall be held in November of 1991
ji to fill the Board of Supervisors positions m Election
ji
| Districts One, Two, Three, Four, Five, Six, Seven, Eight
!
■| and Nine, which terms of office shall commence on January
j i|j 1, 1992, and extend to and including December 31, 1995.
!{
! (d) The boundaries of the nine election districtsi
j|
j i shall be those described in Exhibit A, attached hereto.
|
! (e) The voting precincts for the nine election
i>• I
i j districts in Mecklenburg County, and the polling places for
! | • •Ij each precinct, shall be those identified on Exhibit B,
j attached hereto.
j!ii
;
jl
SL AYTON. B A I N a CLARY 'i
p O BOX 580 I
LAW n E N C E V | L L E _ VA 23869 .
4
( 3 )
That the Court and the parties to this litigation
recognize that redistrictings and reapportionments will
become necessary in the future on account of numerous
reasons, including, although not limited to, any future
decennial census. Such future reapportionments and
redistrictings have been contemplated by all parties, and
it shall not be necessary for this Court, as a part of this
litigation, to approve any future reapportionments or
redistrictings, or any other changes affecting voting
rights of the citizens of Mecklenburg County. Instead, such
reapportionments, redistrictings and other changes must be
accomplished in compliance with applicable state and
federal law.
(4)
That the terms of this Consent Decree shall be
binding upon defendants, their successors, officers, agents
and servants.
(5)
That the defendants shall submit the relevant terms
of this Consent Decree for preclearance under Section 5 of
the Voting Rights Act of 1965, 42 U.S.C. Section 1973c, as
SLAYTON, B A I N 8r C L A R Y 1
p O BOX 560
L A W R E N C E V I L L E . VA. 2 3 0 6 0 ;
!j amended, as expeditiously as possible.
ij
' ( 6 )
That the defendants shall pay plaintiffs1 costs
expended and attorney's fees incurred, in the total amount
of $6,750.00.
LAYTON, B A I N a C L A R Y
p o B O X 5 0 0
- A W n E N C E V i L L E , VA 2 3 8 6 8
Virginia Senate
Marty E. W illiams
(R) Senate District 1
r
Stanley C. Walker
(D) Senate District 6
Stephen H. Martin
(R) Senate District 11
Henry L. Marsh, III
(D) Senate District 16
W. Henry Maxwell
(R) Senate District 2
Thomas K Sorment, Jr.
(R) Senate District 3
William T. Bolling
(R) Senate District 4
Edward L Schrock
(R) Senate District 7
Kenneth W. Stolle
(R) Senate District 8
Benjamin J. Lambert. Ill
(D) Senate District 9
Walter A. Stosch
(R) Senate District 12
Frederick M. Quayle
(R) Senate District 13
Mark L Early
(R) Senate District 14
L. Louise Lucas
(D) Senate District 18
R. Edward Houck
(D) Senate District 17
1 9 9 6 L e g is la t i v e G u id e / P a g e 2
Charles R. Hawkins
(R) Senate District 19
Yvonne B. Miller
(D) Senate District 5
Joseph B. Benedetti
<R) Senate District 10
Richard J. Holland
(D) Senate District 15
Virgil H. Goode. Jr.
(D) Senate District 20
Virginia Senate
John S. Kdwards
11)) Senate District 21
ke\in (i. Miller
iRl Senate District 26
Man Margaret W hipple
11)) Senate District 31
Joseph V. ( iartlan
1 D) Senate District 36
Malf'ourd W. Trumho
(R) Senate District 22
H. Russell Potts, Jr.
(R) Senate District 27
Janet 1). Howell
ID) Senate District 32
Warren K. B arn
i R) Senate District 37
Stephen D. Newman
(Ri Senate District 23
John H. Chichester
iR) Senate District 28
Charles L. Waddell
<1)1 Senate District 33
Jackson K. Reasor. Jr.
11)1 Senate District 38
Emmett W. Hanger Emily Couric
(R) Senate District 24 (D) Senate District 25
Charles J. Colgan Patsy Ticer
(D) Senate District 29 (D) Senate District 30
Madison E. Marve William C. W ampler. Jr.
(D) Senate District 39 (RI Senate District 40
/ W O I ( I I I l i l t ' P(ll!C a’
Jane H. Woods
(R) Senate District 34
Richard L. Saslaw
(D) Senate District 35
Thomas W. Moss, Jr.
(D) House Disirict 88
John H. Tate
(D) House District 5
W. Roscoe Reynolds
(D) House District 10
Raymond R. Guest, Jr.
<R) House District 15
Whittington VV. Clement
(D) House District 20
Virginia Hoi sk of Delegates
Terry G. Kilgore
(R) House District 1
Thomas M. Jackson, Jr.
(Dl House District 6
Ward L. Armstrong
(D) House District 11
Clifton A. Woodrum
(D) House District 16
Frank W. Wagner
(R) House District 21
Clarence K. Phillips
(Di House District 2
Thomas G, Baker. Jr.
(R ) House District 7
James M. Shuler
(D) House District 12
A. Victor Thomas
(D) House District 17
A. Victor Thomas
(D) House District 17
Joyce K. Crouch
(R) House District 22
Jackie T. Slump
(Dl House District 3
H. Morgan Griffith
(R) House District 8
Robert G. Marshall
(R i House District 13
R. Creigh Deeds
(D) House District 18
L. Preston Bryant, Jr.
(R) House District 23
Joseph P. Johnson
(Dl House District 4
Allen W. Dudley
(Rl House District 9
C. Richard Cranwell
(Dl House District 14
Lacey F„ Putney
(1) House District 19
a
S. Vance Wilkins, Jr.
(R) House District 24
1 9 9 6 L e g is la t i v e G u id e ! P a g e 6
Virginia House of Delegates
R. Steven Landes
(R) House District 25
(ilenn M. Weatherholtz
(R) House District 26
Samuel A. Nixon, Jr.
(R) House District 27
William J. Howell
(R) House District 28
John J. Dav ies
(D) House District 30
Jay Kat/.en
(R) House District 31
W illiam C. Mims
(R) House District 32
Joe T. May
(R) House District 33
Richard L. Fisher
(R) House District 35
Kenneth R. Plum
(D) House District 36
Robert K. Harris
(R ) House District 37
James K. O'Brien
(R) House District 40
James H. Dillard. H
(R) House District 41
Da\ id B. Albo
(R i House District 42
Robert D. Hull
(D) House District 38
Gladys B. Keating
(D) House District 43
Julia A. Connallv
(D) House District 48
Beverly J. Sherwood
(R) House District 29
Vincent F. Callahan. Jr.
(R) House District 34
Vivian E. Watts
(D) House District 39
Linda T. Puller
(D) House District 44
L. Karne Darner
(D) House District 49
/owo /.c'c/s/wtnv (iuitlc Pdi>c 7
Virginia House of Delegates
Frank D. Hargrove
(R) House District 55
W. W. Bennett. Jr.
(D) House District 60
John C. Watkins
(R) House District 65
Dwight Clinton Jones
CD) House District 70
David G. Brickley
(D) House District 51
V. Earl Dickinson
(D) House District 56
Frank M. Ruff
(R) House District 61
M. Kirkland Cox
(R) House District 66
Jean W. Cunningham
(D) House District 71
John A. Rollison
(R ) House District 52
Mitchell Van Yahres
(D) House District 57
Riley E. Ingram
(R) House District 62
Roger J. McClure
(R) House District 67
John S. Reid
(R) House District 72
James M. Scott
(D) House District 53
Peter T. Way
< R ) House District 58
Anne G. Rhodes
(R) House District 68
Eric I. Cantor
(R) House District 73
Robert D. Orrock
(R ) House District 54
Watkins M. Abbitt. Jr.
(D) House District 59
William K. Barlow
(D) House District 64
Franklin P. Hall
{DI House District 69
Donald McEachin
(D) House District 74
1 9 9 6 L e g is la t i v e G u id e i P a g e 8
Virginia House of Delegates
J. Paul Council!. Jr. Robert E. Nelms
(Dl House District 75 (R) House District 76
Kenneth R Melvin Glenn R. Croshaw
(D) House District 80 (D) House District 81
Robert Tata
(R) House District 85
George H. Heilig
(D) House District 86
I. Vincent Behm. ,Ir. Vlary T. Christian
(D) House District 91 (Dl House District 92
Shirley F. Cooper George \V. Grayson
(Dl House District 96 (Dl House District 97
Lionel! Spruill
(D) House District 77
Harry R. Purkey
(R) House District 82
Thelma Sawyers Drake
(Rl House District 87
Phillip A. Hamilton
(Rl House District 93
Harvey B. Morgan
(Rl House District 98
J. Randy Forbes
(Ri House District 78
Leo C. Waldrup
(R) House District 83
Jerrauld C. Jones
(D) House District 89
Alan A. Diamonstein
(D) House District 94
W. Tayloe Murphy, Jr.
(D) House District 99
William S. Moore, Jr.
(D) House District 79
Robert F. McDonnell
(R) House District 84
William P. Robinson. Jr.
(D) House District 90
Flora D. Crittenden
(D) House District 95
Robert S. Bloxom
(R) House District 100
199ft Lc^i\him i (iitnlc A /ge 9
OeC 5 09.33124/1994,
TOTAL RELATIVE ABSOLUTSDISTRICT POf 17LAT 108OBVIATION* Deviation
1 42 331 0 74 460I 44 3 H 1 II 24G93 4414ft 3 64 22(6
i 44 113 3-41 24395 43413 2.49 15416 41 996 0- 20 1227 4120* -1.08 -6(08 40039 -2.97 -19359 41894 0.01 2210 40787 -1.76 -1087It 43837 3 20 19*912 41233 -1 04 -641U 43213 2.1* 1139II 59392 -3.69 -229213 44951 4.97 307716 41592 -0.47 -29217 42149 0.48 29518 42631 1,22 13719 42626 122 75220 43132 2.07 1278n 44444 1.16 237222 44583 4.38 270923 61378 -0.80 -4962* *4110 4.10 251623 61384 -O 47 -29026 63969 3.22 194327 44 430 4.16 257*28 *12 34 -1.03 -63829 44 699 4.57 282530 44 3 79 4.05 250531 42910 1.67 103432 41162 -0-03 -51233 $9*42 -3.20 -203231 (1214 -1.07 -660J3 *1272 -0.97 -6023* 64582 4.30 2104
3 7 63394 2.46 152038 *2tSZ 1.40 91039 60901 -1.57 -97 J40 60632 -2-01 -124241 S108J -1.20 -79142 42646 1.25 77243 62790 1.44 92444 *1632 -0.39 -24243 59444 -3.93 -24304 $ 40002 -1.73 -107247 61807 -0.11 -67
STRICT POtUI-ATIOfl M IA 19S IS f o r f l a n IIOSBI 750
r o t io g m e m id i o t a i . p o p u l a t io n by tm e t
•niTE * SLACK 6 OTHSF. 9
61548 9* . 74 609 0.99 Ill 0.286)186 98.22 927 1.44 771 0.34(1643 94.2) t45 0.2) 351 0.5567321 96.90 174 3 I. 71 747 0.18(11)5 94.40 2008 3 17 712 0 4339801 96.44 ion? 3.07 7*0 0.113759* 94.11 3101 5.07 SOI 0.8337*59 9 6.31 1672 2.7fl 100 0.8333428 84.33 8233 13.33 713 0.3551196 84.71 933* 15.3- 263 0.13499*2 7* .0# 1497* 23.46 297 0.4755**1 90,90 7543 4.15 3029 4.9356(78 99.(4 4235 6. 73 2200 3.6137*93 97.15 1593 2.34 301 0.319)271 97.41 1289 1.98 m 0.6045*27 14.40 14963 24.30 800 3.30521)6 81 8( 9331 15.04 602 1.1050126 92.91 1129 *.39 376 0 - 60541(6 90.20 5839 9.32 301 0.184093* 64.87 21778 34.49 436 0*9487*3 75.11 10322 18.02 9331 0.2754523 04-42 *537 14.T7 «?7 o.ai42761 *9.47 18070 29.44 547 0.0956679 89 DO 7247 11.23 484 0.7558309 94.68 2813 4.51 462 0.75COMO 95.01 2238 3.50 *31 1.4951469 19.86 10002 1*. 76 2174 3.3855546 90.71 4301 7.03 1306 2.2661111 94.46 2*48 4.36 634 0.0833431 83.17 *799 13.2? 449 1.01S5443 81.43 *235 *.94 112 1.1353422 *7.88 4337 7-113 1083 5 0254231) 90.42 4033 6. 74 1577 2 . €*52 JOS 83.45 2811 4.59 6095 9.9633708 87.6* 2033 3.32 3529 9.02344(2 84.33 3765 0-93 4)55 6.7153274 84 -04 2017 4 .44 7 303 11.5247341 75.48 3 776 6.01 11(23 18.5148960 80.39 394 4 *. 40 7997 13.1353253 87 83 2 337 4.22 4420 7 .9331516 84.34 2710 4.44 6937 11.2345403 72.48 10467 16 71 6774 10.814 9021 78.C* 1121 11.34 6656 10.60440*’ 71 49 12039 14.31 3310 8.9441532 69.81 13*88 23.53 3*24 6 *04 3061 70. *2 11210 18-41 *932 10.714*209 74.76 5289 8.56 10 309 16.<8
SOURCE* 0 * DEPAPrMKKT O r catW KOCE, BUREAU OR THE CSMS'JS P .L . 9 4 - J 7 1 DATA
CHAPTER 4, 1994 ACTS OF ASSEMBLY, SPECIAL SESSION II
HOUSE DISTRICTS - ADJUSTMENTS
PLAN NO. H0881750 - EFFECTIVE 1/1/95
X POP WRITE 6 BLACK % Of HR* 5
41017 <6101 90 8 7 426 0.91 107 0 2 147142 4 6670 »e 29 fch5 1.40 147 Oil46933 4 6)03 »« 17 8 3 0.10 1*7 0 3680109 48(11 97.05 129 > 2.54 1*1 0.3640436 458(2 16.65 1440 2.9/ 184 0.3448023 46191 4*. 6(1 142 5 2.97 20? 0.434*273 4 64 35 94 3 7 2146 4 )7 424 0.8«4*71* 4 3034 46.45 1316 2 32 343 0.734)336 4 1456 0 7.21 5134 12.18 146 0.314(612 3974C *3.30 (672 14.31 ieo 0.394919B 38341 •'7.81 10759 21 . ) 4 1*6 0.4031034 4*3)1 90 8* 2C39 4.30 7621 5. 1444122 3971) 90 06 7*59 ( (8 1520 3.4443(4* 41406 4) 28 1040 7.30 1*7 0 4349(05 49184 47.54 958 1 .13 263 0.5348189 37272 ) 6.39 109*8 27.(9 344 1.1 318019 41460 «( .14 *134 17.7) 425 C-8949334 45704 42.64 3355 * .60 273 0.564*703 43(61 40.39 4 334 8.99 202 0 421*474 33238 68.58 14947 30.*3 2*4 03943*09 34123 ) 7.71 6302 14.33 3184 7.9349823 42745 43.79 *70) 13.16 372 0.7547242 34202 72.57 17304 26.5* 3*6 0.0449344 41400 *9 .41 5104 10.73 363 0.7147130 447*3 45.02 2042 4.33 305 0.6550069 40398 95.14 1701 3.51 684 1 3446370 30200 *2.03 4975 14.9* 13*5 3.0043093 39135 40 82 3043 7.07 913 2.124R571 46012 44.83 704)4 4.30 423 0.B747053 40481 84.60 (910 14.44 458 0.9646372 41273 *4.00 4621 4.91 4 78 1.0343581 3030* 8*. 36 2*74 6.*2 2101 4.024 3*21 3*782 90.38 3000 1.01 1059 2.4141785 38(00 86.21 1914 4.27 42(3 9.3241532 42122 8*. 62 150* 3-17 3901 8.2 i47*27 40911 *5.70 J811 R .00 2999 6.3049 350 41*30 *4.9* 2185 4.13 3233 10. f%19920 30804 77.73 2153 5.31 8.363 i t . ' * S49484 39714 81.90 2*03 5-94 3872 42-i.i4 3004 30009 88.38 1715 3.99 3280 7.6342334 339*7 84.76 1796 4.24 4633 ii.oo47*17 34200 71.82 *63* 18-14 4791 10.0449478 39134 80.31 4895 9.** 4849 9.8046045 34940 14.39 9102 17.30 3003 8.1219*01 3*103 72.93 10434 21.04 2984 (.0252010 30)03 7 3 64 0691 16.71 5017 9.6330640 3*075 77. 1« 3902 7.71 766.1 15.13
r»« l
48 «1M< 0 14 no 51971 6 J 60 38 78 *26 6383 10 14 53369 4S090 84.42 3310 9 20 SCO 9 4 . 3849■ f. 60*99 -1.34 -975 42270 69. 33 9*76 16.22 8803 14.4* 52010 37451 72.01 77 50 14 90 9€C' 13.09“U 514H 2.55 1575 54933 64.4: 3458 6.60 3136 4.97 4 541* 39604 fl 1 20 3679 7 - 94 ?l£3 4 ■ 0151 Hill -0.39 ■24 J 40511 78. 71 9112 15.27 3708 t. 07 41547 13081 79 *2 5981 14 10 2409 5.905? *3 08 4 0 .34 210 48458 78.6* 9112 15.03 3794 6.11 4 3359 J46 70 79 .4* 6120 11.11 2564 3 9253 434 16 2.49 154Z 31742 81.39 2991 4.72 8683 13.69 51264 4277 ) 83.14 2198 4-21 934 7 12.3754 4C04C -2.96 -1834 51076 83.07 7783 12.96 1182 1 .97 44039 37714 93.64 I486 12 16 0 39 1-9155 €3304 7.31 1432 56440 89.15 4405 10.12 461 0.73 47499 42522 89.52 4644 9.19 329 0.9959 43 JOT 2.32 1433 49009 73.92 14794 23.38 106 0.80 47072 35740 75 93 109 )) 23 31 359 0,57 *3394) 2.77 1716 502 79 79.07 10826 17.02 2485 3.91 52313 42336 90.97 1859 15. C? 2C99 4.0158 4 3799 1.11 1925 5774* 90.55 3396 • - 46 632 0.99 47 737 43306 90.72 4012 9.40 419 0.8839 61072 -1 - J« -852 42036 *9.89 1*630 W 53 35* 0.58 46782 330*9 70.99 13499 29. 19 243 0.32feQ 6 2139 0.33 241 3*524 <3.*3 22333 33.9* 25* 0.41 46916 30954 65.98 13179 33.6) 103 0.19Cl 6)0.18 -1.38 -856 37055 60.73 21704 36.85 253 0.42 46456 29242 62 95 17031 39. 69 103 0.3492 63344 7 .38 1472 42310 *«. 79 1*887 31.39 1149 1.81 47059 3195* *7.91 14181 30.59 722 1 -53Cl 59910 '3.1? -1964 2333T 38.95 35870 59.87 703 1.17 4 5769 18903 41. JO 29351 53.51 515 1.1384 S373J J-00 1839 43007 <7.48 11859 39.59 1807 2.93 46454 31B69 68.60 13347 29 13 1230 2.9785 *4364 4.03 2492 58103 90.27 4 956 7.70 1307 2.03 44500 40383 90.73 3275 7.39 •42 1 .1968 *4**1 4.34 2807 384 *4 90. 39 4857 7.51 1360 2.10 47005 43931 91.33 3157 € 12 916 1 956? 5**20 '3.64 -2254 31900 87.03 2844 4.77 4876 8.18 43122 37840 87.75 1913 1.14 3369 7.0188 <4*16 4.43 7742 sno* 89. 38 *033 9.34 1475 2.28 548*5 49103 89.50 4*7* 9.52 1086 19869 *2603 1.1* 729 2 3389 37.3* 37994 *0.69 1220 1.95 48014 20 709 43.13 26427 55.04 • 78 1.05*10 590 39 -4-58 -2835 22819 38.63 33(3* *0.3* 595 0.99 4 2953 1863) 4 3.38 23998 55.94 421 13 99H *0034 -3.02 -1870 23550 39.25 354*9 39.16 935 1.59 50275 21623 43.01 27*3* 35.37 • 16 1 9272 *3645 2 .86 1771 59466 93.43 7572 *04 1607 2.52 46231 43760 93.79 1889 1 . 41 1004 7 3073 6483J 4.71 2939 57937 69.21 46*2 > 32 7314 3.57 50950 4394 1 90.17 3648 1.17 1593 1.0?74 63741 2.29 1419 24195 38.23 37814 59.84 1224 1.93 47308 19811 41.9* 2*5)3 54.04 474 1 4573 54974 -4 .69 - 2 9 no 2493 J 42.2* 33*21 57.35 220 8,37 4424* 19181 4 4 25 24508 55.79 151 0.3516 546 39 -3.61 -2236 44666 74.90 14333 24.02 *49 1.09 4 3815 3 3206 73.7» lot* J 23.20 44* 3 .0?77 63561 2.73 1661 25632 40.33 37141 58.43 7*8 : .24 44 | 71 19023 4 3.07 14 600 55.9? 5 4 B 1.2478 54374 -4 .04 -2500 50999 85.*9 72*6 12.24 1109 1.87 42859 36967 • (.01 S2JO 1 2 . 7 0 141 l . 7979 54708 -4 31 •7464 41290 69.72 16330 27.92 1)48 2 36 4 3212 31600 71.13 10952 2 4 . 4 3 460 2 .2160 99024 -4 .41 -2910 21663 37.04 3*321 «i as 636 1.08 42881 U2S4 40.24 25171 59.71 448 1 .0491 59127 -4 .44 -2747 49143 81 76 9931 15.10 1853 3.13 42702 353 6 9 92.93 <829 14.12 1304 3-0592 *0094 -2.88 -1760 35932 93.0’ 28H 4.79 1291 211 465*1 43593 93.59 2018 4 49 910 l 9593 <4535 4.30 2461 4 9400 7*. 35 12124 19.10 2811 4.3* 48136 1767) 79 26 • 688 17 9) 197$ 4.1394 54*93 -3.20 -1979 4*335 17. TO 95*3 13.9? 3 766 6.34 41493 328 1 3 79.09 61917 H .09 75C0 9-0395 *3134 2.77 1684 313*2 61.13 6091 9 58 1905 1 29 44622 367 31 82.32 481* 9 00 3871 8.9966 59173 -4.3* -2654 42247 71.39 13313 22.5C 3*15 6.11 4 95*2 35804 72.24 10959 21.91 2899 3.8597 54*51 -4.89 -3023 44323 73.65 11143 18.93 3185 5.41 44123 3442* 78 03 7347 16.75 ?M) 5.2299 54434 -4 .01 -3036 42703 72.39 13017 23.48 2310 3.93 4 73*1 35435 74.82 10131 21.34 1795 3.7999 *0014 -3 00 -1638 20037 33.42 38233 *3.74 1706 2.8* 42*11 13634 16.51 26021 SC 99 HOC 2.0090 5*934 -4.75 -2936 23840 40.45 33*11 57.1C 1445 2.45 42979 184 93 43.03 23661 54.90 1021 2 3991 39449 -3.92 -2423 41235 7 9.45 10338 17.39 1816 1.1* 44181 3 5584 80.54 7)03 19.37 1292 2 4292 3*009 -4.63 -2663 19891 3 3.71 3781* 61 09 1302 2 21 4 4154 15889 35.86 27749 4 2 . 2 9 417 2.0993 60309 -2.21 -1363 9*7 74 77.31 11053 16.27 2617 6.42 441(30 31010 79.24 7290 14.50 1080 4.2094 59150 -4.40 -2724 43461 76.86 11219 18.97 2410 4 . 19 44094 31099 79.*0 7791 16.54 1704 3 0693 5994* -J 08 -1893 23*73 39.48 313 Jl 58.92 963 1.61 433)1 18520 42. 73 24155 35.71 96? 1.3396 62816 1.52 942 11742 76.00 134 1 3 21.1! 1661 7 <4 4 4503 34146 76.13 928S 20.06 10 11 2 4197 63142 2-76 1706 51*51 81.24 10*2* 1* .72 1300 2.04 4 9817 41021 82.34 7912 15 99 494 1.9699 62442 0.95 596 46493 77.64 13254 21 -23 715 1 .14 47122 36781 78.06 912* 20.0* 511 1 C999 59871 -1 11 -2049 41803 69.88 17537 29.31 493 0.91 4 5880 3304 7 72 03 12485 27 21 340 0.76
1 0 0 59813 -4 - 95 -3061 31334 66.91 18953 37.2! 506 O S * 4 4*67 3)201 *9 81 13119 79.31 318 0 79
D t 6147338 4791739 7 7.11 11*2994 I t -HC 732625 3 .7* 46*2*20 3*93417 18 07 873290 11.58 195430 3.54
DURCC. U S . D FrA RTM W T OT CO f«1S*C B , DOPOW O f ? 8 E CENSUS P . L . 44 l ^ j DATA M'/f ?
T h u O ut: « 1 2 : 3 0 : 2 4 1 9 9 4 M STRICT POPULATION AMAL3S13 for H asVOTTNrt Riff; AND TOTAL t>Ot*7l,ATIO*l 87
TOTAL RELATIVE ABSOLUTEDISTRICT pomlattop 0CVIATI01I* DEVIATION
1 15(280 1 .03 159*
2 147583 -4.59 -7101J 151413 2.41 37294 159406 3.05 47325 148570 -3.93 “(1146 154738 0.03 547 154(57 -0.02 -278 157394 1.75 27109 147609 -4 57 -707510 15094* - 2 . *2 -37 3*11 152271 -1.56 -241112 151227 -2.23 -343713 147387 -4.59 -709714 154452 3.0* 47(815 13071( -2.57 -3968l« 148027 -4.30 - 6 6 3 ?1 7 152374 -1 49 -231018 1(12*6 4.27 6*0219 152157 -t (3 -25272C 154904 0 14 2 2 021 15*075 0 <70 1391
2 2 15(44? t .14 175821 150482 -2.72 - 4 2 0 224 15649< I . 1? 181525 15084! -2.4* -18 3924 157376 1.73 2692
2 7 1 3 7 * 2 5 1 <)0 294128 K07IC 3,90 <02*29 157203 1 .63 251930 155393 U.4( 709
U 155313 0 41 (2912 193380 1 74 269611 15(89* 1.41 221234 15(529 1.14 184535 154927 0.1* 24336 159091 2.85 4107T7 155749 3.(9 106538 151770 -1.88 -291439 155933 3.71 114740 159(23 3 .19 4939
otal (187358
WHITE % BLACK A OTHBR
12*146 82.01 2JJ4.0 14.91 474460093 40.72 82015 56.18 4575118704 74.43 35704 22.54 4005124917 78.36 32850 70.61 1*3952806 35.54 92752 62.16 3412113393 73.28 32755 21.17 839012*464 81.77 20052 12.97 9141131523 81.56 302*9 12.8* 380251380 31.81 9408? 61.34 2147133137 88.20 14952 9.91 283S12**42 84.48 20104 13.20 3525131613 87.03 14934 9.88 46*0106928 72.45 37647 25.51 301212685* 79.56 23336 14.64 92(097746 64.85 523 58 34.(1 91235825 37.71 89552 60. 50 2(50118512 77.78 32042 21.03 182063311 39.25 969*1 60.12 101411023? 72.45 41144 27 .04 781129295 83.47 24913 16.08 693129318 82.86 244(2 15.99 1795147998 94 . tO 7394 4.7 3 10301209>9 80.34 28735 18.7* 126*146459 93.5* 9121 5.83 914126424 87.81 21091 13 98 m e143297 91.05 1 202 3 7 (4 2036148700 94 OB 7*37 4.97 liesJ 2 900 3 80 32 2(45! 16 4* 5172173014 84 .61 15811 10.70 7372110769 71.0! 3 >« ic 19.07 15384118971 76.(0 15141 10.39 2133 01138901 88.26 32(1 3 . 36 HIM134809 85-92 122(9 7.83 9799130257 76.83 1037 3 6.(3 25899130953 84 5) 6515 4.71 17459115010 72.29 27578 17 3 3 16501136435 87 (0 *250 5.30 1-0(4148084 97 37 3000 1.98 (9614717* 94-45 5200 3.34 344715612* 9 7 94 271 J 1.10 382
4791771 77-44 11(2994 18.80 232625
SOOPC*i u s . P E P A T tM C N T or COMMENCE, 6 U RPAO O f THE CCH3US F.l 9 4-l?l CAtA
CHAPTER 4,1994 ACTS OF ASSEMBLY, SPECIAL SESSION II
SENATE DISTRICTS - ADJUSTMENTS
PLAN NO. S0882750 - EFFECTIVE 171/9527S41
VOTTtro4 AOP! TOP WHITE * BLACK * OTHER %
; . 74 116113 96783 83.35 16092 13-86 32 38 2 .791.13 107527 4645* 43.2C 57916 53.86 3155 2.933-53 119217 91721 76.52 24759 20.16 2151 2 . 3 1..03 119564 942 54 78 83 24124 20.18 1 186 0 . 9 9;.jo 108734 42619 39.21 *3590 58.40 2505 2.305.55 122178 93 706 75.0* 239*3 19.(1 6939 5.335.26 114103 95025 83 28 134 72 11.81 5606 4.913.36 114*93 97575 84 .85 13488 11.13 3930 3.421.45 1137(1 44*63 39.08 (7676 59.49 1622 1 .431.89 117841 104865 89.99 10928 9.27 2048 1.142.31 109139 93475 85.65 13417 12.24 2247 2 .06
3 .09 117*70 303211 87 .86 11074 9.43 3185 2.112 .04 109953 81939 ? 1 52 23873 23.53 2139 1.955.81 110558 89014 80.51 15642 14.21 3902 5.340.54 11435* 76390 66.68 3TS93 32.82 513 0.501 .79 109928 44435 40.42 (3589 37.85 3904 1.731.19 112(97 88125 18.20 23290 20.67 1282 1.1*0.63 117499 49 364 42.01 (7418 57.19 117 0. 610.51 116035 8(76? 14.78 28 ISO 2418 518 0.450.45 119516 201271 84.73 177*4 14 88 4(3 0.391.15 121729 102*99 84-61 17 5*7 14.43 117 3 0.960.67 123191 16714 94 - 74 5700 4.(3 777 0.630.84 115781 94895 81 .46 19951 11.23 935 0.810.59 120921 113395 43 . ?8 6874 3.68 (52 0.5*7.21 117141 99722 84.70 15 3*3 13.05 2(58 2.261 .31 119913 1045*4 91.34 *404 1.41 1425 1 . 190.94 11*018 112271 94.33 57 37 4.82 1010 0.853.22 11*253 94415 *1 24 18 JOB 15.74 3510 3.024 . 69 1097 77 91 774 05.42 109(1 9.19 50 39 4.59* 90 1108*2 *66(4 13.87 22432 11.16 11146 *.9813.31 111525 103254 7*.51 121 I I 9 11 15494 11.78(.38 121061 107947 09.17 38*2 3.14 9252 7.64(.25 1133*9 9*383 86.53 8306 7.44 <700 (.01If . 55 125930 99271 78.8 1 7723 4.13 18936 15.0411.2 7 111158 96516 85.35 4390 1 88 1219? 10.771C.37 122991 91051 74 03 20233 16.45 11701 9.527.10 131237 *81(0 BB .24 5581 4.95 7 5(( ( .80C. 45 11388? 111290 91 12 2197 l 93 400 0.352 21 124204 111250 94.40 4042 3.25 2912 2-3411.36 120(08 1182(9 98.0* 1949 1.62 390 0.32
3-76 4*62620 3693412 78.87 *23250 17 58 1*5958 3.34
IAUC 1
C H A P T E R 983 O F T H E 1993 A C T S O F A S S E M B L Y
C O N G R E S S I O N A L D I S T RI C TS - 1993 A D J U S T M E N T S
W e d M a r 1 0 0 7 : 2 3 : 5 1 1 9 9 3 D I S T R I C T P O P U L A T I O N A N A L Y S I S f o r P l a n C 0 8 3 0 4 5 2 P L A N N O . C0830452 E F F E C T I V E 7/1/93
V O T I N G A G E A N D T O T A L P O P U L A T I O N B Y R A C E
T O T A L R E L A T I V E A B S O L U T E V O T I N G
D I S T R I C T P O P U L A T I O N D E V I A T I O N % D E V I A T I O N W H I T E t B L A C K % O T H E R % A G E P O P W H I T E % B L A C K % O T H E R 3
1 5 6 2 7 5 7 0 . 0 5 2 7 0 4 5 2 3 7 8 8 0 . 3 9 9 9 2 0 8 1 7 . 6 3 1 1 1 7 1 1 . 9 9 4 2 0 2 1 8 3 4 2 4 6 6 8 1 . 5 0 6 9 9 6 1 1 6 . 6 5 7 7 9 1 1 . 8 5
2 5 6 2 2 7 6 - 0 . 0 4 - 2 1 1 4 3 9 2 8 2 7 8 . 1 3 9 3 4 5 4 1 6 . 6 2 2 9 5 4 0 5 . 2 5 4 1 9 2 3 1 3 3 3 5 2 7 7 9 . 5 6 6 4 9 4 5 1 5 . 4 9 2 0 7 5 9 4 . 9 5
3 5 6 2 3 5 1 - 0 . 0 2 - 1 3 6 1 8 8 2 3 0 3 3 . 4 7 3 6 1 9 9 4 6 4 . 3 7 1 2 1 2 7 2 . 1 6 4 1 2 9 1 7 1 5 0 0 2 8 3 6 . 3 3 2 5 4 3 4 5 6 1 . 6 0 8 5 4 4 2 . 0 7
4 5 6 2 4 6 6 0 . 0 0 - 2 1 3 7 2 2 6 3 6 6 . 1 8 1 8 0 4 7 9 3 2 . 0 9 9 7 2 4 1 . 7 3 4 1 5 0 0 2 2 8 1 1 4 1 6 7 . 7 4 1 2 7 2 4 3 3 0 . 6 6 6 6 1 8 1 . 5 9
5 5 6 2 2 6 8 - 0 . 0 4 - 2 1 9 4 1 8 1 7 1 7 4 . 3 7 1 3 9 3 4 4 2 4 . 7 8 4 7 5 3 0 . 8 5 4 3 3 1 9 2 3 3 0 4 0 2 7 6 . 2 7 9 9 1 7 0 2 2 . 8 9 3 6 2 0 0 . 8 4
6 5 6 2 5 7 2 0 . 0 2 8 5 4 9 2 5 9 4 8 7 . 5 6 6 4 6 4 3 1 1 . 4 9 5 3 3 5 0 . 9 5 4 3 7 9 2 0 3 8 7 7 1 3 8 8 . 5 4 4 6 5 0 1 1 0 . 6 2 3 7 0 6 0 . 8 5
7 5 6 2 6 4 3 0 . 0 3 1 5 6 4 9 4 0 4 7 8 7 . 8 1 5 6 2 8 3 1 0 . 0 0 1 2 3 1 3 2 . 1 9 4 2 4 8 8 2 3 7 6 7 3 6 8 8 . 6 7 3 9 7 6 0 9 . 3 6 8 3 8 6 1 . 9 7
8 5 6 2 4 8 4 0 . 0 0 - 3 4 2 7 3 0 8 7 5 . 9 7 7 5 1 2 8 1 3 . 3 6 6 0 0 4 8 1 0 . 6 8 4 5 3 5 3 3 3 5 2 5 9 2 7 7 . 7 4 5 6 5 6 1 1 2 . 4 7 4 4 3 8 0 9 . 7 9
9 5 6 2 3 8 0 - 0 . 0 2 - 1 0 7 5 4 3 1 0 3 9 6 . 5 7 1 3 9 4 8 2 . 4 8 5 3 2 9 0 . 9 5 4 3 3 9 7 0 4 1 9 2 8 6 9 6 . 6 2 1 0 4 8 3 2 . 4 2 4 2 0 1 0 . 9 7
1 0 5 6 2 6 6 4 0 . 0 3 1 7 7 5 1 0 2 9 6 9 0 . 6 9 3 2 4 7 6 5 . 7 7 1 9 8 9 2 3 . 5 4 4 1 1 8 2 2 3 7 5 2 1 4 9 1 . 1 1 2 2 9 3 0 5 . 5 7 1 3 6 7 8 3 . 3 2
1 1 5 6 2 4 9 7 0 . 0 0 1 0 4 5 4 0 6 7 8 0 . 7 2 4 6 0 3 7 8 . 1 8 6 2 3 9 3 1 1 . 0 9 4 1 9 9 3 3 3 4 4 3 0 7 8 1 . 9 9 3 1 3 5 1 7 . 4 7 4 4 2 7 5 1 0 . 5 4
Total 6 1 8 7 3 5 8 4 7 9 1 7 3 9 7 7 . 4 4 1 1 6 2 9 9 4 1 8 . 8 0 2 3 2 6 2 5 3 . 7 6 4 6 8 2 6 2 0 3 6 9 3 4 x 2 7 8 . 8 7 8 2 3 2 5 0 1 7 . 5 8 1 6 5 9 5 8 3 . 5 4
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S O U R C E : U . S . D E P A R T M E N T O F C O M M E R C E , B U R E A U O F ' J H E C E N S U S P . L . 9 4 - 1 7 1 D A T A PAGE 1
Virginia
1994
Vital Statistics
Annual Report
Center For Health Statistics
Virginia Department Of Health
Richmond, Virginia
December, 1995
Attendant at Birth. The percentage of resident births occurring in hospitals in 1994 was
99.4, as was true for 1993. In 1994, for white births, the percentage in hospitals was 99.3;
for black births, the percentage was 99.5, while it was 99.7 for births to other races. An
additional 164 births were attended by physicians out of the hospital. For white, black, and
other races births, the numbers attended by midwives or others were 382, 22, and 2.
Low Weight Births. During 1994, low weight births (weighed 2,500 grams or less at birth
regardless of gestation) accounted for 7,131, or 7.6 percent, of total live births. Blacks
exhibited a much higher percentage of low weight births, 12.6 percent, than whites (6.0
percent) and other races (6.9 percent).
PERCENT LOW WEIGHT OF RESIDENT BIRTHS BY RACE
VIRGINIA, 1990-1994
Low Weight Births Percent of Resident Births
Year Total White Black Other Total White Black Other
1990 72241 4,076 2,988 177 7.3 5.7 12.5 5.7
1991 7,098 3,973 2,957 168 7.3 5.7 12.5 5.3
1992 7.224 3,987 3,028 209 7.5 5.7 12.8 6.2
1993 6,957 3,826 2,8% 235 7.4 5.7 12.6 6.9
1994 7,131 4,106 2,780 245 7.6 6.0 12.6 6.9
NUMBER AND PERCENT OF BIRTHS ACCORDING TO
WEIGHT GROUP BY RACE, VIRGINIA, 1994
Total White Black Other
Birth Weight Number Percent Number Percent Number Percent Number Percent
Total 94,355 100.0 68,678 100.0 22,103 100.0 3374 100.0
Low Weight 7.131 7.6 4,106 6.0 2,780 12.6 245 6.9
< 501 grams 190 0.2 79 0.1 110 0.5 1 0.0
501-1500 grams 12256 1.3 660 1.0 567 2.6 29 0.8
1501-2500 grams 5,685 6.0 3,367 4.9 2,103 9.5 215 6.0
Full Weight 87,104 92.3 64,500 93.9 19,284 87.2 3320 92.9
2501-3500 grams 49371 52.3 33,846 49.3 13362 60.5 2,163 60.5
3501-4500 grams 36,119 38.3 29347 42.6 5,749 26.0 1,123 31.4
> 4500 grams 1,614 1.7 1,407 2.0 173 0.8 34 1.0
Unknown 120 0.1 72 0.1 39 0.2 9 0.3
The percentage of total births that were low weight was highest at birth order 7+. Birth order
7+ had the highest percentage of low weight deliveries for white and black mothers; for other
races mothers, the percentage was the highest for birth order 4. At all birth orders, the
reladve frequency of low weight births was significantly higher among black than among white
and other races mothers.
PERCENT LOW WEIGHT OF TOTAL BIRTHS BY BIRTH ORDER
BY RACE, VIRGINIA, 1994
Birth Order
Race Total 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 +
Total 7.6 7.9 6.4 7.3 10.4 12.6 11.0 15.4
White 6.0 6.5 5.1 5.7 7.7 8.8 5.5 10.3
Black 12.6 12.6 11.2 11.7 16.1 19.2 18.9 20.8
Other 6.9 8.2 5.0 6.4 10.2 7.3 7.1
1 6
Race. White infant deaths decreased from 447 in 1993 to 436 in 1994, while black infant
deaths decreased from 339 to 333 and other races infant deaths decreased from 24 to 9. The
1994 rates of infant deaths per 1,000 live births were 6.3, 15.1, and 2.5 for whites, blacks, and
other races, respectively.
RESIDENT INFANT DEATHS BY RACE
WITH RATES PER 1,000 LIVE BIRTHS
VIRGINIA, 1990-1994
Total White Black Other
Year Number Rate Number Rate Number Rate Number Rate
1990 1,005 10.2 532 7.4 461 19.3 12 3.9
1991 963 10.0 516 7.4 433 18.3 14 4.4
1992 903 9.3 482 6.9 407 17.2 14 4.1
1993 810 8.6 447 6.6 339 14.7 24 7.0
1994 778 8.2 436 6.3 333 15.1 9 2.5
Cause of Death. Among the 778 infant deaths for Virginia residents. 161, or 20.7 percent,
were attributed to congenital anomalies; 169, or 21.7 percent, to disorders relating to short
gestation and low birth weight; 26, or 3.3 percent, to respiratory distress syndrome; and 79,
or 10.2 percent, to sudden infant death syndrome. The remainder of the group of causes for
conditions originating in the perinatal period (ICD Codes 760-779) accounted for 201 infant
deaths, while certain gastrointestinal diseases, pneumonia and influenza, and all other causes
(including external causes) accounted for the remaining 142 deaths.
RESIDENT INFANT DEATHS BY CAUSE WITH RATES PER 100,000 LIVE BIRTHS
VIRGINIA AND UNITED STATES, 1994
United
Cause of Infant Death Vug inia States*
Number Rate Rate
Total Infant Deaths 778 824.5 791.7
Certain gastrointestinal diseases (008-009,
535, 555-558) 9 9.5 6.6
Pneumonia and influenza (480-487) 9 9.5 11.3
Congenital anomalies (740-759)
Disorders relating to short gestation and low
161 170.6 171.0
birth weight (765) 169 179.1 97.6
Birth trauma (767) 10 10.6 5.5
Intrauterine hypoxia and birth asphyxia (768) 12 12.7 13.9
Respiratory distress syndrome (769)
Other conditions originating in the perinatal
26 27.6 39.6
period (760-764,766,770-779) 179 189.7 194.5
Sudden infant death syndrome (7980) 79 83.7 105.4
All other causes 124 131.4 146.0
* Provisional
2 8
Age at Death. In 1994, there were 362 infants who failed to survive one day and 469 who
died within their first week of life. Infants who died before the age of 28 days (553)
accounted for 71.1 percent of the total infant deaths.
PERCENT OF TOTAL INFANT DEATHS IN EACH AGE GROUP BY RACE
VIRGINIA, 1994
Total Age at Death
Race Infant
Deaths
Under
1 day
1-6
days
Under
1 week
7-27
days
Under
28 days
1-5
Mos
6-11
Mos
Total 100.0 46.5 13.8 60.3 10.8 71,1 22.5 6.4
White 100.0 42.7 16.5 59.2 10.8 70.0 24.5 5.5
Black 100.0 51.7 9.9 61.6 11.1 72.7 19.5 7.8
Other 100.0 44.4 22 2 66.7 66.7 33.3
Data Tables. Detailed data for infant deaths are in Data Tables 34-38.
MATERNAL DEATHS:
In 1994, the deaths of six Virginia women were caused by maternal conditions, giving a rate
of 6.4 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births. Both the number and rate of maternal deaths
increased from the 1993 figure of 4 deaths, or 4.3 per 100,000 live births.
MATERNAL DEATHS BY CAUSE AND BY RACE
VIRGLNiA, 1994
Cause of Death Total White Black Other
Total (ICD 630-676) 6 2 4
Hypertension Complicating Pregnancy (642)
Other Complicauons of Labor and Delivery (669)
1
1 1
1
Obstetrical Pulmonary Embolism (673) 2 2
Unspecified Complicauons of Puerpcnum (674) 2 1 1
Data Tables. Data for maternal deaths are under ICD codes 630-676. They are found in
Data Tables 40-41 and 45-46.
2 9
Median Age at Death. For all Virginia residents, the median age at death was 74.7, higher
than the 1993 value of 74.4. The white median age at death increased from 75.7 to 76.1; the
black median age at death decreased from 70.1 in 1993 to 69.9 in 1994, and the statistic
decreased from 66.2 to 65.3 for other races. The median age for Virginia males increased
from 71.1 in 1993 to 71.3 in 1994; for Virginia females it increased from 78.5 to 78.7.
MEDIAN AGE AT DEATH BY RACE BY SEX
_________ VIRGINIA, 1993 AND 1994_______ _____________
Total White Black Other
Sex 1993 1994 1993 1994 1993 1994 1993 1994
Total 74.4 74.7 75.7 76.1 70.1 69.9 66.2 65.3
Male 71.1 71.3 72.3 72.4 67,0 66.9 65.2 64.9
Female 78.5 78.7 79.7 80.0 73.8 73.4 68.3 66.0
('ban H below shows the cumulative percentages of deaths by selected age groups for the
period 1964-1994. The percentages of total deaths accounted for by the younger age groups
-how a distinctly downward trend.
Chart H
P E R C E N T O F R E S I D E N T D E A T H S B Y A G E G R O U P
V I R G I N I A , 1 6 6 4 - 1 9 9 4
CUMULATIVE PE R C E N T CUMULATIVE P E R C E N T
U N D E R 16
1 8 7 9
YEAR
Month of Death. January had the greatest frequency of deaths (5,224), and the largest daily
average (169). The lowest number of deaths occurred in June (3,957), with the second lowest
daily "average (132). July with 4,019 deaths had the lowest daily average of 130.
31
Firearms and explosives were the implements used in 406, or 72.2 percent, of the homicides
in 1994. Assault by cutting and piercing instruments, with 61, was the second most frequently
used method. Eight deaths were the result of injuries inflicted through legal intervention.
RESIDENT HOMICIDE DEATHS BY RACE BY METHOD
VIRGINIA, 1994
Method Total White Black Other
Total (E960-E978) 562 221 336 5
Assault by:
Firearms and Explosives (E965) 406 132 271 3
Cutting and Piercing Instruments (E966) 61 33 27 1
Hanging and Strangulation (E963) 24 17 7
Submersion (Drowning) (E964) 5 3 2
Fight Brawl, Rape (E960) 1 1
Corrosive or Caustic Substance
and Poisoning (E961-E962) 1 1
Other and Unspecified Means (E968) 50 23 26 1
Injury Due to Legal Intervention (E970-E978) 8 6 2
Child Battering and Other Maltreatment (E967) 4 3 1
Late Effects of Injury Purposely Inflicted (E969) 2 2
Numbers in parentheses are from Iniemauonal Classificauon of Diseases, 9th Revision.
Data Tables. Detailed data for resident deaths are given in Data Tables 39-46. Table 45
gives deaths by cause of death by race by occurrence in Virginia as well as residence in
Virginia. Table 46 gives deaths by cause of death by race for all cities, counties, and
planning districts in the State.
RESIDENT DEATH RATES PER 1,000 POPULATION
BY PLANNING DISTRICTS
VIRGINIA, 1994
4.5 to 6.9
3 8
ent by: ACLU 80^6448090 04/12/96 4:33PM Job 13 Page 7
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA
RICHMOND DIVISION f i___L _ F
VIOLA W. TAYLOR, et al.,
Plaintiffs,
v .
CAMERON L. FORRESTER, et al.
Defendants.
> 3 ! MAY I T '990
! I______
) J r - ' - ' -) Civil Action
) No. 89-00777-R
)
)
)
INTERIM CONSENT DECREE
This proceeding involves a claim that the current method
of electing the three members of the Board of Supervisors of
Lancaster County, Virginia violates Section 2 of the Voting Rights
Act of 1965, 42 U.S.C. § 1973, the First, Thirteenth, Fourteenth,
and Fifteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States,
and 42 U.S.C. § 1983 .
The defendants have stipulated that the use of the
County's current single-member districts, with boundaries as
designated by County ordinance adopted in 1981, has the effect of
violating Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act.
This action is now before the Court on (a) the
defendants' Offer of Judgment pursuant to Rule 68 of the Federal
Rules of Civil Procedure, which offer has been accepted by the
plaintiffs, and <b) the defendants' Motion To Deny Request For
Special Election And To Request That Redistricting Occur After The
1990 Census. Based upon the consent of the parties as evidenced
by the Offer of Judgment and the acceptance thereof, ar.d based
Sent by: ACLu 80464A808C Page 8/1604/12/96 4:34PM Job 13
upon the inherent equitable powers of this Court, it is hereby
ORDERED as follows:
1. The Court hereby finds that the use of the current
single-member election districts, having boundaries as designated
by County ordinance adopted in 1981, has the effect of diluting
the vexing strength cf the County's black voters in violation of
Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, 42 U.S.C. § 1973.
Accordingly, judgment is hereby entered in favor of the plaintiffs
as to the first cause of action asserted in their complaint.
2. As an interim remedy, the defendant Board of
Supervisors shall expand its membership from three to five members
in the following manner:
(a) The Board shall create a two-member County
wide election district tc be in effect from July 10,
1990 until a 1991 decennial redistricting plan is
adopted and implemented;
(b) Pursuant to Virginia Cede § 24.1-76.1, the
Board shall appoint two black residents of the Ccur.ty to
fill the vacancies on the Board from the County-wide
election district:. Such individuals shall be, in the
opinion of the Board, representative of the interests of
the County as a whole and especially of the interests of
black residents of the County;
(c) The plaintiffs may submit to the Beard the
names of two County residents whom the plaintiffs desire
the Board to consider as appointees to such vacant
positions; and
2
Sent by: AClL 8046448080 04/12/96 4:35PM Job 13 Page 9 H 6
(d) The terras cf the appointed members cf the
Board shall expire at the same time as the terms of the
current .incumbent members of the Board,
3. The defendant Board of Supervisors shall also
expand from seven to nine the membership of the Committee for
Redistricting Lancaster County, which is an advisory body created
by the Board of Supervisors in 1988 to recommend a redistricting
plan for the County, The plaintiffs may select the two additional
members of the Committee.
4. It further appearing to the Court that there is
insufficient time prior to July 10, 1990 for the Board of
Supervisors to aaopt an ordinance expanding its membership from
three to five and to have the ordinance precleared by the United
States Justice Department under Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act
of 1965, it is further ORDERED that it shall not be necessary for
Lancaster County to obtain preclearance of these interim remedial
arrangements under Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act.
5. The Court finds that the granting of this interim
relief renders moot the defendants' Motion To Deny Request For
Special Election And To Request Thar Redistricting Occur After The
1990 Census, and accordingly that motion need not be considered.
6- This action shall not be dismissed and the Court
hereby retains jurisdiction to ensure, if necessary, that the 1991
redistricting plan adopted by Lancaster County provides the
plaintiffs with an appropriate remedy for the violation of Section
2 cf the Voting Rights Act, All rights of the parties with regard
3
sent by: ACLb 80464^8080 0 4 / ' 2 ' 9 6 4:35PM Job 13 Page 10/16
to the ISSl redistricting process shall be preserved and are net
changed by this consent decree.
7. The plaintiffs may apply to the Court, pursuant to
42 U.S.C. § 19731(e), for an award of costs incurred through May
4, 1990, including a reasonable attorney's fee, and the defendants
may file any objections to the requested award within eleven days
after service of the application.
The Clerk is directed to send copies of this decree to
all counsel cf record.
United States District Judge
Date: ! -? a ( ri <j o
Agreed and Consented to:
Coynsel for Plaintiffs
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PUBLIC HEARING IN RE:
CONGRESSIONAL REDISTRICTING IN VIRGINIA
SENATE AND HOUSE COMMITTEES
ON PRIVILEGES AND ELECTIONS
General Assembly Building
House Room D
Richmond, Virginia
October 11, 1991
10:00 a.m.
CAPITOL REPORTING, INC.
P.O. Box 959
Mechan l csvi 11 e , Virginia 23111
Tel. No. (804) 788-4917
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those witnesses, we will hear a brief
presentation from our staff counsel, Mary -- Mary
Spain on some of the, just t o refresh the J o i n t
Committee's recollections as to some of the legal
parameters we must take into account as we move
toward the adoption of legislation to redistrict
Virginia's congressional district.
Ms . Spain.
MS. SPAIN: I'll be brief. Just to
highlight some of the differences between the
congressional redistricting scene and the state
legislative redistricting process that you have
just completed, of course the first is that we
have gained a congressional seat. You are adding
a district because of Virginia's population
growth, so we'll be dealing with 11 congressional
seats, an ideal population of 562,487, not as
substantial a difference from our prior ideal as
it would be if we hadn't gained that seat.
The first major difference between
congressional and state legislative- redistricting
is the variation that's allowed by the courts in
reviewing plans, and under the 1983 Karcher
decision, the Supreme Court invalidated and
upheld the invalidation of a New Jersey
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congressional plan with the deviation of .6984
percent or 3,674 people.
The court in its opinion compared that
to alternatives of a .49 range and its own
redrawing or adjustments of the lines that would
have allowed a reduction by one tenth of a
percent in that population deviation.
The end result is that most states view
congressional redistricting as requiring a very
low deviation, and I thought you might be
interested in our deviation in 1981 was 1.81
percent, lower than the state legislative plans
then, but other states as they have drawn
congressional districts for the eleven states
that have completed district plans, six have
drawn plans with zero deviation. That's a
deviation of one or two people that does not
report on a printout on the plan.
Iowa has .05 percent, five 100ths of a
percent deviation. Nebraska seventeen 100ths
percent deviation. Arkansas .73 percent
deviation, and that plan is being challenged in
court now on both Voting Rights Act issues and on
the deviation. And we have Missouri with .198
percent, Georgia with 1.85 percent.
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Several of those plans are at the
Justice Department now, but the majority of the
states that have completed plans have been at the
zero deviation level.
This is possible because of the computer
technology, the breakdown of census data into
small units at the block level, and the court did
not rule out that there could not be a
justification for a variation, but the burden is
f
heavy to show that your variations justify by a
rational consistently applied state policy.
The effect of this type of deviation
requirement or absolute quality requirement will
push towards more split localities. I think as
we look through the plans we will probably not
find many districts consisting of all whole
localities, and in 1981 four of the districts
were comprised of entire localities.
The Voting Rights Act is as applicable
to congressional redistricting as it was to the
state legislative redistricting. You will have
before you today proposals for majority black
congressional districts. The size of the
majority will be a matter for your consideration
and deliberation in creating the 17 black
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for the sake of political gain or favorable
voting patterns.
These challenges propose a tall order to
you. I hope you will take my comments as they
were intended, as an expression of support for
your undertaking, a plea for fairness of the
citizens of Virginia, and a challenge to rise
above partisan needs to provide representative
government for all of us.
Yours is a difficult burden and an
important undertaking, and I thank you for
hearing from me this morning and appreciate this
opportunity to testify.
MR. GARTLAN: Thank you very much,
Congressman, for traveling the long distance
which I traveled as well this morning. Glad to
have you here and hear your views.
Any questions of Congressman Wolf?
Thank you, sir.
MR. WOLF: Thank you.
MR. GARTLAN: The next witness is the
Honorable Thomas J. Bliley, Jr. member of
Congress from the Third District, Richmond.
MR. BLILEY: Good morning, Ladies and
Gentlemen. It's a pleasure to be here and to
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have a chance to speak to you this morning.
I have no prepared remarks. I don't
envy you your job. You have the Supreme Court's
decision of one man one vote, that you can't have
but a very miniscule deviation between your
largest population and your smallest population
of the districts.
And you have now the Voting Rights Act
which of course was changed in 1982 from
plaintiffs having to show intention to merely
having to show the effects, and within those
parameters you are going to have to do your work.
We are more fortunate than most states
in that because of the growth we gained a seat,
which helps.
I would only ask that in your
deliberations as you meet those parameters that
you try to keep the districts as contiguous and
compact as you possibly can. More than that I
don't think anybody can ask, and if anybody has a
question, I'll be happy to try to answer it.
MR. GARTLAN: Does anyone have any
questions of Congressman Bliley?
Thank you very much, sir.
MR. BLILEY: You are sure welcome.
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copies of a plan which I have developed and I
believe you all may have some copies of a map
that I had drawn up, and there are some copies
available I believe.
MR. GARTLAN: Is that the one attached
to this document?
MR. RAWLINGS: That's the one attached
to the copy. I don't have enough copies for
everybody but I think there are enough maps for
everybody.
MS. SPAIN: Is this the same?
MR. RAWLINGS: Yes.
MS. SPAIN: So we have extra copies.
MR. RAWLINGS: Let me start off by
laying a little, I don't know whether you want to
call it ground rules or letting you know where I
come from, unless some of you may not know. I
can't believe there are that many of you who have
not realized I am a Democrat. I come before you
as a Democrat, and so many of the things I say
are sort of tempered by the fact, that fact.
And I have been a Democrat for a long
time. I cast my first vote, believe it or not,
for Franklin D. Roosevelt, and I have been voting
Democratic ever since. I have never voted for a
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Republican in my life, so I guess I'm considered
prejudiced.
But the main thing that brings me here
is because, in addition to being Chairman of the
8th Congressional Democratic Committee, I have
served in this state in various capacities. I
have served six years in the General Assembly and
the House of Delegates. I have been a nominee
for Congress and for the United States Senate, I
have served on the Democratic National Committee
for eight years, and I am here as Chairman of the
8th District Democratic Committee.
And I have traveled all over this state
in my times as a politician and a candidate, and
I think I know most of t h e areas of the state
reasonably well, although as time goes by they
change, and it's been some time since I have been
to many areas of the state.
But I feel that this congressional
redistricting is most important to the state, and
that's why I have taken an interest and tried to
develop a plan.
I'm not a computer operator, I don't
have access to a computer, and I just used my pen
and pencil and adding machine to come up with the
32
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figures that I have.
But I wanted to say this and with all
respect to my Republican friends, I think that a
congressional redistricting plan should be fair
to all as possible. Naturally I would like to
see the interests of Democrats protected as best
can be done, and I have heard those persons who
have been speaking up to now, but it's nothing
new to have strange congressional districts.
It's something new that we have now that we have
computers to divide up counties and cities like
we have been doing.
But when I ran for Congress, my 8th
District that I was running in started on the
Potomac in Loudoun County, took in Fauquier
County, Louisa County, Caroline, a third of
Fairfax, all of Prince William, all the Northern
Neck, and all the way down Hanover County,
Goochland County, and all the way down to include
Charles City County on the James River, and that
was some district, but it was represented for ten
years by a congressman, and it wasn't the best
district in the world, but that was the district.
I also remember that I voted in Hanover
when I lived there when Hanover was part of the
CAPITOL REPORTING, INC.
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Scott's district is where that is. It would be
like eastern Newport News and maybe like
southeastern part of Hampton also, and also is
the western part of Norfolk.
MR . JOANNOU: Okay. And you have the
western part of Norfolk in here also?
MR . MOORE: That's right. If you like,
I can read off the whole list.
MR. JOANNOU: Mr. Chairman, further
question.
So you have got the Naval Base, the
Newport News Shipyard, and the Portsmouth
Shipyard is going to be represented by one
Congressman, is that what you have done? That's
what you are advocating?
MR . MOORE: I'm not sure about that.
The lines, I haven't really drawn. What you have
got to do is to pick where you are going to draw
the lines and pass them through which, you know,
areas of the county and pick them up.
MR . JOANNOU: I don't know. I'm asking
is that what you have done?
MR . MOORE: I'm not sure that's what I
have done, no, sir.
MR. GARTLAN: Further questions?
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I will say it's not that critical, but
just like the previous, the reason we put that in
there is we noted the fact that there's a large
minority grouping in Northampton County but it
wouldn't change the district that much if you
wanted not to include that. We are simply
showing you a way to do that, but that's the only
reason, you know, that that was done was to
recognize the fact that there is a way to
equitably accomplish, you know, a minority based
district.
MR. GARTLAN: All right, further
questions? All right, sir, thank you. Oh, I'm
sorry, were you concluded, Mr. Moore?
MR. MOORE: Yes, ir.
MR. GARTLAN: All right, thank you.
MR. MOORE: Thank you.
MR. GARTLAN: The next speaker on our
list is Grace Keen of Smithfield.
MS. KEEN: Good morning. Mr. Chairman
and Members of the Committee, my name is Grace J.
Keen. I come here today with my husband, Carol,
from our home in Isle of Wight County. I'm the
mother of four children and the grandmother of
three.
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1 Mr. Chairman, I'm also a Virginia
citizen who has been involved in a number of
community activities. I'm president of the Isle
of Wight Citizens Association, past president of
the Isle of Wight Commission on Aging, and
present active appointed member, and a member of
the Southeastern Virginia Area Model Program
Board of Directors for the past twelve years. I
also serve on several other community advisory
boards and committees.
Of course I'm not expert on
redistricting like those of you on this
committee. But as someone who has been active in
my community for many years, I think I know a
little something about what works in general. So
I'm grateful to the committee for giving me this
opportunity to share some of my thoughts on the
redistricting effort.
I'm very proud of Isle of Wight County
and the people who call it their home. We have
had our ups and downs like other places, but we
always seem to pull together when it counts.
It's a special place for many reasons. It's a
beautiful place, but I think its diversity of
people and industry makes it a particularly
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wonderful place to live, a lot like the 4th
District as a whole.
4 8
In Isle of Wight we have a combination
of rural and urban areas linked b y growing
suburbs. We have farmers, defense contractors,
and federal workers. That description could just
as easily be applied to the entire 4th District.
The economy of the 4th District as with
Isle of Wight relies heavily on farming and the
military. And as you know, in the 4th District
there are military facilities in Fort Lee and
Petersburg and Fort Pickett in Blackstone.
There also is the Norfolk Naval Shipyard
in Portsmouth, and not too far away you'll find
the Norfolk Naval Base and the Newport News Ship
Building.
We are fortunate in the 4th District to
have a seasoned Congressman, Norman Sisisky, who
has worked very hard to keep these facilities
thriving even as military spending has been
shrinking. He has been effective in balancing
the national interests with our local interests.
As a member of Congress he has sought
positions on important committees in order to
enable him to better represent us, his
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constituents here in home.
For instance, Congressman Sisisky is a
member of the House Armed Services Committee and
is the only member of Congress to serve on four
of that committee's subcommittees.
He also is chairman of the House Small
Business Subcommittee on Exports, Tax Policies,
and Special Problems, and in addition he serves
on the House Select Committee on Aging.
Obviously we are very impressed with
Norman Sisisky, but the point I'm really making
here today is I like the 4th Congressional
District as it exists today. Why? Because it
works.
I believe Congressman Sisisky has
represented this diverse district well with his
blend of old and young, employers, laborers,
farmers, teachers, men, women, blacks and whites.
His three constituent service offices in Emporia,
Petersburg, and Portsmouth is just one way he's
reached out to all segments of the district.
He also conducts mobile office hours to
serve our other localities. The citizens of the
4th District, despite professional and cultural
differences, share common goals and values. Vie
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all want solutions to the problems facing our
communities and we all want our representatives
to be responsive to our concerns. I believe we
have that today, and I would like for it to
remain that way as much as possible.
I again thank you for allowing me this
time to add my voice to the course of comments
I'm sure you'll receive during this redistricting
process. I know you have an important job to do
and I know you will do it well.
Thank you.
MR. GARTLAN: Thank you so much, Ms.
Keen. Are there questions of Ms. Keen? Senator
Holland I'm sure has a gracious comment.
MR. HOLLAND: Mr. Chairman, I don't have
any questions to ask. I concur with the comments
she made, and on behalf of this committee we are
happy to have you with us.
MS. KEEN: Thank you, Senator Holland.
MR. JOANNOU: Mr. Chairman, I'd also
like to echo his remarks since she is now my
constituent.
MR. GARTLAN: Anyone else in the
immediate area who is represented by Mrs. Keen?
All right, next witness is Mr. Kent
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Willis, American Civil Liberties Union.
You have on your desks, ladies and
gentlemen, a map of a proposal and a statistical
report proposed by the ACLU in this document in
case you haven’t picked it up.
Mr. Willis, we are pleased to hear you.
MR. WILLIS: Good morning, I'm Kent
Willis, the Director of the American Civil
Liberties Union of Virginia.
Earlier today I distributed a copy of a
black majority congressional district drawn by
our office. As in the past, we are only
proposing the one single district, the black
majority district. We feel like what happens in
the rest of the state is really your job, and all
we did was test this to make sure that in drawing
this district we didn't land lock some area or
make it impossible to draw other districts
meeting the one person, one vote concept.
I'd like to briefly go through this
plan. It contains a 62 -- 66.2 percent black
population of 63.1 percent voting age population.
It contains all of the jurisdiction of
Petersburg, Charles City and Surry, and part of
13 jurisdictions. They are Sussex, Prince
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George, Chesterfield, Henrico, Hopewell,
Richmond, Isle of Wight, Suffolk, Newport News,
Chesapeake, Portsmouth, Norfolk, and Hampton.
The deviation is essentially zero. We
came within 12 of the ideal number of 562,487 by
reaching the number of 562,475. I understand
from Mary Spain that our numbers differ by three
with the state's number because of three people
that live in Prince George somehwere that somehow
we didn't account for, so we are actually within
nine of the exact ideal deviation.
We have built this at the precinct
level. We made a decision to try to do it that
way without going down to the block level simply
because it's a simple, logical, rational building
block. However, if someone wanted to build a
stronger district by going to the tract or block
level, that would certainly be possible.
The overall configurations in many ways
should not be new to many of you here who have
recently gone through the re districting process
for the State General Assembly.
The western most portions of the
district in Richmond and Petersburg and Hopewell
have essentially the same contours as the
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believe it runs south of that but I'm not
absolutely sure, and I believe that both Newport
News and Portsmouth are in the district.
MR. JOANNOU: So it would be your
recommendation that Virginia loses its influence
of three Congressmen representing those defense
facilities in exchange for one, is that what your
recommendation is?
MR. WILLIS: Our goal in drawing this
map was to comply with the Voting Rights Act in
the best way we knew how. We drew it basically
in the abstract, and that is avoiding issues of
incumbency and avoiding issues such as those you
just mentioned.
One of the good things about this map is
that 66 percent black, it can withstand a little,
an adjustment here and there, and still be a
black majority district.
Someone who's in it and doesn't want to
be in it might want to move out. Someone who's
not in it might move in. The precinct can be
moved here and there and you are still looking at
a substantial black majority district. These are
questions I put to you.
MR. JOANNOU: My question to you is you
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HR. GARTLAN.- Questions of Senator
Scott? Mr. Quillen.
HR. QUILLEN: If I nad to make a
judgment today, I'm more cautious if I have a 60
or 60 plus minority, I mean majority seat, black
majority seat, because I think historically in
Virginia has never elected a black Congressman,
and I think there's threshold, you know, we have
elected black legislators and senators, so forth,
but we don't have historical perspective.
I think if you would err, I would err on
that caution to try to make sure the seat we do
create would meet muster instead of trying to
divide them so thin that they don't, and I just
bring that viewpoint out because I think we are
down to these two issues seem to be something
that trouble the committee as well as the
different groups that are interested in this, and
I would just, my viewpoint would be that way
would be my viewpoint.
MR WATKINS: Mr. Chai rman?
MR GARTLAN: Mr. Watkins.
MR WATKINS: Just for clarification
purposes, you used that 55, 45 number, are you
talking about voting age population or pure
CAPITOL REPORTING, INC.
A W I N G t h e L I N E
9 9 0 P o p u l a t i o n
District Total Black
1st
Counties:
Accomack 31,703 10,933
Ca/oSne 19,217 7,244
Charles City 6,282 3,969
Essex 8,689 3.270
Gloucester 30,131 3,354
James City 34,859 6.460
King & Queen 6,289 2,633
King George 13,527 2,734
King William 10.913 3,310
Lancaster 10,896 3,289
Mathews 8,348 1,175
Middlesex 8,653 2,131
New Ken! 10,445 2,151
Northampicn 13,061 6.035
Northumberland 10,524 3,098
Richmond 7,273 2.194
Westmoreiand 15,480 5,104
York 42,422 6613
Cities:
Hampton 133.793 51,981
Newport News 170,045 57,077
Poguoson 11,005 84
William scurg 11 530 1 7^4
615.C85 186.598
Deviation v 9 35%
5woc 3 0 34%
2 n d
Cities:
Norfolk 26J.229 rC7,912
V irg in ia Beach L53.K9 67’
654,293 186 653
Deviation■ * 16 32*0
Black: 23.95%
3rd
Cities:
~erfcc 217 881 43,827
-r.'rS-.c'T r-d 201.124 24,365
1C ! ]
P c.n me no ??? Cc5 1 <2 <22
622,061 180.314
Devtaiicn - 10 59%
ciacK 23 99%
o n g r e s s i o n a l [ D i s t r i c t s
IDEAL DISTRICT;-11 SEA TS'- 56 Z ,W |
District Total Black District Total Black
d t h 5 t h
Counties: Counties:
Amelia 8.787 2.822 Appomattox 12,298 2,816
Brunswck 15,987 9,349 Bedford 45,656 3,612
Chesierfietd (part) 8,150 2,831 Buckingham 12,873 5,259
Dinwiddie 20,960 7,471 Campbell 47,572 6,876
Greensville 8,853 4,916 Carroll 26.594 109
Isle o( Wight 25,053 7,925 Charlotte 11,688 4,263
Nottoway 14,993 6,155 Cumberland 7,825 3,027
Powhatan 15,328 3,290 Fluvanna 12.429 2,846
Prince George 27,394 7,972 Franklin 39.549 4,231
Southampton 17,550 7,868 Halifax 29.033 11,393
Surry 6,145 3,411 Henry 56,942 13,155
Sussex 10,248 5,955 Lunenburg 11,419 4,292
Mecklenburg 29.241 11,226Cities: Nelson 12.778 2,406
Chesapeake 151,976 41,662 Patnck 17,473 1,263
Colonial Heights 16,064 129 Pittsylvania 55,655 14,919
Emporia 5,306 2,420 Prince Edward ■ 17,320 6,265
Frankiin 7.864 4,199
Hoceweil 23.101 5,910 Cities.
Petersburg 38.385 27,688 Bedford City 6,073 1,338
Portsmouth 103,907 49,180 Danville 53,056 19.431
Suffolk 5? 14 1 ?3 245 Martinsville 16.162 5,954
South Boston 6,997 2.569
578,193 224,398 Lynchburg (part) 15 '18
Deviation :♦ 2.79% 543,751 129,748
Black, 38,81%
Deviation: • 3 33%
1
Black- 23.86%
|
January l 99 I / Pace 3 DRAWING the LINE
Present Virginia Congressional Districts
1 1990 Populat ion , con t i nued
6 t h __
Counties:
Alleghany
Amhersi
Augusta
Bath
Bctetoun
Highland
Roancxe
Rockbridge
Rockingham
Cities:
Buena Vista
Clilton Forge
Covington
Hamsonourg
Lexington
Lynchburg (pan)
Roanoke City
Salem
Staunton
Waynestocro
7th Qth
Counties:
W 11 1
Counties:
13,176 329 Abemarle 68,040 6,824 Bland 6,514 230
28,578 5,758 Clarke 12,101 1,054 Buchanan 31,333 63
54,677 2,006 Culpeper 27,791 4,783 Craig 4,372 8
4,799 251 Fauquier 48,741 5,462 Dickenson 17,620 68
24.992 1,121 Frederick 45,723 832 Floyd 12,005 292
2,635 3 Goochland 14,163 4,210 Giles 16,366 284
79.332 2,021 Greene 10,297 564 Grayson 16,278 486
18,350 574 Hanover 63,306 6,405 Lee 24.496 91
57,432 869 Louisa 20,325 5,233 Montgomery 73.913 2.841
Madison 11,949 1,697 Puiaskj 34,496 2,004
Orange 21,421 3,079 Russell 28,667 315
6,405 232 Page 21,690 442 Scon 23.204 143
4,679 695 Prince William 45,343 3,974 Smyth 32,370 660
6,991 969 (part) Tazewell 45,960 1,196
30,707 2,018 Rappahannock 6,622 491 Washington 45.887 682
6,959 811 Shenandoah 31,636 359 Wise 39,573 713
50,931 14,947 Spotsylvania 57,403 6,178 Wylhe 25,466 880
96,397 23,395 Stafiord (pari) 24,692 1,233 Cities:23,756 1,065 Warren 26,142 1,292
24,461 3,081 Cities: Bristol 18,426 1,063
18.549 1 749 Galax 5,670 387
Charlottesville 40,341 8,561 Norton 4,247 269
553.857 61,944 Fredericksburg 19,027 4,115 Radford -LL212
Manassas 27,957 2,889
Dev-soon - 1 53% Manassas Park 6,734 490 523,803 13,632
Elack: 11.18% Winchester 21.947 2.199
673,296 72,466 Deviation: • 6.68%
Black: 2.60%
Deviation * 19.72%
Black: 10.76%
8 t h
Counties:
Pnnce William 170.333 21,104
(part)
Staftora (part) 36,544 3,071
Fairfax (part)
Cities:
^28,647 40,227
Alexanona 111 183 2 ± m
746.712 83,741
Deviation - 32.75%
Black. 11 83%
1 n t h
Counties:
Arlington 170,936 17,940
Loudoun 86,129 6,168
Fairlax (pan) 359,937 23,058
Cities:
Fairfax City 19,622 566
Falls Church 29g.
676,202 48.470
Deviation * 20 22%
Black 7 177.
T h u O c t 1 0 1 7 : 1 9 : 3 9 1 9 9 1 P L A N C 0 5 6 4 7 5 0
/ ) C _ L U P u A ^
p r z t J i ^ / 0/ / 0 / 9 /
D I S T R I C T P O P U L A T I O N B R E A K D O W N B Y L O C A L I T Y
( V O T I N G A G E A N D T O T A L P O P U L A T I O N B Y R A C E )
D I S T R I C T 1
L O C A L I T Y P R E C I N C T C E N S U S T O T A L V O T I N G
N A M E N A M E B L O C K P O P U L A T I O N W H I T E % B L A C K % O T H E R % A G E P O P W H I T E * 5 B L A C K A O T H E R A
S u r r y A L L A L L 6 1 4 5 2 7 2 2 4 4 . 3 0 3 - 1 1 1 5 5 . 5 1 1 2 0 . 2 0 4 5 2 4 2 1 2 9 4 7 . 0 6 2 3 9 6 5 2 . 7 4 9 0 . 2 0
C h a r l e s C i t y A L L A L L 6 2 8 2 1 8 0 0 2 8 . 6 5 3 9 6 9 6 3 . 1 8 5 1 3 8 . 1 7 4 7 7 5 1 4 1 4 2 9 . 6 1 2 9 6 0 6 1 . 9 9 4 0 1 S . 4 0
P e t e r s b u r g A L L A L L 3 8 3 8 6 1 0 1 9 4 2 6 . 5 6 2 7 6 8 8 7 2 . 1 3 5 0 4 1 . 3 1 2 9 3 9 2 8 9 4 1 3 0 . 4 2 2 0 0 6 4 6 8 . 2 6 3 8 7 1 . 3 2
S u s s e x P A R T 3 8 6 7 1 7 3 1 4 4 . 7 6 2 1 1 4 5 4 . 6 7 n n 0 . 5 7 2 8 3 7 1 3 5 5 4 7 . 7 6 1 4 6 6 5 1 . 6 7 1 6 0 . 5 6
F r i n c e G e o r g e P A R T 2 1 0 5 4 1 3 7 3 2 6 5 . 2 2 6 3 0 5 2 9 . 9 5 1 0 1 7 4 . 8 3 1 5 3 6 2 1 0 2 0 6 6 6 . 4 4 4 4 7 2 2 9 . 1 1 6 8 4 4 . 4 5
C h e s t e r f i e l d P A R T 1 0 9 3 0 5 0 9 4 4 6 . 6 1 5 7 3 4 5 2 . 4 6 1 0 2 0 . 9 3 8 3 5 2 3 8 1 1 4 5 . 6 3 4 4 7 4 5 3 . 5 7 6 7 0 . 3 0
11 e n r i c o P A R T 3 8 5 1 7 1 4 8 2 8 3 8 . 5 0 2 3 2 3 5 6 0 . 3 2 4 5 4 1 . 1 8 2 9 3 7 0 1 1 9 0 3 4 1 . 9 6 1 6 1 3 9 5 6 . 8 9 3 2 8 1 . 1 6
H o p e w e l l P A R T 8 9 7 2 4 6 3 4 5 1 . 6 5 4 1 4 4 4 6 . 1 9 1 9 4 2 . 1 6 6 3 9 1 3 5 4 3 5 5 . 4 4 2 7 2 2 4 2 . 5 9 1 :5 1 P I
F i c h m o n d C i t y P A R T 1 3 9 9 4 3 3 3 1 5 5 2 3 . 6 9 1 0 4 9 2 3 7 4 . 9 8 1 8 6 5 1 . 3 3 1 0 5 4 2 4 2 9 2 4 9 2 7 . 7 4 7 4 7 6 3 7 0 . 9 2 1 4 1 2 1 . 3 4
1 3 l e o f W i g h t P A P T 1 6 4 2 4 1 0 5 7 9 6 4 . 4 1 5 7 4 7 3 4 . 9 9 9 8 0 . 6 0 1 2 1 6 2 7 9 5 6 6 5 . 4 2 4 1 4 0 3 4 . 0 4 6 6 0 . 5 4
S u f f o l k P A R T 7 1 7 9 4 6 9 6 6 5 . 4 1 2 3 5 5 3 2 . 8 0 1 2 8 1 . 7 8 5 1 6 7 3 4 9 4 6 7 . 6 2 1 5 8 8 3 0 . 7 3 8 5 1 . 6 5
N e w p o r t N e w s P A R T 3 6 9 5 6 6 8 1 5 1 8 . 4 4 2 9 8 2 2 8 0 . 7 0 3 1 9 0 . 8 6 2 6 0 2 3 5 5 7 6 2 1 . 4 3 2 0 2 3 6 7 7 . 7 6 2 1 1 0 . 8 1
C h e s a p e a k e P A R T 2 9 6 6 9 7 9 9 0 2 6 . 9 3 2 1 2 7 4 7 1 . 7 0 4 0 5 1 . 3 7 2 0 4 8 9 6 0 6 4 2 9 . 6 0 1 4 1 3 7 6 9 . 0 0 2 8 8 1 . 4 1
P o r t s m o u t h P A P T 6 5 7 0 2 2 1 8 6 5 3 3 . 2 8 4 3 0 6 2 6 5 . 5 4 7 7 5 1 . 1 8 4 6 8 0 0 1 7 0 1 0 3 6 . 3 5 2 9 2 4 2 6 2 . 4 8 5 4 8 1 . 1 7
N o r f o l k P A P T 7 2 9 0 4 1 9 1 4 9 2 6 . 2 7 5 2 6 2 3 7 2 . 1 8 1 1 3 2 1 . 5 5 5 4 0 9 2 1 6 4 5 2 3 0 . 4 1 3 6 7 5 0 6 7 . o . i 8 9 0 1 . 6 5
H a m p t o n P A R T 5 9 5 4 2 2 2 4 5 4 3 7 . 7 1 3 6 0 4 1 6 0 . 5 3 1 0 4 7 1 . 7 6 4 5 1 0 3 1 7 7 5 4 3 9 . 3 6 2 6 6 2 3 5 9 . 0 3 7 2 6 1 . 6 1
D i s t r i c t 1 T o t a l s 5 6 2 4 7 2 1 8 1 4 3 8 3 2 . 2 6 3 7 2 4 - 1 7 6 6 . 2 2 8 5 8 7 1 . 5 3 4 1 5 2 6 3 1 4 6 8 5 7 3 5 . 3 6 2 6 2 1 6 2 6 3 . 1 3 6 2 4 4 1 . 5 0
SOURCE: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, BUREAU OF THE CENSUS P-L. 94-171 DATA RAGE I
ORIGINAL i
PUBLIC HEARING ON CONGRESSIONAL REDISTRICTING
HELD BY THE
VIRGINIA STATE SENATE AND HOUSE COMMITTEES
ON PRIVILEGES AND ELECTIONS
AT
NOVA COMMUNITY COLLEGE ANNANDALE CAMPUS
8333 LITTLE RIVER TURNPIKE
FORUM - COMMUNITY CULTURAL CENTER
ANNANDALE, VIRGINIA
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1991
7:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m.
Sauny Ikenberry, CVR
Court Reporter
13811 Leighfield Street
Chantilly, VA 22021-2504
Phone: 703-803-8577
17
r
1 There isn't any guarantee in any State of the
2 Union that guarantees somebody that they are going to get
3 elected. Whether or not you live in Harlem, New York,
4 whether you live in Indian Island in Maine, or whether you
5 live in the Commonwealth of Virginia, the only guarantee
6 is that if you're a pretty good salesman, and if we like
7 what you have to sell, we'll buy it. If we don't, we
8 reject it.
9 You and I both know that, Senator.
10 SENATOR GARTLAN: Any other questions?
11 Thank you, Ms. Jordan.
C 12 MS. JORDAN: You're welcome.
13 SENATOR GARTLAN: The next witness is Gloria
14 T. Fisher of the Mount Vernon District in Fairfax County.
15 MS. GLORIA T. FISHER: Good evening. My name
16 is Gloria Fisher, and I'm a resident of Belle Haven
17 Precinct, Fairfax County, and I testified before you in
18 March on behalf of our Citizens' Association.
19 I am also privileged to have been elected in
20 the General Elections of 1984, '87, and '90, to three
21 terns on the Northern Virginia Soil and Water Conservation
22 District Board. Last year, I won every precinct in
» 23 Fairfax County, receiving over 130,000 votes. I mention
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this only to point out my experiences in the electoral
process.
I should also mention that I serve as the
First Vice-Chairman of the Eighth Congressional District
of Virginia Republican Committee, so you can understand my
obvious joy today when I read FAIRFAX JOURNAL'S blast of
this year's redistricting process. If you haven't seen
it, I'll leave this copy for you (indicating).
To guote this editorial entitled A GOP LAUGH,
"We, the Journal, got a chuckle watching the returns pour
in from the Northern Virginia legislative races Tuesday
night, and we're sure Republicans laughed harder.
Democrats in Richmond tried to redistrict the GOP out of
existence last spring, but 'voters came back and gave the
Democrats the thumping they richly deserved. After their
redistricting shenanigans, Democrats deserve every
agonizing moment to come." The words of the FAIRFAX
JOURNAL.
Well, you should realize that what happened on
Tuesday is not just a laughing matter to Republicans.
Look at Wednesday's WASHINGTON POST headline, "Redrawn
boundaries confuse the voters in Fairfax and Loudoun
Counties." The article goes on to describe how this
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reaches the dimension of having a potential to control a
district.
MS. JORDAN: So what you're saying is you're
going to be ghettoing districts, correct?
You're correcting by ghettoing by district, is
it not? This is what you are going to be doing, by your
plan, is it not?
MS. SPAIN: The objective of the Voting Rights
Act and the objective of the process is to be sure it's
open and available to minority groups.
MS. JORDAN: It's open and available — but
you can't elect them.
SENATOR GARTLAN: All right, if there be no
further questions, the next witness who has signed in is
Marv Hrubus -- I hope I've pronounced that correctly.
MR. HRUBUS: It's very close. Thank you.
SENATOR GARTLAN: -- from the Democratic Party
of Prince William County.
MARV HRUBUS: Thank you, Mr. Chairman, Members
of the Committee.
I didn't come here tonight with any hardened
out or announced or proposed boundaries for this, today.
I've been involved in some reapportionment designs in the
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past, somewhat, and I know that with the electronic
databases, voter registrations, population statistics,
that can be done quite mechanically and usually very
accurately.
I'm here tonight not just as Chairman of the
Democratic Party in Prince William County, but I've also
been asked to speak for two other jurisdictions we have in
Prince William County, which is Manassas and Manassas
Park. There are a few very basic things we want to leave
this Committee with.
For the past ten years we've had a split
County. It's something we would like to eliminate if at
all possible.
We know that when you're looking at
demographics -- and I heard a new definition of the term
"rural" tonight. I come from Iowa; I do know what rural
is. Prince William County cannot really be called a rural
county, but we think we are part of the Northern Virginia
community and we ask that we be given consideration that
the Country, either in the whole or in the best parts
possible, be placed in the Northern Virginia communities.
We know that's difficult. We know it's
difficult: to make -- anytime you're trying to compose
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Falls Church, Mount Vernon and Lee, promote the new 8th
District.
SENATOR GARTLAN: Thank you.
Questions by the Committee?
MS. BOREN: I've been reminded that there
would be some additional precincts that would be needed,
and in Fairfax County we are accustomed to Magisterial
Districts having to be split, so there would be some
precincts along the edge there, and then probably the
Springfield and Annandale areas that would have to be
included.
SENATOR GARTLAN: Questions?
Thank you very much, ma'am.
The last witness who has signed in — before I
introduce her let me ask if there is anybody else who has
been stimulated to want to address the Committee from the
remarks you have heard so far. Please give your name to
Mr. Garrett, who is the Deputy Clerk of the Senate, if you
desire to do so.
In the meantime, the next witness is Janet
Carver, 8th District Democratic Committee.
JANET CARVER: George Rollins, the Chairman of
8th District Democratic Committee cannot be here tonight,
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E M MU) ( M i l
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JOINT COMMITTEE REDISTRICTING HEARING
Lake Wright Hotel
Norfolk, Virginia
November 8, 1991
TRANSCRIPT OF PROCEEDINGS
House Privileges & Elections Committee:
THE HONORABLE FORD C. QUILLEN, Chairman
Senate:
SENATOR JOSEPH V. GARTLAN, JR., Chairman
TAYLOE ASSOCIATES, INC.
Registered Professional Reporters
Telephone: (804) 461-1984
Norfolk, Virginia
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this process.
So if anybody would like to speak, if
you would just raise your hand and come to the -- you
all get the best of every world. You all never
get — you ought to take positions on things instead
of always waiting until we take positions and tell us
we did wrong. It's much harder to govern than people
think it is.
Who would like to say something,
please?
All right. Let us go with Mary and let
Mary go ahead and give some explanations as to her
situation, and maybe we can lay out a little bit
later on what our timetables might be and then maybe
that will spur on some comments from people in the
audience .
MS. SPAIN: Two committees that are
holding three public hearings to invite public
comment in advance of the November 18 special session
and the first hearing was October 11th. We have on
the table for any members or anyone in the audience
who hasn't obtained them copies of plans on file with
the committee to date from the NAACP and the ACLU
filed by George Rawlings and by the American Party.
These plans are available and have been circulated to
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date.
Basically the legal requirements for the
congressional redistricting follow that for the state
redistr l cting , state legislative redistricting. We
address first the equal population, the evening of
the population among the districts. With the
congressional plans we will be dealing with even
congressional districts. The Supreme Court cases in
this area have held to a higher more strict standard
for equal population among the districts, so we are
looking at plans that will be with the very low
deviation among the level districts.
The Karcher versus Daggett case in 1983,
the Supreme Court there upheld the invalidation of
the New Jersey congressional plan with a less than
one percent overall deviation on that ground.
So states as they have been
redlstric1 1 ng for congress in the 1 99 0's have been
bringing the deviations to below one percent of the
11 states. To date six of them have really gone down
to zero deviation because where any locality is split
it's possible with the census data at the block level
to come to a very low deviation.
The focus of the plans filed by the
N A A C P and ACLU so far bring up the voting acts
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requirements governing congressional redistricting
and demonstrate the at least two approaches to
drawing a black majority district. Those plans both
are similar and draw on black population from urban
concentrations from the Richmond area south to the
Norfolk, Hampton Roads area.
Other factors that will govern will be
compactness and contiguity. On the compactness issue
the Circuit Court now has the Senate redistricting
case before it and the trial has been concluded and a
Court opinion should be issued sometime in the near
future which will address the compactness standard
under the Virginia constitution.
For procedures our staff will be working
on drafting bills that are in the same format as your
House and Senate plans, referring to the 1990 census
precincts where a locality is divided. This i. s the
information which we have available which gives a
quick and exact count of the populations involved and
racial breakdowns for those populations.
Our office is aware that all of the
counties, most, have redrawn their precinct lines and
we hope the process will give us some window of
opportunity to review any split jurisdiction to try
and honor as much as possible those new precinct
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lines. But that is not going to be easy to do given
your timetable and it's also not going to be easy to
do in cities because so many of the cities are now
looking at their precinct changes.
So that is really all my comments. I
will be glad to answer any questions.
MR. QUILLEN: We would entertain
questions from any members of our joint subcommittee
as well as any members from the public.
Now, would anybody like to give us some
of your thoughts about some of the things that we
should take into consideration?
This is our third public hearing. We
have had one in Richmond, we were in Northern
Virginia last night, and the idea was to come to
Tidewater. I might say that later today Senator
Gartlan and I will be working in Richmond. We are
going to try to come up with a working draft of some
measure to have before the committees and maybe get
something either by late this afternoon or maybe by
tomorrow, and then we would hope the press would
circulate that if we can come up with a working
plan. And then the committees, we are hoping, will
come back on Wednesday of next week and have a
hearing on this working plan and that will give an
T s v r . n p a c c n r t a t p c t m r
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1
PUBLIC HEARING IN RE:
CONGRESSIONAL REDISTRICTING IN VIRGINIA
SENATE AND HOUSE COMMITTEES
ON PRIVILEGES AND ELECTIONS
General Assembly Building
House Room D
Richmond, Virginia
November 13, 1991
1:30 p .m .
CAPITOL REPORTING, INC.
P . 0. Box 959
Mechanicsville, Virginia 23111
Tel. No. (304) 788-4917
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population. Any plan that accomplishes this goal
impacts the present 3rd Congressional District.
However, there should be no more disruption of
communites of interest than is the minimum
required to comply with the law.
The current 3rd District has more of a
community of interest and compactness than most
congressional districts. The localities of
Henrico, Chesterfield, and the City of Richmond
share most of the same concerns and perspective
on issues because many residents of each locality
work, shop, or attend church in one or the
others.
Regional cooperation between the three
localities has steadily improved over the years.
The citizens are served by the same radio,
television, and newspapers. There is a
commonality between people in each county and the
city.
It is my strong feeling and hope that
this community of interest and the compactness be
preserved in the newly drawn 3rd Congressional
District. If the boundaries of our district must
expand, then they should expand to include
communities which border the district and which
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also share common interests.
It is clear that the interest of the
voters in an area are best served when they are
represented by a single Congressman. While some
areas must be split into two districts, it is
very detrimental to effective representation when
they are split into three.
I wish to thank you for the opportunity
to submit this statement and hope you will
consider substantial changes in the draft plan to
more effectively preserve communities of
interest.
HR. GARTLAN: Congressman, do you have
any, I don't know if the committee has any, but
do you have any time f c r questions?
HR. BATEMAN: I'll be glad to.
MR. GARTLAN: Are there questions of
members of the joint committee of Congressman
Bateman? Seemingly not. Thank you.
HR. BATEMAN: Thank you very much.
MR. GARTLAN: The next preregistered
witness is the Honorable Fhilip Hamilton, member
of the House of Delegates.
HR. HAMILTON: Good afternoon, Hr.
Chairman and other distinguished members of the
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Joint Committee. I come before you today to
express my concerns with proposed plans for
congressional redistricting.
My concerns are twofold. First, the
recent General Assembly elections reflected
heightened voter confusion and apathy. In
Newport News with the number of split precincts
created, many people chose not to participate in
the electoral process.
At a time when public sentiment has
grown against partisanship of government, we
should be making every effort to reduce the
perception of blatant partisanship and improve
government effectiveness.
While campaigning for reelection this
fall, I was surprised at the discontent created
by the legislative redistricing that occurred
earlier this year. I believe this discontent
resulted in less voter participation because of
lack of voter confidence in our ability to carry
out the process of government.
Secondly I'm concerned with the draft
proposal because of its impact on Newport News
and the entire Virginia peninsula region. Under
the proposal, Newport News would be represented
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by three congressmen. Some say this will
increase our political clout in Congress. To
them I say not likely. More is seldom better.
I believe this proposal so fragments the
state's forth largest city that Newport News and
the peninsula become lost in the representative
shuffle.
Given the possible political scenario of
this plan, my city could well be represented by a
congressional representative from Richmond,
Norfolk, and southside Virginia. How much
political clout will Newport News and the
Virginia peninsula have if this occurs?
Redistricting is a political process,
and political partisanship will always rule the
day regardless of the political party in power.
In evaluating this plan, the potential
representative effectiveness for localities and
communities of interest should be the guiding
principal of any adopted plan. No plan will be
perfect or even satisfactory to all parties
involved.
I would hope that strong consideration
be given to preserving the continuity, integrity,
and community of interest in Newport News and the
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congressional districts.
The fractionalization of representation
within that congressional district would place
Newport News in far less standing as compared to
other municipalities.
MR. CROSHAW: Further question. Have
you ever had a problem with, I appreciate your
answer, but what I want to know is has anyone
ever called you, one of your citizens, and said
because there were three state representatives,
have you ever had a citizen complaint that they
were confused about who to go to for constituent
service?
MR. DUVAL: No, I have not had a call
complaining about service received by our
delegation or any confusion on that matter.
MR. CROSHAW: Thank you.
MR. DUVAL: Any other questions, Mr.
Cha i rman ?
MR. GARTLAN: Mr. Melvin.
MR. MELVIN: Mr. Mayor, one of my
concerns has been that the Norfolk Naval Shipyard
and Newport News Shipbuilding not be in the same
congressional district. In looking at the
working plan, I see that the Norfolk Naval
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Shipyard is going to be in the 4th District under
this plan that's before us today. Where would
Newport News Shipbuilding be, which congressional
district?
MR. DUVAL: Under the proposed plan?
MR. MELVIN: Yes,
MR. DUVAL: Be under the 1st and perhaps
part of the 3rd. I don't have the breakdown of
the streets, and it ranges five miles of _our city
along the coast line.
MR. MELVIN: Thank you.
MR. DUVAL: But I share your concern
about having a single congressman representing
both shipyards, and I think you are appropriately
concerned about that fact.
Any other questions, Mr. Chairman?
MR. GARTLAN: No, that's it. Thank you
very much.
MR. DUVAL: Thank you very much.
MR. GARTLAN: The next witness is the
Honorable Dale W . Dover, mayor of the City of
Falls Church.
MR. DOVER: Thank you, Mr. Chairman,
Honorable Members of the Joint Committee. On
behalf of the 9,578 some odd constituents of
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to want to work to help the black community of
this area can propose a step which in all
likelihood will have the effects of, one,
threatening our position in Congress, and two,
ultimately contributing to putting many minority
workers on the street without a job.
Thank you for the opportunity to present
the views of Newport News Shipbuilding. I'll be
pleased to take any questions.
MR. GARTLAN: Are there questions of Ms.
Cooper?
MS. COOPER; Bob, a couple things I want
to ask you about. I don't think anyone is more
keenly interested in keeping people at work and
making sure that our area gets its fair share.
I would be curious to know how many
facilities such as yours that abut the Chesapeake
Bay that are actually clumped into one district
and the one congressional would be represented by
one congressman. I think it's crucial that we
keep that in mind.
I think Mr. Melvin mentioned it a few
minutes ago. In other words, making sure that we
have enough congressional voice by, in other
words, how many shipyards are in the third, how
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many shipyard's perhaps, or NASA or whatever, are
in the 4th. I think that that needs to be a
driving factor here because we have got to keep
our people at work.
HR. TERRELL: Well, the answer, if I
understand the question, most of the facilities
of Newport News Shipbuilding are presently in the
1st District. The people who work at the
shipyard would be represented by three
congressmen in Newport News, two in York County.
Our people come from that area.
As far as the principal office of the
shipyard, that would be in the 3rd District as
proposed by this working draft.
MS. COOPER: Well, for instance, what
other Naval yard would reside in the 3rd, what
other Air Force facility? In other words have we
pumped noticeably all facilities in one
particular congressional district? I think that
needs to be strongly looked at as we go about
amending this plan, and again it's just a draft,
and I think there has to be amendments made to it
because I think a lot of people are dissatisfied
with it.
MR. TERRELL: I think there's a
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second, I guess, no, It doesn't either, it takes
a little bit of the 4th, that's right, it doesn't
take the 2nd.
I just don't know whether that, you
know, I'm not a legislator and I'm not privy to
the computer's spinout, but I think what we are
trying to say is that there are many advantages
to the strength that we have in terms of
representation, and hopefully that representation
will continue.
MR. GARTLAN: All right, thank you, Mr.
Terrell.
Next witness is Daniel A. Carrell or
Carre 11?
MR . CARRELL: Carrell.
HR . GARTLAN: Carrell. Daniel Carrell,
Esquire of the City of Richmond.
MR CARRELL: Thank you very much, Mr.
Chairman, ladies and gentlemen of the Joint
Committee. My name is Dan Carrell. I live and
practice law in the City of Richmond, but I am
not here today in a representative capacity, I'm
here today solely as a citizen of the 3rd
District, 3rd Congressional District where I have
lived for 20 years, 18 of which have been within
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t h e C i t y o f R i c h m o n d i t s e l f .
I o n l y w a n t a f e w m o m e n t s o f y o u r t i m e ,
a n d I t h a n k y o u f o r t h e o p p o r t u n i t y t o s p e a k a
f e w w o r d s t o y o u .
H y c o n s c i e n c e w o u l d n o t p e r m i t me t o
e n g a g e i n t h e n o r m a l f o r m o f c i t i z e n a p a t h y
t o w a r d p r o c e e d i n g s o f t h i s k i n d . I f e l t
c o m p e l l e d t o s t e p f o r w a r d a n d t o e x p r e s s my v i e w s
a s a c i t i z e n . I m i g h t s a y t h a t t h e s e v i e w s a r e
s h a r e d b y t h e o t h e r s t h a t I h a v e m a n a g e d t o t a l k
w i t h a b o u t t h i s m a t t e r i n t h e l a s t f e w d a y s .
I n a w o r d my p o s i t i o n i s t h a t t h e
w o r k i n g d r a f t i s a n o u t r a g e . I t i s a p p a l l i n g t o
t h e c e n s u s o f a n y f a i r m i n d e d c i t i z e n a n d an
a f f r o n t t o s o u n d g o v e r n , men t .
To t a k e o n e e x a m p l e , t o s p l i t t h e
m e t r o p o l i t a n a r e a o f t h e C a p i t o l o f t h e
C o m m o n w e a l t h a n d t o t a k e p o r t i o n s o f t h a t a r e a
a n d c o n n e c t t h e m w i t h c o u n t i e s f r o m S h e n a n d o a h
a n d A c c o m a c k i s p o s i t i v e l y l u d i c r o u s . I t s e r v e s
n e i t h e r b l a c k n o r w h i t e n o r c i t i z e n s o f a n y o t h e r
c o l o r .
A n d I r e m i n d y o u t h a t t h i s p l a n w i l l
u l t i m a t e l y be r e v i e w e d b y t h e A t t o r n e y G e n e r a l o f
t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s , a n d i n c l u d e d i n t h e
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consideration within that view among other
criteria is the following:
The extent to which the plan departs
from objective redistricting criteria set by the
submitting jurisdiction, ignores other relevant
factors such as compactness and contiguity, or
displays a configuration that inexplicably
disregards available natural or artificial
boundaries, and that's paragraph eight from
volume 28 of the Code of Federal Regulations,
Section 51, 59. Paragraph F, I'm sorry.
The editorial in last night's News
Leader I think put it best, and I might interject
in view of the reference to the editorial on Mr.
3all that I'm not interested in who prepared the
plan. I'll only interested in its contents.
The editorial said, among other things,
that the redistricting proposal violates every
aspect of compactness, contiguity, and community
of interest. They would sever the ties between
individual congressmen and their constituents.
The inevitable result of districts
lacking geographic, ethinic, or historic cohesion
is apathy. If the General Assembly wants to
discourage citizens from voting, then it
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certainly should approve the map as drawn.
The proposed districts would hurt the
political enterprise. They treat voters not as
constituents with concerns, opinions, and needs,
but as nameless numbers to be exploited for crass
partisan ends. The roles are reversed. The
citizens are the servants; the politicians, the
masters.
Ladies and gentlemen, I find this to be
an assault on the principles of representative
democracy, and I would urge that you scrap this
plan and move on to something that carries us
toward the role of reason. Thank you.
MR. GARTLAN: Any questions?
MR. QUILLEN: Just one point. If you
look at the NAACP plan, I think, if I understand
your criticism, whether it would be the 3rd or
anything, you would be in the black district
created either by the NAACP plan, or in
particular I think in the plan here that you have
before you. I mean I think as I understand it,
the City of Richmond has in the NAACP plan
142,000 otal population of which 105,000 is
black, and the plan that we have before us today
is 142,000 of which 105,000 is black, so I think
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same. I misunderstood. Thank you.
HR. GARTLAN: All right. Mr. Tony
Dominquez, Prince William County.
MR. DOMINQUEZ: Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I'm here as a common citizen, just a common man
or woman. I do not represent any special
interest, I do not represent any party
specifically, I just came here as an individual
that have deep concern.
I have a written statement which goes as
follows-. Honorable Committee Members, I take
this opportunity to bring to your attention my
concern with regard your endeavor of remapping
the congressional political landscape of the
Commonwealth of Virginia, especially Prince
William County, my local jurisdiction.
Before going further, I would like to
say thanks for given us the opportunity to
address the issues before you. Unlike in the
budget, the common man and woman have at least,
excuse me, have at least the opportunity to
express cur view.
According with the working draft map for
the plan and the table showing the locality and
population on each district, the committee placed
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the new 11th Congressional District across five
county and three cities. One of those counties
is Prince William.
I came to ask for the opportunity to
have the local leadership to represent us in
Congress since Prince William County and the
cities of Manassas and Manassas Park population
has increased enough in the past ten years to a
grand total of 250,377 individuals. Given the
facts that the ideal population for each
congressional district is 562,487, the population
growth means that the whole county could be
contained in half of the new congressional
district.
Prince William Icunty during the past
decade have paid the price of having two
congressional districts which in combination with
the local political environment has divided the
county into what is known as east or west end,
having created a harmful status quo.
Northern Virginia have enough population
to accommodate a better congressioniil alignment.
There is no doubt about the fact that most of you
still have burning hands from the backfire effect
of the gerrymandering during the last General
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Assembly redistricting.
The congressional district is, the
congressional district plan, excuse me, working
draft released on November 8th is an insult to
Virginians, it is political retribution, and
grossly unfair. It divide communities into three
or more districts, and it was not only an abuse
of trust, but an insult to the citizen
intelligence .
Furthermore, it seems to be the priority
of this committee is to perpetuate incumbency and
the placement of partisanship over statesmanship.
It is clear to us that all incumbent will remain
in the general district area with most of the
urban area in the heart of the district, and
they, excuse me, and you are trying to fulfill
the law by creating a new district in Northern
Virginia and one with a black majority.
This is nothing but a fake maneuver to
deprive the common man and woman such as myself
in Northern Virginia or any minority in the new
black district to be elected. Due to the
geographic and to the extent of those districts
it would be physically and financially impossible
to win one of them.
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generally discussed.
That is not to say that a district
something lower than this might not be a viable
black majority district in this part of Virginia.
HR. GARTLAN: Mr. Quillen.
MR. QUILLEN: I understand what you are
saying is can be analysis made of these plans
that probably would give you more refined
evidence as to whether or not they comply, but
really the district that we had before you, there
is really considerbly ...inaudible... by the
Justice Department as the district that you have
now before us with a 61, which is basically
higher numbers than what we did in the
legislative re apportionment, is that correct?
MR. WILLIS: First of all I don't want
to predict what Justice Department would do. If
you submitted a 62 percent plan and we had a 66,
we would probably write a letter to the Justice
Department saying we think you did better, and
I'd like to think that the Justice Department
would listen to us, but they didn't before.
MR. QUILLEN: What concerns me about
this plan, if I look at the localities that you
have gone into which are somewhat different, you
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whose names come later, Senator Scott-- Delegate
Murphy and Senator Bobby Scott. I understand
Senator Andrews that Mr. Murphy wanted to speak
after you nave spoken, and it would be my
intention after we hear Mr. Guest, because he has
been on this list from the beginning virtually,
that we then hear the rest of the nonlegislative
witnesses, then with the exception of Mr. Murphy,
the legislative members who are not members of
the committee, and then the committee.
All right, Mr. Guest.
MR. GUEST: Am I suppose to be here or
off to the side?
Mr. Chairman and Members of the
Committee, my late mama always told me you should
try to start off by saying something nice about
what's before you, so therefore I will say that
unlike the House of Delegates plan which cut
Rockingham County, nice rural community, into
four pieces, this working paper only cuts them in
half. Now we have got the nice stuff out of the
way.
MR. GARTLAN: We are grateful for your
mother's admonition.
HR. GUEST: Yes. Looking at the
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proposed 10th District and the proposed 7th
District in particular, I notice that the
gentleman who will be succeeding your committee
colleague, Senator Truban, in office, will be
serving districts that are in two congressional
districts.
Then I saw much to my chagrin that also
Delegate Hiller and I have the same problem. We
would be serving folks either in the 10th and the
7th or the 7th and the 6th Congressional
Districts. And we really have enough meetings to
go to without ...inaudible....
Going down the list of your communities,
I must note that it says part, and part, and
part, and part in every single district. Now if
we are looking at community of interest and we
are looking at contiguity, we need fewer parts
and more entities, especially in the smaller
rural districts which do not make up a district
in and of themselves that become a minor splinter
of what is a larger congressional district.
I'll have to say that we all had a good
laugh when the gentleman from Massachusetts whose
name was put forth, but I would have to say also
that the thinking of the National Democratic
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Party has to have pervaded this committee because
this plan has the squiggles and the blips and
bloops and cutouts that we might expect to see in
the California plan around the San Francisco Bay
area, perhaps in New Jersey, perhaps in Chicago
or elsewhere, but certainly outside thinking did
pervade this plan.
And the partisan part which says looking
back over the results in the House of Delegates
race, and the reaction to that partisan
gerrymander plan says go ahead and throw me in
the briar patch, the problem is that the people
will be stuck with what is finally enacted for
the next ten years unless the court somehow or
another decides that perhaps they would want to
intervene in what is taken to be a partisan
political game.
The 7th District the way it is proposed
seems to squeeze through one, two, perhaps three
small sphincter-1 ike valves to get from one end
to the other. That's not trying to put together
compactness or the contiguity or the unity of
interest in the people.
The 1st District is somewhat
indescribable. In polite company it's almost to
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HR. EPSTEIN: A zero deviation?
HR. CROSHAW: Population deviation.
HR . EPSTEIN: Maybe you could explain
further.
HR. CROSHAW: You don't know what
deviation means?
HR. EPSTEIN: I know what deviation
means, but --
HR. CROSHAW: Federal courts ruled in
congressional redistricting there can't be
variation in population numbers essentially, and
at a very very minuscule level there is a
presumption that the deviation is too wide, so
therefore when you are doing congressional
redistricting, even more so than legislative
redistricting where there are more seats, there
are bound to be divisions in communities because
mathematical precision is required, and that's by
federal courts and the federal Justice
Department.
HR. EPSTEIN: We don't have any problem
with that, but when you look at the City of
Newport News when you divide that up into three
congressional districts, I think that's where we
seriously have a problem. Hopefully the other
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make a request, I don't think this was made of
staff.
MR. GARTLAN: I think the question has
passed you by, Mr. Harris. Thank you very much.
And we appreciate it. Further question. I'm
sorry, Mr. Croshaw.
MR. CROSHAW: Mr. Chairman, I would
simply like to request that maybe counsel in
making their analysis that not only the numerical
analysis be done but some voting history be done
for minority candidates in those districts,
because I'm not a believer that numbers alone
will ever create any kind of minority
representation, and I think that also is a
scrutiny of the federal courts, so I think it_
ought to be in addition to numerically both past
voting history in those areas.
MR. GARTLAN: All right. All right, now
along with legislative members of the audience,
Senator Scott.
MR. SCOTT: Mr. Chairman, I just had a
couple of brief comments. One was to add, to get
in line behind everybody else on the peninsula
that had problems with Newport News being split
two ways, and furthermore the split was frankly
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along an unnatural line, I'm not sure exactly
where the line was, but Mercury Boulevard, maybe
Harpersville Road, maybe J. Clyde Morris, maybe
Oyster Point Road would be clear demarcations
that people would understand. I'm not sure
exactly where this line came in.
But people don't see any constructive
purpose being served with Newport News being
divided twice into three different parts.
Second is the configuration in the 3rd,
proposed 3rd Congressional District creates a
district in terms of compactness that is, I think
you have heard comments from others in Newport
News, is unreasonably not compact. Certainly the
Voting Rights Act doesn't require that land area,
the ACLU, the NAAC? and others have shown
configurations that are much more compact.
And finally I'd like to add my voice to
those made by Delegate Melvin and Curtis Harris
that a 65 percent, even a 60 percent district is
more than, way more than enough to create an
effective majority, minority majority in a
district, and that we should look if possible to
see, to look at the possibility of a second
district being drawn perhaps in the area most of
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1
IN T'Br UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA
RICHMOND DIVISION
DONALD MOON and ROBERT SMITH
vs.
M. BRUCE MEADOWS, et al.
CA# 3:95 CV942
April 18, 1996
. 7 Richmond, Virginiav ■* ) r \
The deposition of DONALD MOON, taken at the instance of
the defendants, before Kathleen M. Harrison, a Notary Public
for the State of Virginia at Large, beginning at 1:15 p.m., at
the offices of Hirsh, Robinson, Sheiness & Glover, 700 East
Main Street, Richmond, Virginia; said deposition taken
pursuant to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
COOK & WILEY, INC.
Registered Professional Reporters
Post Office Box 14582
Richmond, Virginia 23221
(804) 359-1984
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13
questions and you responded, is that it?
A Yes.
Q Any other radio appearances, TV appearances?
A No.
Q You gave us your address earlier in Hampton. About
how many houses are on your street?
A Probably someplace between 30 and 40.
Q How many black families live in houses on your
street?
A One for sure I know right on the end of the street.
If you turn the corner, there is another black family.
Q How long have you lived in Hampton?
A In Hampton itself 35 years.
Q Where did you live before Hampton?
A Newport News.
Q How about before Newport News?
A United States Navy.
Q Based in Newport News?
A Well, based all over the world but principally out
of Hampton Roads.
Q You were born where?
A Salinas, California.
Q When did you then first move to Virginia?
A 1945.
Q Was that in the military or your family came here?
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1 8
Q Are you a member of a church in Hampton?
A Yes.
Q What church would that be?
A Bethany United Methodist Church.
Q Where is that church located?
A On Todds Lane. That’s the best I can do.
Q How many members — well, not members. But on an
average Sunday, how many folks attend your church?
A I'd say several hundred.
Q On an average Sunday, how many black people attend
church at your church?
A Half a dozen or so including the mixed blood
pastor's two children.
Q The mixed blood pastor's two children, is that what
you said?
A He's adopted two children.
Q The pastor is of mixed blood or his children are?
A His children.
Q Do you belong to any social or civic organizations
at Hampton?
A I belong to the Republican party of Hampton.
Q There is a separate city party?
A It's a city committee. I guess I'm still a member
of Big Brothers, Big Sisters, the Virginia peninsula. You
want only those in Hampton?
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3 8
Q
clause?
In what form did you make that plea for poverty
A Voice.
Q I mean in a meeting to the executive board?
A Yes.
Q Is there any such poverty clause for attending
conventions?
A Sometimes yes, sometimes no.
Q What determines whether there is or is not?
A A vote of the unit that's issuing a call for
convention.
Q Have you ever participated in the redistricting
process for any legislative body?
A The 1991. I guess I attended the meetings in '90 as
an interested spectator and as a person who wanted to speak
but didn't get a chance.
Q You said you attended meetings regarding the 1990.
What meetings were those?
A The committees from both the senate and house that
were acting on redistricting.
Q Were these meetings or legislative sessions?
A Both.
Q The sessions here in Richmond?
A Yes.
Q Did you attend any public hearings?
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39
A No.
Q Did you present any plans during any part of the
1990 redistricting process?
A No.
Q Am I correct that during the 1990 redistricting
process, you were the Third Congressional District Committee
or was that after?
A I was Congressional Committee after the
redistricting.
Q To your knowledge were there any plans put forth in
the legislature by Republican members of the General Assembly?
A I have no knowledge of that. I'm sure there were
but I couldn't quote it.
Q So you had no contact with Republican legislators
during the redistricting process?
A Other than hearing me hollering and screaming.
Q You were hollering and screaming about what?
A That's a phrase. Other than me speaking against it.
Q And what form did you speak against it?
A Just speaking out wherever they'd listen to me and
let me speak, which wasn't too often because the hearings were
mostly closed.
Q Which hearings are you referring to?
A Legislative hearings on the redistricting.
Q Who was your state senator at the time?
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1
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA
RICHMOND DIVISION
DONALD MOON )
and ROBERT SMITH, )
)Plaintiffs, )
)V. ) No. 3:95 CV 942
)M. BRUCE MEADOWS, )
)Defendant, )
)and )
)CURTIS W. HARRIS; et al., )
)Defendant-Intervenors. )
DEPOSITION UPON ORAL EXAMINATION
OF ROBERT ALEXANDER SMITH,
TAKEN ON BEHALF OF DEFENDANT-INTERVENORS
Norfolk, Virginia
April 19, 1996
ZAHN, HALL & ZAHN
London, England Norfolk, Virginia
Tel. (804) 627-6554 Fax (804) 625-7077
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effect — in existence.
Q. And what percentage of the students at those
schools that you just named were black?
A. Titustown was mixed, because students from
the military compound known as Benmorell attended there as
well. Of course, you/re talking about something some 35
years ago. But it was a mixed class there, but there were
more blacks than whites; I can state that.
Lindenwood was exclusively black, as was
Jacox. From a racial standpoint, the first white
instructor I encountered was at Jacox.
Granby High School was, I would say, was
predominantly white when we integrated in '70, though there
had been some minimal integration previously. My aunt
attended Granby, so that's how I can speak towards that.
Q. And when you were growing up — you live in
the same neighborhood, you said, where you grew up?
A. Yes.
Q. Yeah.
When you were growing up, how many — well,
about how many houses or people live on the street where
you live or lived as a child? Is it independent houses or
apartment buildings --
A. Well, no. It's all independent houses.
Q. Okay. I'll ask it in terms of houses.
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About how many houses on your street?
A. Fifteen.
Q. Okay. And to the best you can recall, when
you were a child of those, how many white families lived in
those houses?
A. None.
Q . And today, how many white families live in
the houses on your street?
A. No white families, but there is a white
resident who is living with a young man on that street.
Q . Do you have children?
A. Yes. I have a nine-year-old son.
Q . And where does he go to school now?
A. Sherwood Forest Elementary.
Q . And is that in your neighborhood or —
A. No, no. My son -- my son's mother and I are
divorced, and they live maybe five miles from where I live.
Q . Do you belong to a church here in Norfolk?
A. Yes, I'm a —
Q . And what church would that be?
A. Mount Olive Baptist Church.
Q . And where is that church located?
A. In Lindenwood a whole block from where I
live. Real convenient. As a matter of fact, the original
church was right across the street from where I live.
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Tel. (804) 627-6554 Fax (804) 625-7077
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18
Q. Didn't have to get up too early to get to
service, do you?
A. No, I didn't; no, I don't.
Q. That's good.
On an average Sunday, how many folks attend
church at Mount Olive Baptist?
A. Oh, between — I'd say between 125 and 150.
Q. And on an average Sunday, how many white
people attend church at your church?
A. None, on an average.
Q. Are there predominantly white Baptist
churches here in Norfolk?
A. Yes.
Q. What would some of those be?
A. Oh, let's see. There's — this may sound
bad, because I guess this is kind of the state of religion
in this country, that I can't, off the top of my head — I
mean, there's First Baptist of Norfolk, but — and that is
predominantly white. There are black members there. I
know people who are members there that are black.
Freemason Street Baptist Church in downtown Norfolk.
Q. That's a predominantly white church?
A. Yes. There's Tabernacle Church which is on
Granby Street here in Norfolk. And there's another — I
can't think of the name. It's on South Newtown Road here
ZAHN, HALL & ZAHN
London, England Norfolk, Virginia
Tel. (804) 627-6554 Fax (804) 625-7077
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40
Q. Okay.
A. The third district convention.
Q. Okay. And were you required to pay a
registration fee to attend that convention?
A. Yes.
Q. Did you pay that yourself, or did a
political campaign pay that for you?
A. I paid myself. I wrote my check that day,
as a matter of fact.
Q. Did you attend prior nominating conventions
where a fee was required?
A. Yes, ma'am.
Q. Has it been required at every convention
you've attended?
A. Yes, ma'am. I think it's as part of the
party bylaws, fees are incumbent.
Q. Have you ever participated in the
redistricting process for a legislative body?
A. No.
Q. Did you participate in the 1980's state
redistricting process?
A. Other than being included in the census, no.
Q. Did you participate in the 1990's
reapportionment process in any way?
A. No.
London,
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41
Q- Did you attend any public hearings about
congressional redistricting?
A. No.
Q. Did you present any plans to the legislature
or to your elected representatives?
A. Nope.
Q. Did you follow the redistricting process?
A. Yes, I did.
Q. And how did you follow the redistricting
process?
A. Primarily through the media reports.
Q. Did you attend any legislative sessions in
Richmond?
A. No, ma'am.
Q. To your knowledge, did Republican members of
the General Assembly put forward any congressional
redistricting proposals?
A. To my knowledge, I would have to say no,
because I — I mean, just to my knowledge, no. I don't
recall them putting forth any, in light of the fact that
they were minority in both houses. It would have been an
exercise in futility anyway, but that's neither here nor
there.
Q. So it's your view that a political minority
— the exercise — the attempt to participate in the
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84
A. Okay. And that is a predominantly white
neighborhood, but there are some blacks. As a matter of
fact, one of the school board members who's a friend of
mine lives over there.
Q. And before it was raised, was that a
predominantly black neighborhood?
A. No. It was really — it was rather equally
mixed at that time.
Q. I believe you indicated that you followed
the 1990s redistricting process primarily through the
newspapers —
A. Yes, ma'am.
Q. — is that true?
Do you know to what extent partisan politics
factored into that process?
A. I don't know the extent to which it factored
into it, but to dismiss partisan politics as part of the ■—
as having an impact I think would be naive.
Both state houses and the governor's office
were occupied by Democrats. And if anyone knows anything
about the inner-workings of the Virginia General Assembly
under the control of the Democrats, Republicans have been
treated, to use a phrase like "red-headed stepchildren."
And when it came — whether you're talking about committee
assignments or the introduction of legislation, they have
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been voiceless. Basically, until recently, as Republicans
have begun to gain more parity in the House of Delegates —
I mean, well, in the General Assembly. Excuse me.
Q. Would you agree that there are significant
socioeconomic differences between blacks and whites in
Virginia?
A. No. Because I've had occasion to observe
blacks and whites at both ends of the socioeconomic
spectrum. I would -— I would agree that in Norfolk there
is a great — as a matter of percentage of population, more
blacks are at the — at the lower socioeconomic scale than
probably whites.
Q. We talked about your public school education
here in Norfolk. From your experience, was race
segregation in the schools, was that readily embraced in
the city of Norfolk?
A. I'm familiar with the massive resistance in
the sense that I've read on it. I was too young to go to
school at the time. As far as the embracing of racial
segregation, I would say that it was an accepted practice,
pretty much so like you segregate — racial segregation in
churches is an accepted — it's practiced.
My take on the circumstances of racial
segregation in any — and especially if you talk about the
incorporation of a city, is that the key to it for me is
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that. We are Republicans who are black who feel the need
to be able to associate freely with others of our ilk.
Q. What does your identity as blacks imply in
terms of the rest of the parties? Is there any implication
in terms of the rest of the Republican party?
A. I would — my response to that would be the
same in relation to her question (indicating) about the
Republican members who belong to the congressional black
caucus, and that is the attitude is basically: so what.
Q. That's your —
A. No. That's their attitude towards us: so
what. I mean, we are still Republicans, but we don't have
an agenda that is exclusive to the larger agenda of the —
of the — of the Republican Party of Virginia.
Q. In 1989, your election campaign that was
run, you indicated that you won your precinct. I'm curious
as to what sources did you use to analyze your voting
results?
A. Well, the Virginian Pilot prints a election
aftermath summary every year, and so basically it's just a
line item. You look down the precincts and you see how you
did. And the only one that I won in '89 was Lindenwood.
Q. Okay. Did you have any other political
assistance or analysts working for you at that time?
A. Before or after the election?
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Q. Before the election and after the election.
A. No. Because I, one, I didn't have the money
to do so and, number two, I think — I think a lot of the
hired guns in politics are a waste of money.
Q. Did you consult anyone —
A. No.
Q. -- regardless of payment?
A. No, I didn't. I was working as an
independent. I think that one needs to clarify that. And
when you talk about the political spectrum, most people
gravitate to one or the other of the two major parties. So
there really wasn't anyone out there for me to consult.
Now, I will say that some of my Republican
friends approached me about running as a Republican, and I
made an attempt to do that, but the then-chairman in the
city of Norfolk refused to let me apply to be nominated.
So I ran as an independent, and I beat her candidate.
Q. What was the basis of that refusal?
A. Racism.
Q. Within the Republican party?
A. With this person.
Q. With this person?
A. Yes.
Q. And what was the race of that person?
A. White.
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redistricting.
Q. On what do you base —
A. That's the way the districts were drawn,
quite simply. They drew him out. It's — trust me. That
is a very old and established political practice. You
reward your friends; you punish your enemies. And they put
two Republicans in the same district.
Q. When you say “they," you are referring —
A. The Democratic legislature in Virginia. And
Mr. Allen lost his seat, so he ran for governor instead.
Q* In response to Interrogatory Number 4, you
were asked to identify any lay witnesses that you may call
at the trial. You indicated yourself and Mr. Moon and no
other witnesses had been identified at that time. Are you
personally aware of any other lay witnesses that are
available for trial?
A. No, ma'am.
Q. Okay. Have you engaged in any efforts
A. — recruit?
Q. -- recruit any?
A. No, ma'am.
Q. You attended Old Dominion University?
A. Yes, ma'am.
Q. And Norfolk State University?
A. Yes, ma'am.
London,
ZAHN, HALL
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& ZAHN
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Tel. (804) 627-6554 Fax (804) 625-7077
ATTACHMENT 15
LEGISLATIVE HISTORY OF 1991 VIRGINIA CONGRESSIONAL REDISTRICTING
As outlined recently in prior submissions for Virginia's
state legislative redistricting plans, the advance preparation
for the decennial congressional and legislative redistricting
began in 1986 when the General Assembly established a Joint
Reapportionment Committee to plan for 1991 redistricting. The
Joint Committee subsequently authorized participation in Phases I
and II of the U.S. Census Bureau precinct redistricting project,
space allocation, and acquisition of a computer-assisted mapping
and redistricting system.
The Constitution of Virginia, in Art. II, § 6, recognizes
that both state legislative and congressional districts must be
redrawn in 1991. The election schedule in Virginia required
elections in 1991 from newly drawn state legislative districts,
however, while post-redistricting congressional elections will
not be held until 1992. Because of this election schedule, the
General Assembly first redistricted the state legislative dis
tricts and scheduled congressional redistricting to begin in
November, 1991.
This Attachment provides a chronology that identifies the
legislative actions and proposals resulting in the enactment of
the new congressional district boundaries in Chapter 6, 1991 Va.
Acts (Spec. Sess. II) ("Chapter 6") on December 9, 1991, and
their final approval by Governor Lawrence Douglas Wilder on
December 11, 1991.
November 1990 through January 1991
In November 1990, the Virginia Division of Legislative Ser
vices published and circulated estimated population statistics
for each congressional district in its redistricting newsletter,
Drawing the Line (Issue 2).
In January 1991, Virginia received notice that it would gain
an 11th congressional seat. Official 1990 census statistics for
the existing congressional districts were published and circu
lated in January 1991 in Drawing the Line (Issue 3). See Plan
C0003000. [Each congressional redistricting plan is identified
by a plan number beginning with the letter "C." The TABLE at the
end of this chronology lists each plan, its sponsor, the date the
plan was introduced or made public, its plan number, and the
black percentage of total population and voting age population
("VAP") for each majority black district in the plan.]
In House Joint Resolution No. 282, the 1991 Regular Session
of the Virginia General Assembly established November 18, 1991,
as the date to reconvene in special session to redraw congres
sional district boundaries.
August 1991 through September 1991
In August 1991, the chairmen of the Privileges and Elections
Committees of the Virginia Senate and House of Delegates, Senator
Joseph V. Gartlan, Jr. (D-Fairfax County) and Delegate Ford C.
Quillen (D-Scott County), directed committee staff to invite the
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
("NAACP"), the American Civil Liberties Union ("ACLU"), and
-2-
Virginia's congressional delegation to use the General Assembly's
computer-assisted redistricting system for preparing suggested
congressional district plans and to submit plans for the Commit
tee's consideration in advance of the November 18 Special Session
of the General Assembly.
The committee chairmen also scheduled the first joint public
hearing on congressional redistricting for Friday, October 11,
1991, and directed that widespread advance notice be given for
the hearing, which was done.
October 11, 1991, Public Hearing
The Virginia NAACP and ACLU presented similar proposals for
one majority black congressional district combining black popula
tion concentrations in urban areas (Henrico County and the Cities
of Richmond, Petersburg, Norfolk, Newport News, Hampton, Ports
mouth, and Chesapeake) linked by more rural areas along the James
River.
The ACLU's proposed district (CO564750) contained 66.2%
total black population and 63.1% black VAP. The NAACP's draft
district (CO567750) had 65.4% total black population and 62.1%
black VAP.
Statewide proposals were offered by 8th Congressional Dis
trict Democratic Party Chairman, George Rawlings, and American
Party Chairman, A1 Moore. (Subsequent analysis by committee
staff demonstrated that each of these two proposals included one
black majority district with approximately 54% total black popu
lation . )
-3-
Under each of the four proposals described above, an incum
bent member of Congress resided in the black majority district —
Congressman Sisisky in the ACLU, NAACP, and American Party plans
and Congressman Bateman in the Rawlings plan.
Delegate Kenneth Melvin (D-Portsmouth and member of the
House Privileges and Elections Committee and the Black Caucus of
the General Assembly) and Senator Robert C. Scott (D-Newport News
and also a member of the Black Caucus) suggested that considera
tion should be given to a combination of a 55% black majority
district and a 45% black influence district, as an alternative to
one 55% majority district.
November 7 and 8, 1991
The Joint Committees conducted two public hearings, one in
Northern Virginia on November 7 and a second in Tidewater on
November 8, which elicited no new proposals.
Later on November 8, Committee Chairmen Gartlan and Quillen
released a November 8, 1991 working draft plan (C0596750) and
announced that the Committees would hold a joint public hearing
in Richmond on Wednesday, November 13, 1991, to receive alterna
tive proposals to, and comments on, the working draft plan.
Information describing the working draft plan and notice of the
hearing were circulated through news releases and the Drawing the
Line mailing list.
The November 8 , 1991 working draft plan contained an open
District 11 anchored in Fairfax County and a black majority Dis-
trict 3 (61.5% total black population and 58.5% black VAP) that
- 4 -
included portions of Henrico County and the Cities of Richmond,
Hampton, Newport News, Norfolk, Portsmouth, Petersburg, and all
or portions of 11 other localities. Congressman Herbert H.
Bateman (R-Newport News) resided in proposed District 3. No
members of Congress were combined in any district. Under the
working draft plan, District 4 contained 33.3% total black popu
lation and 31.9% black VAP. Congressman Norman Sisisky
(D - Petersburg) was the incumbent in District 4.
November 13, 1991
The Privileges and Elections Committees of the Senate and
House of Delegates met jointly at 1:30 p.m. Four new plans were
introduced:
1. A new ACLU three-district plan (C0609777). In response
to the working draft plan, the ACLU had drawn a proposed
District 4 with a 33.0% black population (30.9% VAP)
(with Congressman Sisisky as the resident incumbent) and
a proposed District 3 with a 65.7% black majority (62.4%
VAP) (with Congressman Bateman as the incumbent). The
proposed District 4 stretched from Henry County into
Virginia Beach.
2. A new NAACP three-district plan (C0608721). The NAACP
revision included 33.6% black population (31.6% VAP) in
its District 3 (an open seat) in southside Virginia, the
area from Henry County into Chesapeake, and a 66.6%
black majority (63.5% VAP) in its proposed District 1
(with Congressman Sisisky as the incumbent).
- 5 -
3. A three-district proposal offered by Senator Andrews
(D-Hampton) (C0605101). This proposal contained an open
black majority District 11 (60.3% of total population
and 57.0% VAP) , a District 1 configured similarly to
existing District 1, and a District 2 using portions of
the City of Norfolk and all of the City of Virginia
Beach. Under the Andrews proposal, Congressmen Bateman
and Owen B. Pickett (D-Virginia Beach) were incumbents
in Districts 1 and 2, respectively.
4. A statewide proposal offered by Delegate John C. Watkins
(R-Chesterfield) (C0565590). The Watkins proposal con
tained a black majority District 11 (65.5% of total
population and 62.3% VAP). Delegate Watkins offered the
plan with the understanding that the black majority seat
was an open district ( in fact , Congressman Sisisky ' s
precinct was included in the district) and that no
incumbent congressmen were combined in any district.
At this meeting, there was further discussion of the possi
bility of creating two districts with majority or close-to-major-
ity black population concentrations.
Delegate Quillen commented that he would prefile the working
draft plan to have it available for House Privileges and Elec
tions Committee consideration at a meeting Sunday, November 17.
Senator Gartlan advised that the Senate Privileges and Elections
Committee would meet at 10:00 a.m. on Monday, November 18, to
consider the plan contained in the working draft and proposed
revisions to it.
-6-
November 14, 1991
Delegate Quillen prefiled House Bill No. 4001, the November
8, 1991 working draft plan (CO596750). Delegate Watkins prefiled
House Bill No. 4002 (C0611590), a slightly revised version of the
plan he had presented on November 13.
November 17 and 18, 1991
The House Committee met November 17 and heard comments and
testimony on the working draft plan. The Senate Committee met
November 18 and took under advisement a number of suggested
revisions in the working draft plan.
Senator Kevin G. Miller (R-Harrisonburg) filed Senate Bill
No. 2003 (C0642126) and presented it to the Senate Privileges and
Elections Committee. This proposal incorporated Senator Andrews'
three-district proposal (including a 60.3% black majority dis
trict) into a statewide proposal. It also differed significantly
from the working draft plan in the Richmond and Northern Virginia
areas.
At an afternoon House Privileges and Elections Committee
meeting on November 18, 1991, Delegate Watkins presented a
revised plan (C0637590) which was drawn to incorporate various
revisions discussed in earlier committee meetings. The black
majority District 11 contained 65.8% total black population and
62.6% black VAP.
Delegate Melvin filed a two-district proposal drawn by com
mittee staff to approach, as closely as possible, two 55% black
majority districts (C0640517). The black percentages for the two
- 7 -
districts were 55.7% (52.8% VAP) and 52.1% (49.4% VAP). On
behalf of the Black Caucus, Delegate Melvin reported that the
caucus was seeking a 60% black majority district and 45%+ black
influence district in the areas covered by the two districts.
November 19, 1990 - Senate Privileges and Elections Committee
The Senate Privileges and Elections Committee began its
afternoon meeting with a staff review of a revised working draft
plan entitled "Amendments to Working Draft" (CG628118). This
plan incorporated a number of changes discussed earlier in Com
mittee meetings affecting Patrick County, the District 1 and 3
boundary in Newport News and Hampton, Norfolk precincts, and
Falls Church. The plan included an open District 3 with a 61.1%
black majority (58.1% VAP) and retained an open Northern Virginia
District 11. Congressman Bateman was the incumbent in
District 1. Congressmen Bliley and Allen were combined in Dis
trict 7 .
Senator Charles L. Waddell (D-Loudoun) presented a plan
(C0648136) which combined Senator Andrews' three-district plan
with elements of Senator Miller's plan and combined Congressmen
Bliley and Allen in a central Virginia District 3. Under Senator
Waddell's Plan, both the black majority District 11 and the newly
drawn District 7 would be open seats.
Senator Elmo G. Cross, Jr. (D-Hanover) proposed amendments
to combine Senator Andrews' three-district plan with elements of
the original working draft plan and to redraw Districts 4, 7, 10,
and 11.
- 8 -
The Committee rejected the Kevin Miller, Waddell and Cross
proposals and reported the amended working draft plan (C0628118)
with amendments proposed by or on behalf of Senators Madison E.
Marye (D-Montgomery) , Andrews, C. A. Holland (D-Virginia Beach),
Kevin Miller, Yvonne B. Miller (D-Norfolk), and R. Edward Houck
(D-Spotsylvania). The committee substitute was reported by a 10-
4 vote (Plan C0679888). The open black majority District 3 con
tained a 60.9% black majority (57.9% VAP), a slight reduction due
to amendments proposed by Senator Yvonne Miller for the Norfolk
area.
November 19, 1990 - House Privileges and Elections Committee
At its morning session, the House Privileges and Elections
Committee heard Delegate William P. Robinson, Jr.'s (D-Norfolk)
report on the Black Caucus Plan (C0653750 ). This plan was a
follow-up to Delegate Melvin's two-district plan. The Black
Caucus Plan revised the working draft plan: (i) to include 60.3%
black majority District 3; (ii) to increase the black percentage
in District 4 to 36.8%; and (iii) to add the Eastern Shore coun
ties to District 2 (to replace Norfolk population shifted to
District 3). The plan differed from Delegate Melvin's Plan by
retaining the working draft boundary between Districts 4 and 5
and not extending District 4 west into additional southside coun
ties .
In the afternoon session, Delegate Quillen presented plan
C0643552 incorporating revisions to the working draft plan as a
vehicle for discussion and amendment. This revised plan incor
- 9 -
porated changes affecting a number of localities and amendments
earlier proposed to the Committee. The proposed black majority
District 3 remained similar to the working draft plan (with minor
adjustments affecting, for example, Richmond County and the line
in the Cities of Norfolk and Newport News).
Under the revision, District 3 became an open district (Con
gressman Bateman was the resident incumbent in District 1, and
Congressmen Bliley and Allen were combined in District 7), and
District 3 contained 61.6% total black population and 58.6% black
VAP. District 4 contained 32.3% and 30.8% black total and voting
age populations.
The Committee voted to reject Delegate Watkins' House Bill
No. 4002 as its working draft, voted to adopt the Delegate
Quillen's revision, and then voted on a series of amendments to
that revised plan. At the conclusion of the meeting, the Commit
tee reported, by a vote of 11-7, a substitute for House Bill 4001
incorporating Delegate Quillen's revision and approved amend
ments. The reported substitute is Plan C0680552. The combina
tion of the revised plan and approved amendments reduced the
black population in District 3 to 60.4% of total population and
57.3% of voting age population. The reduction in percentages
from Plan C0643552 was due primarily to an amendment by Delegate
Melvin affecting Petersburg and Portsmouth precincts.
November 20, 1991 - Senate
The Senate convened in the morning. Substitute legislation
offered by Senator Robert Russell (R-Chesterfield) (C0667146) and
- 1 0 -
Senator Waddell (C0648136) failed by votes of 13-25 and 17-20,
respectively. The Russell Substitute was identical to Plan
C0637590 offered on November 18 by Delegate Watkins in the House
Privileges and Elections Committee meeting and later on November
20 on the floor of the House of Delegates. Senator Waddell's
Plan was the same as the plan he previously had offered to the
Senate Privileges and Elections Committee and was defeated on
November 19.
The Senate defeated amendments by Senator William E. Fears
(D-Accomac) to move Congressman Bateman into District 3 and by
Senator Cross to reunite Hanover and reconfigure major portions
of the Committee Substitute Plan. Three minor amendments were
approved, and the amended committee substitute passed the Senate
by a 24-14 vote.
November 20, 1991 - House of Delegates
The House Privileges and Elections Committee received the
engrossed Senate Bill 2003 (C0697750) and reported out a substi
tute — the same plan (C0630552) it had earlier reported for
House Bill 4001 . Action then proceeded on Senate Bill 2003 in
the House of Delegates. The House rejected Delegate Watkins'
Substitute (C0637590) by a 38-52 vote and adopted the Committee
Substitute. It defeated two floor amendments and approved an
amendment by Delegate Melvin. The effect of the Melvin amendment
(C0689517) was to reverse his earlier amendment approved in Com
mittee and to increase the black population in District 3 to
51.3% of total population and 58.3 VAP.
The House of Delegates passed the amended substitute by a
vote of 53-39.
November 20, 1991 - Senate and House of Delegates Conferees
The Senate and House of Delegates put the bill in confer
ence. Later that night the conferees reported plan C0705552 to
resolve the areas in conflict — primarily in Northern Virginia
and in the Northern Neck area. District 3 was not in dispute and
only was affected insofar as necessary to retain zero population
deviations. As proposed by the conferees, District 3 had a 61.5%
black majority of total population and a 58.5% black VAP.
The conferees' report was approved 23-9 in the Senate and
50-36 in the House of Delegates. All black members were present
and voted for the conferees' report except Delegate Jean
Cunningham (D-Richmond) who was not present to vote.
November 21 through December 11, 1991 - Governor Wilder's Substi
tute Amendment
Following criticism of the three-way division of the City of
Richmond and Henrico County and his review of Senate Bill 2003,
Governor Lawrence Douglas Wilder returned the bill to the General
Assembly on December 2 with a substitute. The key elements of
the Governor's substitute (C0723750) were to: (i) increase the
percentage of black population in District 3 by adjustments in
the City of Norfolk between Districts 2 and 3; (ii) eliminate
three-way divisions of the Cities of Richmond and Newport News
- 1 2 -
and Henrico County; (iii) draw a more compact District 7; and
(iv) reduce the population deviations among the districts.
As proposed by the Governor, District 3 contains 63.98%
total black population and 61.17% black voting age population.
The General Assembly met on December 9. The House of Dele
gates and Senate Privileges and Elections Committees met jointly
for an information session on the Governor's proposal.
The Senate voted to adopt the Governor's substitute by a
vote of 22-16, and the House of Delegates agreed by a vote of 42-
41. All ten black members of the General Assembly were present
and voted in favor of the Governor's substitute.
On December 11, Governor Wilder signed Senate Bill 2003 as
amended and reenrolled, and plan C0723750 became Chapter 6.
- 1 3 -
TABLE
LIST OF CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT PLANS
Black Majority Districts
Plan Name Plan Number Black Percentage Black Percentage
Sponsor of Total of VAPDate Offered Population
1980 Districts C0003000 N/A N/A
ACLLJ One-District
Plan — 10/11/91
C0564750 66.22 63.13
NAACP Two-District
Plan — 10/11/91
C0567750 65.38 62.15
Working Draft
Gartlan/Quillen
11/8/91 — HB 4001
C0596750 61.51 58.56
ACLU Three-District
11/13/91
C0609777 65.74 62.39
NAACP Three-District
11/13/91
C0608721 66.61 63.47
Senator Andrews
Three-District Plan
11/13/91
C0605101 60.35 57.05
Delegate Watkins
Plan — 11/13/91
C0565590 65.53 62.26
Delegate Watkins
Plan — 11/14/91
HB 4002
C0611590 65.63 62.37
Senator K. Miller
Plan — 11/18/91
SB 2003 (introduced)
C0642126 60.35 57.05
Delegate Watkins C0637590
Revised Plan
11/18/91
Floor Sub. for SB 2003
Also Senator Russell
Plan — 11/20/91
Floor Sub. for SB 2003
65.81 62.64
-14-
Delegate Melvin C0640517
Two-District Plan
11/18/91
55.68
52.09
52.75
49.42
Senate Committee C0628118
Amended Working
Draft — 11/19/91
61.07 58.12
Senator Waddell C0648136
Plan — 11/19/91
60.35 57.05
Senate Comm. Sub. C0679888
for SB 2003
11/19/91
60.86 57.87
Black Caucus Plan C0653750
11/19/91
60.26 57.33
House Committee C0643552
Revised Working
Draft — 11/19/91
61.59 58.64
House Comm. Sub. C0680552
for HB 4001 and
for SB 2003
11/19/91
60.43 57.34
SB 2003 as passed C0697750
by the Senate
11/20/91
60.86 57.87
Melvin Floor C0689517
Amendment for
House Comm. Sub.
11/20/91
61.28 58.30
Conferees' Report C0705552
11/20/91
61.48 58.50
Governor's C0723750
Substitute - 12/2/91
Agreed to 12/9/91
Signed 12/11/91
Chapter 6, 1991 Acts
(Special Session II)
63.98 61.17
NOTE: These plans also are being submitted in computer-readable f o
- 1 5 -
Apr-23-96 01:1 IP tJ. G e ra ld Hebert (703) 684-3586 P . 28
U.S. Department of Justice
Civil Rights Division
Appellate Section
P 0 . Box 66078
Washington, D C. 20035-6078
April 3, 1996
J. Gerald Hebert, Esq.
800 Parkway Terrace
Alexandria, Virginia 22302
Re: Moon v. Meadows, C.A. No. 3:95CV 942 (E.D. Va.)
Dear Mr. Hebert:
This is in response to your request for my opinion
concerning whether it would be permissible for you to work on the
above-referenced case as a private practitioner. This case is a
challenge to the congressional reapportionment plan in Virginia.
You have indicated that you served as an attorney in the Voting
Section of the Civil Rights Division until May 31, 1994.
As we have discussed, the pertinent post-employment
restrictions are found at 18 U.S.C. 207(a)(1) and (2). Section
207(a) (1) prohibits you from representing anyone before the
government on a particular matter involving specific parties in
which you participated personally and substantially while with
the government. Section 207(a) (2) prohibits you for two years
from representing another person on a particular matter involving
specific parties which you know was pending under your
responsibility for the last year of your government service.
You stated in your letter that the Moon case was filed in
November 1995, after you left the Voting Section. You also
indicated that you do not recall having any involvement in the
Voting Section's review of Virginia's congressional redistricting
plan under Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, 42 U.S.C. 1973c,
while an attorney in the Voting Section. Representatives of the
Voting Section have stated that they do net believe that you were
involved in the Section 5 review process while in the Voting
Section, and a review of the Section's files revealed no such
involvement. Based on the information I have been provided, your
participation in this case would appear to violate neither
Section 207(a) (1) nor Section 207(a) (2) .
2
Please feel free to call me at (202) 514-2195 if you have
any questions regarding this case, or any other Voting Rights Act
case that you may wish to handle in private practice.
Sincerely,
O' /
Dennis J. Dimsey &
Deputy Designated Agency
Ethics Official
Civil Rights Division
c c : William R. Yeomans
Elizabeth Johnson
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA
DONALD MOON and ROBERT SMITH, )
)
Plaintiffs, )
)
v. ) Civil No.3:95CV942
)
M. BRUCE MEADOWS, )
)
Defendant, )
)
and )
)
CURTIS W. HARRIS; JAYNE W. BARNARD, )
JEAN PATTERSON BOONE; RAYMOND H. BOONE; )
WILLIE J DELL; HENRY C. GARRARD, SR.; )
and GERALD T. ZERKTN, )
__________ Defendant-Intervenors._____________________
DECLARATION OF WILLIAM S. COOPER
Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. Section 1746, I, William S. Cooper, make the following
declaration:
1. I serve as a demographic consultant for the defendant-intervenors in this
lawsuit.
2. I have a BA degree in Economics from Davidson College, supplemented with
graduate work in Urban and Regional Planning at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State
University.
3. Since 1986, as an employee of the American Civil Liberties Union of Virginia,
I have prepared redistricting maps in approximately 350 jurisdictions for Section 2
litigation, Section 5 comment letters, and for use in other efforts to promote compliance
with the Voting Rights Act of 1965. 1 have prepared election plans for Section 2 litigation
in Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska,
North Carolina, Ohio, South Carolina, Virginia, and Tennessee.
4. I have testified at trial as an expert witness on redistricting and demographics
in federal courts in the following voting rights cases: Georgia (Woodard v. Lumber City ,
Love v. Deal, and Askew v, City of Rome): Louisiana (Knight v. McKeithen and Reno v,
Virginia): Maryland (Cane v. Worcester Countv): Mississippi (Gunn v, Chickasaw
County and Ewing v, Monroe County): Nebraska (Stabler v. Thurston Countv):
Tennessee (Cousins v. McWherter and Rural West Tennessee African American Affairs
Council v. McWherter): and Virginia (Henderson v. Richmond County. McDaniel v.
Mehfoud. White v. Daniel, and Smith v. Brunswick County).
5. In addition, I have filed declarations or been deposed in the following voting
rights cases: : Colorado (Cuthair v. Montezum-Cortez ), Florida (Johnson v. DeSoto
County): Georgia (Jones v. Cook County. Cofield v. City of LaGrange. and Johnson v.
Miller: Louisiana (Rodney v. McKeithen and Wilson v. Town of St. Francisville):
Mississippi (Clark v. Calhoun County (on remand), NAACP v. Fordice. Teague v. Attala
County (on remand), and Stanfield v. Lee County): North Carolina (Lewis v. Alamance
County, Gause v. Brunswick County, and Webster v. Person Countv), and South
Carolina (Vander Linden v. Campbell).
Census Block-Level Distribution of the African-American Population in Virginia
6. According to the 1990 census, Virginia has a population of 6,187,358, of
whom 1,162,994 persons are African American. Virginia has a total voting age population
of 4,682,620 and a black voting age population of 823,250. African Americans comprise
18.8% of the total population and 17.6 % of the voting age population.
7. At the request of counsel for defendant-intervenors, 1 analyzed population by
race at the census block-level for all of Virginia. This analysis is based on data from the
1990 Bureau of the Census PL 94-171 data file - the complete population count file used
for reapportionment of legislative districts.
2
8. Of the 144,371 populated census blocks in Virginia, there are 14,681 where
African Americans comprise more than 50% of the population. The total population in
these majority-black census blocks is 833,688, with a black population of 688,1 12. Thus,
in Virginia, about three of five African Americans (59.17%) live in majority-black census
blocks.
9. About one-quarter of the African American population, (371,262 persons or
24.29%), resides in the 8,418 census blocks that are over 90% black. About seven in 10
non-black persons, (3,575,747 persons or 71.17%) live in 70,847 census blocks that are
over 90% non-black. About one-third of non-black persons (1,723,999 persons or
34.31%), reside in the 59,000 census blocks that do not contain any African Americans.
Socio-Economic Characteristics of Whites and African Americans in Virginia and
the Third Congressional District (104lh)
10. At the request of counsel for defendant-intervenors, 1 prepared tables and bar
charts comparing socio-economic characteristics of the population by race for Virginia and
the Third Congressional District (104th), I extracted the data for these tables and charts
from the 1990 Census o f Population and Housing Summary Tape File 3 A on CD -RO M
(Virginia) and the 1990 Census o f Population and Housing Summary Tape File 3D
(1995) on CD-ROM. I formatted the data and calculated the percentages using a
computer spreadsheet, Microsoft Excel fo r Windows. The bar charts were also prepared
with Microsoft Excel.
11. The ten variables displayed in these tables and charts are listed below by
variable ID code as defined by the Census Bureau.
3
P20. RACE OF HOUSEHOLDER BY HOUSEHOLD TYPE AND PRESENCE AND
AGE OF CHILDREN
P58. RACE BY EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT
P71. RACE BY SEX BY EMPLOYMENT STATUS
P82. RACE OF HOUSEHOLDER BY HOUSEHOLD INCOME IN 1989
P115A. PER CAPITA INCOME IN 1989 BY RACE
PI 19. POVERTY STATUS IN 1989 BY RACE BY AGE
H10, TENURE BY RACE OF HOUSEHOLDER
H39, RACE OF HOUSEHOLDER BY VEHICLES AVAILABLE
H45. RACE OF HOUSEHOLDER BY GROSS RENT
H66. RACE OF HOUSEHOLDER BY PLUMBING FACILITIES
PI 15A. PER CAPITA INCOME IN 1989 BY RACE
PI 19. POVERTY STATUS IN 1989 BY RACE BY AGE
H39. RACE OF HOUSEHOLDER BY VEHICLES AVAILABLE
12. The 1990 census reveals sharp socio-economic disparities between African
Americans and whites in Virginia.
13. The 1990 census shows that the socio-economic characteristics for African
Americans residing in the Third Congressional District mirror the low socio-economic
status experienced by African Americans statewide..
14. In 1989, per capita income for white persons in Virginia was $17,361, per capita
income for African Americans in Virginia was $9,439. Per capita income for African
Americans in the Third Congressional District was $8,502.
4
15. In 1989, 7.38% of white persons (342,970) in Virginia lived below1 poverty
level; 22.36% of African Americans (245,972) in Virginia lived below poverty level. In the
Third Congressional District, 28.34% of African Americans (98,576) lived below poverty
level.
16. In 1989, 8.53%, of white children under 5 years (27,179) in Virginia lived
below poverty level; 34.73% of African American children under 5 years (33,873) in
Virginia lived below poverty level. In the Third Congressional District, 46.23% of African
American children under 5 years (14,847) lived below poverty.
17. In 1989, 8.69% of white children 5 years of age (5,509) in Virginia lived below
poverty level; 34.24% of African American children 5 years of age (6,676) in Virginia
lived below poverty level. In the Third Congressional District, 46,49% of African
American children 5 years of age (2,945) lived below poverty level.
18. In 1989, 8.17% of white children 6 to 11 years of age (29,351) in Virginia
lived below poverty level, 30.95% of African American children 6 to 11 years of age
(35,111) in Virginia lived below poverty level. In the Third Congressional District,
41.71% of African American children 6 to 11 years of age (14,936) lived below poverty
level.
19. In 1989, 7.68% of white children 12 to 17 years of age (26,331) in Virginia
lived below poverty level, 26.51% of African American children 12 to 17 years of age
(27,202) in Virginia lived below poverty level. In the Third Congressional District,
35.07% of African American children 12 to 17 years of age (10,944) lived below poverty
level.
5
20. In 1989, 6.48% of white adults 18 to 64 years of age (196,988) in Virginia
lived below poverty level; 17.00% of African American adults 18 to 64 years of age
(113,230) in Virginia lived below poverty level. In the Third Congressional District,
21.69% of African American adults 18 to 64 years of age (44,727) lived below poverty
level.
21. In 1989, 8.58% of white adults 65 to 74 years of age (28,040) in Virginia lived
below poverty level; 26.63% of African American adults 65 to 74 years of age (17,088) in
Virginia lived below poverty level. In the Third Congressional District, 26.23% of African
American adults 65 to 74 years of age (6,126) lived below poverty level.
22. In 1989, 15.37% of white adults 75 years of age and over (29,572) in Virginia
lived below poverty level; 34.96% of African American adults 75 years of age and over
(12,792) in Virginia lived below poverty level In the Third Congressional District, 31.61%
of African American adults 75 years and older (4,001) lived below poverty level.
23. In 1989, 3.99% of white households (73,373) in Virginia had income of less
than $5,000, 12.33% of African American households (48,234) in Virginia had income of
less than $5,000. In the Third Congressional District, 16.49% of African American
households (20,942) had income of less than $5,000
24. In 1989, 10.3% of white households (189,448) in Virginia had income of loss
than $10,000; 23.92% of African American households (93,577) in Virginia had income of
less than $10,000. In the Third Congressional District, 29.63% of African American
households (37,619) had income of less than $10,000.
25. In 1989, 17.17% of white households (315,867) in Virginia had income of less
than $15,000; 35.05% of African American households (137,129) in Virginia had income
6
of less than $15,000. In the Third Congressional District, 41.62% of African American
households (52,849) had income of less than $15,000.
26. In 1989, the majority (67.4% or 1,240,526) of white households in Virginia
had income of $25,000 or more; the majority of African American households (55.54% or
217,302) in Virginia had income of $25,000 or less. In the Third Congressional District,
61.54% of African American households (78,138) had income of less than $25,000.
27. In 1989, 51.65% of white households (950,681) in Virginia had income of
$35,000 or more; 28.4% of African American households (111,118) in Virginia had
income of $35,000 or more. In the Third Congressional District, 23.26% of African
American households (29,540) had income of $35,000 or more.
28. In 1989, 31.99% of white households (588,808) in Virginia had income of
$50,000 or more; 13.37% of African American households (52,319) in Virginia had
income of $50,000 or more. In the Third Congressional District, 9.9% of African
American households (12,577) had income of $50,000 or more.
29. In 1989, 13.44% of white households (247,385) in Virginia had income of
$75,000 or more; 3.47% of African American households (13,589) in Virginia had income
of $75,000 or more. In the Third Congressional District, 2.09% of African American
households (2,651) had income of $75,000 or more.
30. In 1989, 6.06% of white households (111,563) in Virginia had income of
$100,000 or more; 1.10% of African American households (4,312) in Virginia had income
of $100,000 or more. In the Third Congressional District, 0.57% of African American
households (724) had income of $100,000 or more.
7
31. In 1990, of 1,309,963 white family households in Virginia, 140,039 (10.69%)
were female-headed households with no husband present. Of 282,714 African American
family households in Virginia, 102,100 (36.1 1%) were female-headed households with no
husband present. In the Third Congressional District, of 89,639 African American family
households, 39,735 (44.33%) were female-headed households with no husband present.
32. In 1990, of 3,666,493 white persons 16 years and over in Virginia, 88,186
(3.51%) were unemployed, of 821,563 African American persons 16 years and over in
Virginia, 47,863 (8.93%) were unemployed. In the Third Congressional District, of
258,932 African American persons 16 years and over, 16,912 (10.54%) were unemployed
33. In 1990, of 3,163,904 white persons 25 years and over in Virginia, 9,76%
(308,766) had less than a 9th grade education, of 676,995 African American persons 25
years and over in Virginia, 17.43% (118,013) had less than a 9th grade education. In the
Third Congressional District, of 208,540 African American persons 25 years and over,
16.13% (33,640) had less than a 9th grade education.
34. In 1990, of 3,163,904 white persons 25 years and over in Virginia, 21.71%
(686,977) had less education than a high school diploma; of 676,995 African American
persons 25 years and over in Virginia, 39.72% (268,893) had less education than a high
school diploma. In the Third Congressional District, of 208,540 African American persons
25 years and over, 41.58% (86,715) had less education than a high school diploma.
35. In 1990, of 3,163,904 white persons 25 years and over in Virginia, a majority
(51.6% or 1,632,522) had some college education or more; of 676,995 African American
persons 25 years and over in Virginia, a majority (67.4% or 456,293) had a high school
8
diploma or less. In the Third Congressional District, of 208,540 African American persons
25 years and over, 69.17% (144,237) had a high school diploma or less.
36. In 1990, of 3,163,904 white persons 25 years and over in Virginia, 32.75%
(1,036,123) had an associate's degree or more education; of 676,995 African American
persons 25 years and over in Virginia, 15.27% (103,352) had an associate's degree or
more education. In the Third Congressional District, of 208,540 African American persons
25 years and over, 13.05% (27,218) had a an associate's degree or more education.
37. In 1990, of 3,163,904 white persons 25 years and over in Virginia, 16.92%
(535,216) had a bachelor’s degree; of 676,995 African American persons 25 years and
over in Virginia, 7.51% (50,841) had a bachelor's degree. In the Third Congressional
District, of 208,540 African American persons 25 years and over, 6.43% (13,403) had a
bachelor’s degree.
38. In 1990, of 3,163,904 white persons 25 years and over in Virginia, 26.98%
(853,581) had a bachelor's degree or more education, of 676,995 African American
persons 25 years and over in Virginia, 11.15% (75,472) had a bachelor's degree or more
education. In the Third Congressional District, of 208,540 African American persons 25
years and over, 9.2% (19,178) had a bachelor’s degree or more.
39. In 1990, of 3,163,904 white persons 25 years and over in Virginia, 10,06%
(318,365) had a graduate or professional degree; of 676,995 African American persons 25
years and over in Virginia, 3.64% (24,631) had a graduate or professional degree. In the
Third Congressional District, of 208,540 African American persons 25 years and over,
2.77% (5,775) had a graduate or professional degree.
9
40. In 1990, of 1,841,346 housing units occupied by white householders in
Virginia, 1,296,422 (70.41%) were owner occupied and 544,924 (29.59%) were renter
occupied; of 389,928 housing units occupied by African American householders in
Virginia, 191,749 (49.18%) were owner occupied and 198,179 (50.82%) were renter
occupied. In the Third Congressional District, of 127,647 housing units occupied by
African American householders, 55,683 (43.62%) were owner occupied and 71,694
(56.38%) were renter occupied.
41. In 1990, of 1,841,346 white occupied housing units, 112,359 (6.10%) had no
vehicle available; of 389,928 African American occupied housing units, 88,454 (22.68%)
had no vehicle available. In the Third Congressional District, of 127,647 African
American occupied housing units, 39,428 (30.89%) had no vehicle available.
42. In 1990, of 1,841,346 white occupied housing units, 19,674 (1.07%) lacked
complete plumbing facilities; of 389,928 African American occupied housing units,
15,553 (3.99%) lacked complete plumbing facilities. In the Third Congressional District,
of 127,647 African American occupied housing units, 1,372 (1,07%) lack complete
plumbing facilities
43. In 1990, of 523,538 white renter-occupied housing units, a majority (56.58%
or 296,153) had a gross rent of $500 or more, of 193,798 African American renter
occupied housing units, a majority (63.89% or 123,822) had a gross rent of $499 or less.
In the Third Congressional District, of 71,060 African American renter occupied housing
units, a majority (77.98% or 55,415) had a gross rent of $499 or less.
10
I declare under penalty of perjury that the above is true and correct
Executed at Richmond, Virginia this ;©_th day of May, 1996.
William S. Cooper
1990 Census Of Population And Housing Summary Tape File 3
Summary Level: State
Virginia: FIPS STATE=51
PER CAPITA INCOME IN 1989 BY RACE
Universe: Persons
Per capita income in 1989:
White $17,361
Black $9,439
American Indian, Eskimo, or Aleut $14,049
Asian or Pacific Islander $14,022
Other race $10,249
□
Per Capita Income In 1989 By Race -- Virginia
$18,000
$16,000
$14,000
$12,000
$ 10,000
$8,000
$6,000
$4,000
$2,000
$ 0
Per Capita Income
Source: 1990 Census of Population and Housing
1990 Census Of Population And Housing Summary Tape File 3A
Summary Level: State
Virginia: FIPS STATE=51
POVERTY STATUS IN 1989 BY RACE BY AGE
Universe: Persons for whom poverty status is determined
Income in 1989 below poverty level:
Persons % by race
White:
Under 5 years 27,179 8.53%
5 years 5,509 8.69%
6 to 11 years 29,351 8.17%
12 to 17 years 26,331 7.68%
18 to 64 years 196,988 6.48%
65 to 74 years 28,040 8.58%
75 years and over 29,572 15.37%
All Ages 342,970 7.38%
Black:
Under 5 years 33,873 34.73%
5 years 6,676 34.24%
6 to 11 years 35,111 30.95%
12 to 17 years 27,202 26.51%
18 to 64 years 113,230 17.00%
65 to 74 years 17,088 26.63%
75 years and over 12,792 34.96%
All ages 245,972 22.36%
Poverty Status in 1989 by Race by Age -- Virginia
years years years years years and
over
Source: 1990 Census of Population and Housing Summary Tape 3A
1990 Census Of Population And Housing Summary Tape File 3A
Summary Level: State
Virginia: FIPS STATE=51
RACE OF HOUSEHOLDER BY HOUSEHOLD INCOME IN 1989
Universe: Households
Households % by Race
White:
Less than $5,000 73,373 3.99%
$5,000 to $9,999 116,075 6.31%
$10,000 to $14,999 126,419 6.87%
$15,000 to $24,999 284,477 15.45%
$25,000 to $34,999 289,845 15.75%
$35,000 to $49,999 361,873 19.66%
$50,000 to $74,999 341,423 18.55%
$75,000 to $99,999 135,822 7.38%
$100,000 or more 111,563 6.06%
Total 1,840,870 100.00%
Black:
Less than $5,000 48,234 12.33%
$5,000 to $9,999 45,343 11.59%
$10,000 to $14,999 43,552 11.13%
$15,000 to $24,999 80,173 20.49%
$25,000 to $34,999 62,904 16.07%
$35,000 to $49,999 58,799 15.03%
$50,000 to $74,999 38,730 9.90%
$75,000 to $99,999 9,277 2.37%
$100,000 or more 4,312 1.10%
Total 391,324 100.00%
Race of Householder by Household Income in 1989 -- Virginia
$5,000 $9,999 $14,999 $24,999 $34,999 $49,999 $74,999 $99,999
Source: 1990 Census of Population and Housing Summary Tape 3A
1990 Census Of Population And Housing Summary Tape File 3A
Summary Level: State
Virginia: FIPS STATE=51
RACE OF HOUSEHOLDER BY HOUSEHOLD TYPE AND PRESENCE AND
OF CHILDREN
Universe: Households
Households % by Race
White:
Family households:
Married-couple family:
With own children under 18 years 515,405 39.35%
No own children under 18 years 607,524 46.38%
Total Married-couple
Other family:
Male householder, no wife present:
1,122,929 85.72%
With own children under 18 years 19,768 1.51%
No own children under 18 years 27,227 2.08%
Total Male householder 46,995 3.59%
Female householder, no husband present:
With own children under 18 years 68,999 5.27%
No own children under 18 years 71,040 5.42%
Total Female householder 140,039 10.69%
Total Family households 1,309,963 100%
Nonfamily households
Black:
Family households:
530,907
Married-couple family:
With own children under 18 years 84,485 29.88%
No own children under 18 years 78,291 27.69%
Total Married-couple
Other family:
Male householder, no wife present:
162,776 57.58%
With own children under 18 years 6,909 2.44%
No own children under 18 years 10,929 3.87%
Total Male householder 17,838 6.31%
Female householder, no husband present:
With own children under 18 years 60,542 21,41%
No own children under 18 years 41,558 14.70%
Total Female householder 102,100 36.11%
Total Family households 282,714 100%
Nonfamily households 108,610
Family Household Type by Race -- Virginia
Married
couple,
children
under 18
Female
householder,
children
under 18
Male
householder,
children
under 18
No Children
under 18
Source: 1990 Census of Population and Housing Summary Tape 3A
1990 Census Of Population And Housing Summary Tape File 3A
Summary Level: State
Virginia: FIPS STATE=51
RACE BY EMPLOYMENT STATUS
Universe: Persons 16 years and over
Persons % by Race
White:
Civilian:
Employed 2,422,537 96.49%
Unemployed 88,186 3.51%
Labor Force Participation 2,510,723 68.11%
Not in labor force 1,175,770 31.89%
Persons 16 and Over
Black:
3,686,493
Civilian:
Employed 488,283 91.07%
Unemployed 47,863 8.93%
Labor Force Participation 536,146 65.23%
Not in labor force 285,737 34.77%
Persons 16 and Over 821,883
N o t e : U n e m p l o y m e n t r a t e is d e f i n e d a s a p e r c e n t a g e o f t h e civ i l i a n l a b o r f o r c e .
L a b o r f o r c e p a r t i c i p a t i o n r a t e is d e f i n e d a s a p e r c e n t a g e o f
t h e ci v i l i a n p o p u l a t i o n o v e r 1 6 .
Unemployment & Labor Force Participation Rates by Race --
Virginia
Note: Unemployment rate is defined as a percentage of the civilian labor force. Labor force participation rate is defined as a percentage of the civilian population over 16.
Source: 1990 Census of Population and Housing Summary Tape 3A
1990 Census Of Population And Housing Summary Tape File 3A
Summary Level: State
Virginia: FIPS STATE=51
RACE BY EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT
Universe: Persons 25 years and over
White:
Less than 9th grade
9th to 12th grade, no diploma
High school graduate (includes equivalency)
Some college, no degree
Associate degree
Bachelor's degree
Graduate or professional degree
Universe
Black:
Less than 9th grade
9th to 12th grade, no diploma
High school graduate (includes equivalency)
Some college, no degree
Associate degree
Bachelor's degree
Graduate or professional degree
Universe
Persons % by race
308,766 9.76%
378,211 11.95%
844,405 26.69%
596,399 18.85%
182,542 5.77%
535,216 16.92%
318,365 10.06%
3,163,904 100%
118,013 17.43%
150,880 22.29%
187,400 27.68%
117,350 17.33%
27,880 4.12%
50,841 7.51%
24,631 3,64%
676,995 100%
( P e r c e n t a g e o f
P o p u l a t i o n
OV6rMo%
25.00%
20 .00%
15.00%
10.00%
5.00%
0 .00%
Educational Attainment by Race - Virginia
Less than 9th
grade
9th to 12th
grade, no
diploma
High school
graduate
(includes
equivalency)
Some
college, no
degree
Associate
degree
Bachelor's
degree
Graduate or
professional
degree
Source: 1990 Census of Population and Housing
Summary Level: State
Virginia: FIPS STATE=51
TENURE BY RACE OF HOUSEHOLDER
Universe: Occupied housing units
1990 Census Of Population And Housing Summary Tape File 3A
Housing Units % by Race
Owner occupied:
White 1,296,422 70.41%
Black 191,749 49.18%
Renter occupied:
White 544,924 29.59%
Black 198,179 50.82%
t
Housing Tenure by Race Virginia
P e r c e n t a g e o f O c c u p i e d
H o u s i n g U n i t s
Owner occupied Renter occupied
□ Black
□ White
Source: 1990 Census of Population and Housing Summary Tape 3A
Summary Level: State
Virginia: FIPS STATE=51
RACE OF HOUSEHOLDER BY VEHICLES AVAILABLE
Universe: Occupied housing units
1990 Census Of Population And Housing Summary Tape File 3A
Housing Units % by Race
White:
None 112,359 6.10%
1 or more 1,728,987 93.90%
Black:
None 88,454 22.68%
1 or more 301,474 77.32%
P e r c e n t a g e o f
O c c u p i e d H o u s i n g
U n i t s
Race of Householder by Vehicles Available -- Virginia
□ Black
□ White
Source: 1990 Census of Population and Housing Summary Tape 3A
1990 Census Of Population And Housing Summary Tape File 3A
Summary Level: State
Virginia: FIPS STATE=51
RACE OF HOUSEHOLDER BY PLUMBING FACILITIES
Universe: Occupied housing units ____________
Housing Units % by Race
White:
Complete plumbing facilities 1,821,672 98,93%
Lacking complete plumbing facilities 19,674 1.07%
Black:
Complete plumbing facilities 374,375 96.01%
Lacking complete plumbing facilities 15,553 3.99%
P e r c e n t a g e o f O c c u p i e d
H o u s i n g U n i t s
Race of Householder by Plumbing Facilities -- Virginia
4 .0 0 % -i/ /
/
3 .5 0 % - / /
3 .0 0 % -
/
/
1 : :
r i / v r •
2 .50% /
; .
:
2 .0 0 % -
//
///
1 .5 0 % -
/
1 .0 0 % -
/
/
/ • -'V:-
0 .5 0 % -
0.00%
/ ' |
r,
□ Black
□ White
Lacking
Complete
Plumbing
Source: 1990 Census of Population and Housing Summary Tape 3A
1990 Census Of Population And Housing Summary Tape File 3A
Summary Level: State
Virginia: FIPS STATE=51
RACE OF HOUSEHOLDER BY GROSS RENT
Universe: Specified renter-occupied housing units
Rental Units % by Race
White:
Less than $200 26,690 5.10%
$200 to $299 44,185 8.44%
$300 to $499 156,510 29.89%
$500 to $749 160,754 30.71%
$750 to $999 65,419 12.50%
$1,000 or more 40,659 7.77%
No cash rent 29,321 5.60%
Total 523,538 100.00%
Black:
Less than $200 32,132 16.58%
$200 to $299 20,577 10.62%
$300 to $499 71,113 36.69%
$500 to $749 44,809 23.12%
$750 to $999 11,462 5.91%
$1,000 or more 3,651 1.88%
No cash rent 10,054 5.19%
Total 193,798 100.00%
Race of Householder by Gross Rent -- Virginia
P e r c e n t a g e o f R e n t e r - O c c u p i e d
Source: 1990 Census of Population and Housing Summary Tape 3A
Summary Level: State-Congressional District (104th)
District 3: FIPS STATE=51, CONGR=03
PER CAPITA INCOME IN 1989 BY RACE
Universe: Persons
Per capita income in 1989:
1990 Census Of Population And Housing Summary Tape File 3
White $14,036
Black $8,502
American Indian, Eskimo, or Aleut $11,071
Asian or Pacific Islander $8,035
Other race $8,422
□
$16,000
$14,000
$12,000
$10,000
$8,000
$6,000
$4,000
$2,000
$ 0
Per Capita Income In 1989 By Race - 3rd Congressional District (104th) -
___________ _ Virginia _______ __ ____
Per Capita Income
Source: 1990 Census of Population and Housing
Summary Level: State-Congressional District (104th)
District 3: FIPS STATE=51, CONGR=03
POVERTY STATUS IN 1989 BY RACE BY AGE
Universe: Persons for whom poverty status is determined
1990 Census Of Population And Housing Summary Tape File 3A
Income in 1989 below poverty level:
Persons % by race
White:
Under 5 years 1,755 13.40%
5 years 176 8.17%
6 to 11 years 1,276 11.03%
12 to 17 years 992 9.72%
18 to 64 years 9,792 8.36%
65 to 74 years 1,433 9.52%
75 years and over 1,237 12.89%
All Ages 16,661 9.31%
Black:
Under 5 years 14,847 46.23%
5 years 2,945 46.49%
6 to 11 years 14,936 41.71%
12 to 17 years 10,994 35.07%
18 to 64 years 44,727 21.69%
65 to 74 years 6,126 26.23%
75 years and over 4,001 31.61%
All ages 98,576 28.34%
Poverty Status in 1989 by Race by Age - 3rd Congressional District (104th) -
Virginia
years years years years years and
over
Source: 1990 Census of Population and Housing Summary Tape 3A
Summary Level: State-Congressional District (104th)
District 3: FIPS STATE=51, CONGR=03
1990 Census Of Population And Housing Summary Tape File 3A
RACE OF HOUSEHOLDER BY HOUSEHOLD INCOME IN 1989
Universe: Households
Households % by Race
White:
Less than $5,000 4,106 5,27%
$5,000 to $9,999 6,566 8,43%
$10,000 to $14,999 6,954 8.93%
$15,000 to $24,999 16,547 21.24%
$25,000 to $34,999 14,688 18.85%
$35,000 to $49,999 14,828 19.03%
$50,000 to $74,999 10,219 13.12%
$75,000 to $99,999 2,553 3.28%
$100,000 or more 1,453 1.86%
Total 77,914 100.00%
Black:
Less than $5,000 20,942 16.49%
$5,000 to $9,999 16,677 13.13%
$10,000 to $14,999 15,230 11.99%
$15,000 to $24,999 25,289 19.92%
$25,000 to $34,999 19,302 15.20%
$35,000 to $49,999 16,963 13.36%
$50,000 to $74,999 9,926 7.82%
$75,000 to $99,999 1,927 1.52%
$100,000 or more 724 0.57%
Total 126,980 100.00%
Race of Householder by Household Income in 1989 -- 3rd Congressional
District (104th) - Virginia
$5,000 $9,999 $14,999 $24,999 $34,999 $49,999 $74,999 $99,999
Source: 1990 Census of Population and Housing Summary Tape 3A
1990 Census Of Population And Housing Summary Tape File 3A
Summary Level: State-Congressional District (104th)
District 3: FIPS STATE=51, CONGR=03
RACE OF HOUSEHOLDER BY HOUSEHOLD TYPE AND PRESENCE AND
OF CHILDREN
Universe: Households
Households % by Race
White:
Family households:
Married-couple family:
With own children under 18 years 17,072 34.76%
No own children under 18 years 23,317 47.47%
Total Married-couple 40,389 82.23%
Other family:
Male householder, no wife present:
With own children under 18 years 795 1.62%
No own children under 18 years 1,207 2.46%
Total Male householder 2,002 4.08%
Female householder, no husband present:
With own children under 18 years 3,301 6.72%
No own children under 18 years 3,423 6.97%
Total Female householder 6,724 13.69%
Total Family households 49,115 100%
Nonfamily households 28,799
Black:
Family households:
Married-couple family:
With own children under 18 years 20,883 23.30%
No own children under 18 years 23,675 26.41%
Total Married-couple 44,558 49.71%
Other family:
Male householder, no wife present:
With own children under 18 years 1,799 2.01%
No own children under 18 years 3,547 3.96%
Total Male householder 5,346 5.96%
Female householder, no husband present:
With own children under 18 years 23,986 26.76%
No own children under 18 years 15,749 17.57%
Total Female householder 39,735 44.33%
Total Family households 89,639 100%
Nonfamily households 37,341
Family Household Type by Race - 3rd Congressional District (104th) -
Virginia
under 18 under 18 under 18
Source: 1990 Census of Population and Housing Summary Tape 3A
1990 Census Of Population And Housing Summary Tape File 3A
Summary Level: State-Congressional District (104th)
District 3: FIPS STATE=51, CONGR=03
RACE BY EMPLOYMENT STATUS
Universe: Persons 16 years and over
Persons % by Race
White:
Civilian:
Employed 86,887 95.83%
Unemployed 3,779 4.17%
Labor Force Participation 90,666 63.18%
Not in labor force 52,831 36.82%
Persons 16 and Over 143,497
Black:
Civilian:
Employed 143,596 89.46%
Unemployed 16,912 10.54%
Labor Force Participation 160,508 61.99%
Not in labor force 98,424 38.01%
Persons 16 and Over 258,932
Note: Unemployment rate is defined as a percentage of the civilian labor force.
Labor force participation rate is defined as a percentage of
the civilian population over 16.
3rdUnemployment & Labor Force Participation Rates by Race --
Congressional District (104th) -- Virginia
70.00%
60.00%
50.00%
40.00%
30.00%
20 .00%
10 .00%
0 .00%
Unemployed Labor Force Participation
Note: Unemployment rate is defined as a percentage of the civilian labor force. Labor force participation rate is defined as a percentage of the civilian population over 16,
Source: 1990 Census of Population and Housing Summary Tape 3A
Summary Level: State-Congressional District (104th)
District 3: FIPS STATE=51, CONGR=03
RACE BY EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT
Universe: Persons 25 years and over
1990 Census Of Population And Housing Summary Tape File 3A
Persons % by race
White:
Less than 9th grade 12,438 9.89%
9th to 12th grade, no diploma 20,897 16.61%
High school graduate (includes equivalency) 38,061 30.26%
Some college, no degree 25,282 20.10%
Associate degree 6,918 5.50%
Bachelor's degree 14,760 11.73%
Graduate or professional degree 7,434 5.91%
Universe 125,790 100%
Black:
Less than 9th grade 33,640 16.13%
9th to 12th grade, no diploma 53,075 25.45%
High school graduate (includes equivalency) 57,522 27.58%
Some college, no degree 37,085 17.78%
Associate degree 8,040 3.86%
Bachelor's degree 13,403 6.43%
Graduate or professional degree 5,775 2.77%
Universe 208,540 100%
( P e r c e n t a g e o f
P o p u l a t i o n
o v e r 2 5 )
Educational Attainment by Race -- 3rd Congressional District (104th)
Virginia
diploma (includes degree
equivalency)
degree
Source: 1990 Census of Population and Housing
1990 Census Of Population And Housing Summary Tape File 3A
Summary Level: State-Congressional District (104th)
District 3: FIPS STATE=51, CONGR=03
TENURE BY RACE OF HOUSEHOLDER
Universe: Occupied housing units
Housing Units % by Race
Owner occupied:
White 45,421 58.22%
Black 55,683 43.62%
Renter occupied:
White 32,599 41.78%
Black 71,964 56.38% I
Housing Tenure by Race -- 3rd Congressional District (104th) -- Virginia
P e r c e n t a g e o f O c c u p i e d
H o u s i n g U n i t s
Source: 1990 Census of Population and Housing Summary Tape 3A
1990 Census Of Population And Housing Summary Tape File 3A
Summary Level: State-Congressional District (104th)
District 3: FIPS STATE=51, CONGR=Q3
RACE OF HOUSEHOLDER BY VEHICLES AVAILABLE
Universe: Occupied housing units
Housing Units % by Race
White:
None 7,812 10,01%
1 or more 70,208 89.99%
Black:
None 39,428 30.89%
1 or more 88,219 69.11%
Race of Householder by Vehicles Available --
P e r c e n t a g e o f —Virginia
O c c u p i e d H o u s i n g
3rd Congressional District (104th)
□ Black
□ White
Source: 1990 Census of Population and Housing Summary Tape 3A
Summary Level: State-Congressional District (104th)
District 3: FIPS STATE=51, CONGR=03
1990 Census Of Population And Housing Summary Tape File 3A
RACE OF HOUSEHOLDER BY PLUMBING FACILITIES
Universe: Occupied housing units ____________
Housing Units % by Race
White:
Complete plumbing facilities 77,654 99.53%
Lacking complete plumbing facilities 366 0.47%
Black:
Complete plumbing facilities 126,275 98.93%
Lacking complete plumbing facilities 1,372 1.07%
Race of Householder by Plumbing Facilities --
P e r c e n t a g e o f O c c u p i e d , „ ̂ „,, , ... . .
H o u s i n g u n i t s (104th) - Virginia
3rd Congressional District
1.20%
1.00%
0.80%
0.60%
0.40%
0 .20%
0 .00%
Lacking
Complete
Plumbing
□ Black
□ White
Source: 1990 Census of Population and Housing Summary Tape 3A
1990 Census Of Population And Housing Summary Tape File 3A
Summary Level: State-Congressional District (104th)
District 3: FIPS STATE=51, CONGR=03
RACE OF HOUSEHOLDER BY GROSS RENT
Universe: Specified renter-occupied housing units
Rental Units % by Race
White:
Less than $200 1,856 5.81%
$200 to $299 1,858 5.82%
$300 to $499 15,434 48.35%
$500 to $749 9,687 30.35%
$750 to $999 1,026 3.21%
$1,000 or more 541 1.69%
No cash rent 1,520 4.76%
Total 31,922 100.00%
Black:
Less than $200 16,479 23.19%
$200 to $299 7,352 10.35%
$300 to $499 31,584 44.45%
$500 to $749 12,151 17.10%
$750 to $999 1,209 1.70%
$1,000 or more 153 0.22%
No cash rent 2,132 3.00%
Total 71,060 100.00%
Race of Householder by Gross Rent -- 3rd Congressional District (104th)
Percentage of Renter-Occupied Vi rg i n ia
Source: 1990 Census of Population and Housing Summary Tape 3A
for llic seat vacated l>y the tie .1 of the incumbent.
In llic February 15, 1^77. I. icraltc runoff. Mr.
Johnson defeated Ins white opponent by 2 . I'Ll votes
to Z.Obl.111 H owever, in the April 5. I')77. hnal
eleetion. Mr. Johnson failed to. allrael any aihiitional
while Mippoil, which was needed to ensure his
election over Ins Republican opponent. In 4 predom
inantly while precincts, he polled 25 votes in the
February runoff compared to 502 votes for Ins
Democratic opponent.1'* In the final election Mr.
Johnson could increase Ins support in these precincts
to only 4H votes, while Ins Republican opponent
polled KU2 voles .11’ Mr. Johnson lost the election by
over 700 vo les .11* In that election G eorgetown
County elected its first Republican to the statehouse
in this century.11*
Virginia
Shite House—Mtillimenibcr Districts
The Virginia House o f Delegates elects its l(X)
members from 20 single-member districts, 2K multi-
member districts, and 4 lloterial districts.1** (Flolert-
al districts arc single-member districts whose bound
aries encompass other districts, e lec tors in these
districts, therefore, vote lor candidates who will
represent the lloterial district, as well as for those
who will represent the other districts ) O f the 1(X)
members in the house o f delegates, 4 are black.3*'
1 his level o f black representation is related in part to
the fact that only one district in the entire house of
delegates has a potential black voting-age m a j o r i
ty. ’*’ Although blacks constitute Ib percent of the
State population, and are concentrated in the south
ern anil southeastern portions of the Stale, the
diaw m g of legislative boundaries and the extensive
use o f multunember districts has hunted black
opportunities lor elected o ll ice .’*’
Cuircully, all four blacks in the Virginia House of
Delegates are elected liom mullimember districts In
( lane ( inint is. " Johnson Wins |*i 1111 ■ 1 y Kimoll. ' (*«."**.(.*••*. (5 f )
/•**., , I . I. | 7 1*117 p i
"* l l .m r f oiiihiis, " ^ iu i» | | U ms \ ' j i .ml Sr*t m Hi mint I .«•*(•>••» m
<S( | /»*»»,» Api 17 1**77 11 | |l< 1.11 >1 itf l j i i u u r n I•' 1 th r V o.mt v ••{
( n'oi iirioAii. I lir W lm lr N idiiI^ i «•( \ o t r i ( jm |« >1 | )isi« is 1 11H 11. •••%* of
Hrpii ' scni jiiv rs
•’* Ibi.l
Ihul
••• llml
t/iwlc of ViiRiiio. I illc 24 | . ( 12 1 I lm»i K fn d i ie k ilur> loi.
Virginia Aini' iu 411 (. i ' l l I dn it ir s Ihnoii ;in«l fudv i • ohito- 1 g \inlf
.111«»inr v. Vtr gnu.1 A n i r in an ( 1 s il i lU il if s Ihuoii inter s ir »s m H •< !• *#••••»• I
^ . J d n 1 1. I*/KU ( lu'ir-illc 1 1 Hril 4 \ Kt m in t W jm l ( #ol«H«« 1 g I n i n \ « 1
**' loud l 1 tilt*f Ini I'niiiit al Slmlirs. / hi Aon. •*».#/ /<mh 1 .»/ L I h , i r j
rV/hi«/» '-••I IO | I**H | ), |. 2*2
*** l l‘»*j i. i .dc i. I Ii / .iIm i Ii V j n l icjim-. ami Meg Williams. I Hr •!/**«.<«.*, *•/
5(i
these p.u ocular d s is, candidates must 1 tin d is -*
tnctwiile loi lim ) seven seats 111 llic house ol
delegates. Since none ot these districts has a black
majority, there is a tenuous d e c im a l base loi tilas k
candidates As a lesult ol the lelusal ol many
whiles to suppoit black candidates, only single-shot
voting in the black community has 111 some instances
assured black representation. In I'D'), ol the loin
black delegates elected, t inee ran far behind white
delegates elected in the same nmltnnembei districts
In Newport News, Delegate Robert C Scott ran at
least 2.5IX) votes behind the successful sslute candi
dates.1*1 In Richmond, Delegates Hcni.nnm Lambert
and James Christian, Jr., ran at least t.tXXI voles
behind the successful while candidates.1** In fact,
Mr. Christian avoided defeat by only 442 votes.1*1
Only the late William F Robinson, former delegate
from Norfolk, avoided tins situation in the last bouse
o f delegates election.1*" Accord ing h> Norfolk c o m
munity leader Hvclyn Mutts, however, Mr. Kolunson
finished first in the seven-member Norfolk district
because a ceilam number of blacks voted for bun
only.1** In past elections, Mr. Robinson had finished
seventh m the seven-member district despite the fact
lie had been endorsed by the local Democratic
party.1’" efforts were made in l')7‘> to avoid tins
through smgle-sliot voting.1”
The piohlcm for black candidates m multunember
legislative districts in Virginia is that they must gam
white support or organize extensive single-shot
voting campaigns in the black community, liven
when blacks are part o f a slate, seeming while
support is problematic. I or example. Delegates
Lambert and Christian ran m the Richmond multi-
member district In l ‘)7') as part o f a Democratic
slate. Although tins gamed litem some while sup
port, it also gave the whites on the slate mote black
support.1'1 Accord ing to a study by Michael Drown
o f the Vngiiua Stale Conference ol IIrauchcs,
N A A C I’, one out ol tw o black votcis wippoitcd
white candidates, but only one ol tluee while* volets
supported a black candidate m the 1777 house of
delegates race m Richmond
1 '-V'-’ I.J 1' , ‘l f t i . , (I j t o l h t m li. Vfl ll , c W ..... . , \ , i t \ . v i I xml f m l l
IIt m j h r i , net /In-.I n . i , J
*** Kf mil •* k mill ( tolt||>ei|( liilettievc
Muli i ir l l l i tiwo. 1 <•<•«,Iniftlot. l» | ,| t u r n It .M .v .o rs , Vngnn* N A At I*,
m t r r s i rw m K nlu n o n . l , V * . J.,„ | 1 | •* Kl» th«i., . l i<i , .1, ,IN Hi..wu
I nit 11 t r u |
*** / h r .4 I m . i m n . p |f»
*•* II...I . |. 4K
’•* lltt.l
'** II*mI . p w
I Hulls. tiHli.tti I e m n i t i tl ( t i i / ru s l.*r ,1 I . in . zii.ui
i .xr i s m m m N . n lo l l . j 5 | oh |
* • Ho.I
** II-..I
**' Muli . t r ! lit .m i l . •‘All Anal V MS , ,f th r Kts lun.ni.l l | . . , .vr .*1
I jtrv Ka, r tun|Mihltv|n .1 |**Mf)»,, n
i: I
CL
T A B L E 2.1 Black Elected Officials in Southern States Covered Under the Preclearance
Provisions of the Voting Rights Act, July 1980
US. State
Congress legis la ture County ohfices Munic ipal o ff ices
Other
officials TotalSenate Mouse Senate House
County
qoverni.nq
boa'd
la w en- County
forcemenl school
officials board
Other
positions Mayor
Governing
body
City
school
board Other
Alabama 0 0 2 13 18 40 23 9 16 110 2 5 0 238
Georgia 0 0 2 21 20 8 31 5 7 139 12 4 0 249
Louisiana 0 0 2 10 65 34 87 1 12 1 19 4 8 1 363
Mississippi 0 0 2 15 27 77 45 34 17 143 13 14 0 357
Nonh Carolina' 0 0 1 4 18 7 42 2 13 136 16 3 5 247
South Carolina 0 0 0 14 34 20 47 5 13 86 9 1 9 238
Texas 0 t 0 13 5 18 77’ 0 5 68 0 5 4 196
Virginia 0 0 1 4 34 5 — 3 5 71 — 1 0 124
Total 0 1 10 94 24 1 209 352 59 88 872 56 41 19 2.042
' Statewide data, in d u in g the 40 counties subject to preclearance
’ School t-oard members elected in independent school districts
— Not an elective position.
Source Jont Center tor Political Studies. N a u c a i Rosier ol Sleek E ec.'ec 0 “ c e s voi to ( t § s t ) Data or. Virginia succeed ty Virginia State
Conference NAACP
T A B L E 2.3 B lacks as Percentage of Population and Elected Offic ia ls in
Southern States Covered Under the Preclearance Provis ions of the
Vot ing Rights Act, July 1980
Elected officials
Siaic Populaiion porcenl black. 1980 Tolal oflieials Ulack officials
Number Percenl ol lotal
Alabama 25 6% 4.151 230 5 7°.0
Georgia 26.0 6,660 249 3.7
Louisiana 29.4 4.710 363 7.7
Mississippi 35.2 5.271 307 7 3
Norib Carolina' 22 4 5.295 247 4.7
Soulh Carolina 30 4 3,225 230 7 4
Texas 12.0 24.720 196 0 .0
Virginia 18 9 3.04 1 124 4.1
’ Siaiewide data. including ihe 40 counlies subject lo preclearance.
S o u ic e Jom i C e n io f lo t I ’ u li l ic a l S tu d ie s . N .iim n o l H o sier o l UidC* t i le c lu d U thO dls . vu l 10 (1 9 0 1 ) Dul«ji o n V i iy i t iu s u p p lie d Dy
Virginia Stalu Conlerunce NAACP
T A B L E 2.4 Black Elected Off icials as Percentage of all Elected Off ic ials in
Southern States Covered Under the Preclearance Provis ions of the
Vot ing Rights Act, July 1980
Slale
U S Slale
County
governing
Local
school
Municipal
qovernmcj
Population
peicent
Cong ress leyisialute body board boa id black. 1900
Senale House Senate House
Alabama 0 0°'.. 0 0% 5 7°/u 12 4U. o 6 6uo 7 l “ o 5 3“ o 25 6°u
Georgia 0 0 0 0 3 6 1 1 7 3 4 5 9 5 2 26 0
Louisiana 0 0 0 0 5 1 9 5 13 2 13 4 9 4 29 4
Mississippi 0 0 0 0 3 0 12 3 6 6 10 3 10 4 3!. 2
North Carolina' 0 0 0 0 2 0 3 3 3 7 7.4 It 0 22 4
Soulh Carolina 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 3 1 1 7 11 6 6 7 30 4
Texas 0 0 4 2 0 0 0 7 0 5 1 0 1 '1 12 0
Virginia 0 0 0.0 2.5 4 0 6 0 — 5 2 10 9
' Statewide data, including the 40 counties subject to preciearance.
— not an elective position.
S o u rce s U S O c p .ir tm o n l o l C o m m e rc e H u i im u o l ihe C e n s u s Potmi.uiy C /e»< /«*•/ O lh c n tls vo l l n o .mO
Jum i C e n tu r lo r P o lit ic a l S lu J te s . N j h o i u t l H o b l c t o t L lo t l e d OUn.i.tib vo l 10 (1 'J t i t ) O u tii o n V irg in ia hy V m jim a
o ia iu C o n lo ie n c e N A A C P
I S
T A B L E 2.10 Percentage of Vot ing Age Populat ion Reported Registered in
Jur isd ic t ions Covered by Sect ion 5 of the Vot ing Rights Act, by
Race and Ethnici ty, 1976
State Percent reported registered, 1976
Whito Black Hispanic
American Indian/
Alaskan Native
Alabama 75.4% 58.1% __
Alaska 73.0 _ 62 0%Arizona 715 _ 60.9% 40 0California" 65.3 __ 49 5
Colorado' GO 1 _ 52 8
Florida" 66 5 _ 63.7
Georgia 73.2 56.3
Louisiana 78.8 63 9 _
Michigan"' 63.7 52.4
Mississippi 77.7 67 4
Now York" 69.0 51.4
North Carolina" 63.1 40 2 65.6
South Carolina 64.1 60 6 _
South Dakota" 77.3 _ 52 7
Texas 69.4 64 0 61.1
Virginia 67.0 60.7 _
Solocted county (counties) subject to preclearanco rnthor than entire Stale.
Soloctod towns subjoct to preciearance rathor than ontire Slate.
— Group not covorod undor soction 5
S o u tco U S . D e p n r lm e n l o l C o m m e rc e . O iirn a u o l the C e n iu s . R e g is tr a tio n n n d V oting m N o v o m b e r 19 7 0 — J u risd ic tio n s C o v e r e d
by th e V o ting R ig h ts A c t A m e n d m e n ts o l 1 9 / 5. s e n e s P -2 3 n o 74 ( iy /0 1 , la b lo s 1 e n d 2
Business,
.Science & Technology
Virginia
Statistical Abstract
1994-95 Edition
Prepared under the direction of
Michael A. Spar, Ph.D.
Research Associate
Demographic Studies
Center for Public Service
University of Virginia
Charlpttesville
1994
APEX'90
Award for Publication Excellence
for Desktop Publications
Figure 9.1
Popular Vote Cast for President in Virginia, 1984-1992
a ,
Source: Table 9.11
Figure 9.2
Black Elected Officials, 1991
S'
i
14t
12-
10-
8-*
6-'
4-
2-
0-*
- 35 .
V - -> Vt s' ||| M . | /" xC -.v . % 1 1 :
' -./'sot '•V > ' *. • < :s s --- ; i|||§
r.
il l • . . . , . > ;
•> V • •
k g ■e~ im l a i l l l a J
US VA DE DC FL GA KY MD NC SC TN WV
Source: Table 9.18
278 ■
9 • Government and Elections
TABLE 9.8
Black Elected Officials by Office for the U.S.,
Virginia, and Surrounding States: 1989-1991
1991
Tool
U.S,
t Stale
Legislatures
city
ft County
Offices
Law
Enforce.
ment Education
1990
Total
United States 7,445 476 4,493 847 1.629 7,335
Virginia 151 11 127 IS 149
Delaware 26 3 14 3 6 22
District d Columbia 209 4 198 7 235
Florida 184 14 127 26 17 177
Georgia 511 37 360 26 88 495
Kentucky 71 3 54 6 8 70
Maryland 132 32 71 23 6 118
North Carolina 443 19 324 24 76 453
South Carolina 405 21 246 12 126 396
Tennessee 163 14 100 25 24 149
West Virginia 25 2 19 4 25
SOURCE: U.S. Department of Conmerce, Bureau of the Cenaua. S ta tistica l Abstract a t the U nled Stales, 1991. U.S.
Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C., annual.
NOTES: Ae of January at each year.
'U .S . a State Legislatures' Indudee elected state adminstralori.
■City a County Offices' Indudee county commfulonert and coundlmen, mayors, vice mayors, aldermen,
regional officials, and other.
'Law Enforcement* indudee judges, magistrates, constables, marshals, sheriffs, justices of the peace, and other.
‘ Education* includes members o( state education agencies, college boards, school boards, and other.
TABLE 9.S
Women Holding State and Local Public Offices for
the U.S., Virginia, and Surrounding States: 1975-1992
Statewide
Elective
Executive
Office,
1992
Stats
Legislature,
1992
County
Governing
Boards,
1988
. " T "
Municipal
Council
M anibafs,
1985
" 1984
. ..To tal
II 1975
Total
United States 60 1,375 1,653 14,672 17,077 16,083 6,997
Virginia 1 17 49 211 248 226 132
Delaware 1 8 2 57 66 55 33
District d Columbia (NA) (NA) (NA) 7 6 6 3
Florida 1 30 51 311 366 395 204
Georgia 34 28 251 252 262 93
Kentucky 8 17 450 456 34
Maryland **• 44 21 133 195 157 92
North Carolna 25 45 337 418 332 174
South Carolina 1 22 36 184 189 127 84
Tennessee 15 .117 144 212 196 96
West Virginia 28 11 202 209 204 135
SOURCES: U.S. Department at Commerce, Bureau of the Cenaua. Statistical Abstract a t the Undsd States, 199Z U.S.
Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C., annual; U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau d the Census.
State and M etropolian Ares Data Book, 1966. U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C„ 1986.
NOTES: 'Statewide Elective Executive Office' as of July. Exdudas women elected to the judiciary, women appointed to
state cabinet-level positions, women elected to executive poets by the legislature, and eiacted members ot
university Board ot Trusteas or Boards d Education.
NA—N d applicable.
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