Politics & Government

Citizens/Voters Guide to the Upcoming Redistricting of Virginia

What you need to know about redistricting

The decennial sweepstakes over power and politics in Virginia kicks off in Fairfax tomorrow . The public is invited to a joint hearing convened by the Senate and House committees who are redrawing the state’s political boundary lines to accommodate population growth in Loudoun and Prince Williams counties.

Monday the Virginia General Assembly opens in a special session whose sole purpose is to create two new Senate districts and four new house seats.  There are 100 seats in the General Assembly and 40 seats in the state Senate. Those numbers won't change. They just draw the district lines in a different way.

The State Legislature decided to do their usual legislative session that ended the early part of March.  Then return to Richmond to handle redistricting separately. Both the General Assembly, which is controlled by Republicans, and the State Senate, which is controlled by Democrats, must agree on a plan for redrawing the lines. That plan then goes to the governor, who is a Republican.

Find out what's happening in McLeanfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The Virginia  General Assembly must realign the boundaries of its 40 Senate seats and 100 delegate districts once every 10 years to reflect new census numbers.  The state's population is now 8 million. That means each house district should contain 80,000 people and each senate district, 200,000 people.

The GOP-controlled House presented its redistricting plan Tuesday. The GOP has proposed three new house seats in Loudoun and Prince William counties.

Find out what's happening in McLeanfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

“In the House, Republicans who rule that chamber packed up the districts of three downstate Democrats and moved them into the fast-growing suburbs of northern Virginia,”  according to the Associated Press.

“Virginia grew from slightly more than 7 million people in 2000 to more than 8 million in the 2010 Census. Because most of the growth was just outside the Washington Beltway, it was inevitable that fast-growing areas such as Prince William and Loudoun would gain seats at the expense of rural areas that grew little or lost population," the AP reported.

"Lawmakers are under pressure to enact the new lines quickly to allow for August primaries and November general elections for all 100 House of Delegates seats and all 40 Senate seats," the AP reported.

 New maps for Virginia's 11 congressional districts have not been filed. U.S. House races aren't until the fall of 2012, giving lawmakers more time to finish congressional redistricting, according to the AP.

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Saturday's Public Hearing: 10:30 a.m. - Fairfax County Gov't Center Auditorium (12011 Government Center, Rm. 208). This is one of eight public hearings being held around the state by the joint Senate-House committee.

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