Your thoughts???
Ward watch
Wednesday, March 14, 2007 - Emily Jerman
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While an Oklahoma City councilman says adding two wards could improve municipal representation for the growing metropolis, members of the council have differing opinions on what the repercussions of that action might be.
No official proposal to add wards is on the table. However, a black councilwoman fears ward fragmentation could dilute minority participation in city government.
In the shadow of recent city elections, in which three of four candidates ran unopposed, Ward 4 Councilman Pete White is hoping the council will decide to augment the now eight-ward, eight-member council to 10 by the next round of elections in two years.
“I think the result would be council members (who) were closer to their constituencies both geographically and numerically, and I think that’s what good municipal government’s made of,” he said.
2000 census numbers indicate about 60,000 people live in each of the city’s eight wards. In 1966, when the city moved to the eight-ward structure, each ward included about 20,000 people, according to a redistricting proposal map.
“We’re using a 40-year-old system for a city that has grown double in size,” White said. “The relationship between elected officials and their constituents, I think, is somewhat dependent on the size of your constituency, and it just seems to me that it’s time we took another look at that.”
The councilman posed the 10-ward idea at a council meeting last fall and said he has received primarily positive feedback. While he said he hasn’t pushed the issue because he’d like to better know public opinion, some people, including Mayor Mick Cornett and Ward 7 Councilwoman Willa Johnson, question changing a system that seems to be working.
“Our wards are about 60,000 people and … I think that’s manageable,” Cornett said. “It’s probably in line with most places in the rest of the country. … My impression, yes, (is) that the people are being represented well.”
Of the current council members, seven are Caucasian and two are women, representing a city that is, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, 68 percent white, 15 percent black, 10 percent Hispanic and almost evenly divided between men and women.
While Johnson said a “good representative is going to be a good representative, no matter what his or her ethnicity is,” when the city switched to the eight-ward system in the Sixties, an argument favoring the move was that it would assure places on the council for one or two minority members.
“The change from four to eight wards … means the city probably will always have a (black) councilman,” an Oct. 12, 1966, Daily Oklahoman story reported. Having black as well as female council members would help yield a “continuing awareness of the various groups and elements in our society,” said then City Manager Robert Tintsman, in the story.
Black representatives have played key roles on the council since the Sixties, particularly in representing Ward 7, which spans the northeast part of the city. Whether or not all communities are being represented is still a concern today, according to Cornett. If the city at some point seemed to not be representing residents, “then we need to figure out why,” he said.
But, he added, with only one of last week’s council races having more than one candidate, “I don’t think (one) could necessarily make the point that someone isn’t having an opportunity to serve, or a group isn’t being represented, when there (are) not even candidates out there.”
For Johnson, apparent disinterest or apathy among black voters is troubling — one in four voted in the last election when she was re-elected, she said. She intends her current term to be her last, but is concerned no one else in the black community will step up to replace her in 2009. The limited salary and the time commitment involved in being a council member might bar some people — of any ethnicity — from running for the office, she said.
All this makes her wary of dividing the city into additional wards, regardless that her ward — along with White’s — is among the largest, geographically. There are more important priorities, she said.
“In my ward, the majority of the folks who live here are African-American,” she said. “Now, if you cut that up, you see, how can you convince me that less African-Americans will call for more African-Americans to be on the council? … You simply can’t draw the lines like this where you can have a majority (of) minority, and once you dilute that minority, you’re going to decrease the chances of that minority participation.”
White said location of the two new wards is a decision for someone else or the council as a whole to make. He and Johnson both said they are willing to discuss the topic, and that they want what is best for Oklahoma City.
“I’m just trying to make it somewhat more reasonable than it is — kind of like eating a foot-long hot dog,” White said. “Every time you look at it, you want to take another bite rather than just trying to jam it all in your mouth at one time.”
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Oklahoma Gazette
Oklahoma Gazette
You can contact your city councilman/woman or Mayor Cornett at the following page. Just click your ward on the left it will take you to their info page.
City of Oklahoma City | Council Agenda
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