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Politics & Government

Baltimore County Seeks to Retain Shared District with Howard

Proponents of shared districts say crossing additional boundary lines promotes regional cooperation.

Democrats and Republicans argued during a recent hearing of the Governor’s Redistricting Advisory Committee about whether it should cross jurisdictional lines when it redraws state legislative districts later this year.

The five-member commission is charged with making recommendations on the decennial redrawing of state legislative and congressional districts. The hearing at the Randallstown Community Center was the last of 12 public hearings.

Proponents of multi-jurisdictional legislative districts said regional concerns should be considered.

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A court decision in 2002 erased all the districts that Baltimore City and Baltimore County shared.

“A decade later, I can only testify that the need for regional thinking has only increased with the passage of time,” said Melvin Freeman, executive director of the Citizens Planning and Housing Association.

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But others argued that changes in population should mean changes in representation.

“The county continues to grow in terms of population while the city continues to lose population,” said Mike Ertel, a Towson Democrat who ran for County Council in 2010.

The county, at more than 805,000 in population, has added about 50,000 people since the districts were redrawn nearly a decade ago.

Ertel urged the commission to add another full legislative district to the five already contained inside Baltimore County's borders.

Currently, the county has five full legislative districts and three more that contain parts of CarrollHarford or Howard Counties.

  • On the eastside, 40 percent of the Republican-held 7th District is in part of western Harford County and stretches from Cockeysville to Middle River and includes a portion of Perry Hall.
  • In northern Baltimore County, Wade Kach, a Republican, represents a single-member district that includes parts of Cockeysville and is part of a larger Senate district of which two-thirds is made up of Carroll County.
  • Democrat Dels. Jim Malone and Steve DeBoy represent the two-member District 12A that represents the Catonsville and Arbutus areas. The balance of the 12th District covers a portion of Howard County.

“The status quo is that Baltimore County is breached by three districts that are represented by people of other counties,” Sen. Delores Kelley said. “And they vote in our county delegations. It is very difficult to work with representatives of other counties.”

Kelley urged for a reduction in the number of shared districts.

“Certainly (legislative districts) should cross the line, but three is too many,” Kelley said.

Kelley urged the committee to consider only one shared district for the county, keeping the one currently shared with Howard County.

County Executive Kevin Kamenetz, a Democrat, has lobbied state officials this year on the issue and asked that no districts cross into Baltimore City or into Harford County. The one exception appears to be the 12th District that includes a portion of Howard County, according to a source close to the county executive who spoke on background.

Retaining the 12th district would be politically beneficial to the county since it is led by Sen. Ed Kasemeyer, a Howard County Democrat who is chairman of the Senate Budget and Taxation Committee.

Some expressed concern that population gains in Baltimore County might be used to offset losses in the city and allow Baltimore City to retain more Senate districts than the census figures would allow.

Not everyone sees crossing into the city as a bad thing.

Freeman, of the Citizens Planning and Housing Commission, urged the panel to consider regional issues when drawing districts.

“Where the lines stop, the problems don’t,” Freeman said.

Prior to 2002, the county and city shared five state legislative districts.

Freeman said “district overlap” has led to mutually beneficial initiatives.

“Representatives understand the clearer truth that no jurisdiction is an island,” Freeman said. “Public school issues that are left to fester soon become county school problems. Furthermore, money used to fight crime in the city ultimately strengthens the security of the county.”

In 2002, Gov. Parris Glendening redrew the maps and extended several Baltimore County legislative districts into the city and other surrounding counties.

The plan was ultimately challenged in court. The Court of Appeals, the state’s highest court, threw out the plan and redrew the maps.

In its opinion, the court said that preference should be given to drawing whole legislative districts inside jurisdictions when there is the population to support it.

The commission is expected to complete its work on recommendations for redrawing the state’s eight congressional districts in time for a special session of the General Assembly scheduled for the week of Oct. 17.

The legislature will take up recommendations on redrawing legislative districts during the 2012 session, which begins in January.

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