Fletchall v. Rosenblum

442 P.3d 193, 365 Or. 98
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 2019
DocketSC S066460 (Control, S066463, S066465)
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 442 P.3d 193 (Fletchall v. Rosenblum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fletchall v. Rosenblum, 442 P.3d 193, 365 Or. 98 (Or. 2019).

Opinion

NELSON, J.

**100In this ballot title review proceeding, we consider three separate petitions that challenge the Attorney General's certified ballot title for Initiative Petition 5 (2020) (IP 5). For all three petitions, we review the ballot title under the same standard: substantial compliance with ORS 250.035(2). See ORS 250.085(5) (setting out that standard of review). Having considered the various and sometimes conflicting arguments raised in the petitions, we conclude that the ballot title does not substantially comply with ORS 250.035(2). Accordingly, we refer the ballot title to the Attorney General for modification.

I. BACKGROUND

In a nutshell, IP 5 would repeal and replace a provision in the Oregon Constitution, Article IV, section 6, that addresses reapportionment of the state's legislative districts, after each decennial census, to take into account changes in the distribution of the state's population.

In its present form, Article IV, section 6, assigns the task of reapportionment to the legislature, § 6(1), but provides that, if the legislature fails to complete that task by a specified date after the census, the Secretary of State will "make a reapportionment" in the legislature's stead, § (6)(3)(a). It also provides for judicial review of the resulting reapportionment, upon the petition of "any elector," for compliance with the requirements of Article IV, section 6, and "all laws applicable thereto." Or. Const., Art. IV, § 6 (2)(a)-(c); id . § 6 (3)(b), (c). The "laws applicable thereto" include ORS 188.010, which directs the legislature (or the Secretary of State) to apportion districts using certain specified criteria, including a requirement that districts be drawn in a way that does not "divide communities of common interest," ORS 188.010(1)(d), and ORS 188.016, which requires the legislature to hold at least 10 public hearings at locations throughout the state prior to proposing a reapportionment plan, and at least five more public hearings before finally adopting the plan that is proposed.

*197IP 5 would repeal that current version of Article IV, section 6, and replace it with a new Article IV, section 6, **101that establishes a "Citizen Commission on Legislative Redistricting" to which the task of reapportionment would fall. The commission created by IP 5 would be composed of 11 members, each of whom would be appointed by all of the county commissioners serving within one of 11 designated geographic areas within the state. Each of the designated geographic areas would be composed of a group of contiguous counties, or, in the case of Washington and Multnomah counties, a single county. The state's population would not be evenly distributed among the 11 areas. As a result, the commission's membership would not equally represent the population of the state but, instead, would give significantly greater representation to rural areas of the state.

After the issuance of the decennial census, the commission thus constituted would be required to (1) adopt a preliminary redistricting plan by an affirmative vote of the majority of its members; (2) hold at least one public hearing in each congressional district regarding the preliminary plan; and (3) adopt a final plan, again by a majority vote, within a designated time frame.

The proposed version of Article IV, section 6, specifies criteria for apportionment by the commission. Most notably, it requires the new commission to apportion districts to be "as compact in area as possible," with the "aggregate linear distance of all district boundaries" being "as short as possible." In addition, the districts must be contiguous, of equal population "within a range of two percent plus or minus," and drawn using "existing geographical and political boundaries to the extent practicable." While some of those criteria for apportionment mirror the statutory criteria for apportionment set out in ORS 188.010 -which the legislature is required to follow when carrying out the redistricting demanded by the current version of Article IV, section 6-some are different. Most notably, IP 5 would (1) establish the above-mentioned "compactness" requirement, which does not exist in the present reapportionment scheme; (2) expressly permit a small amount of inequality between the populations of districts ("equal within a range of two percent") that is not expressly permitted under current law; and (3) omit the present statutory requirement **102that each district "not divide communities of common interest." ORS 188.010(1)(d).1

Finally, the proposed version of Article IV, section 6, provides for judicial review of a final redistricting plan adopted by the commission, but only for constitutional errors and only upon a petition filed by 15 electors. It also provides that, if the commission fails to timely adopt a final redistricting plan, this court will prepare a final redistricting plan within a specified time period.

The Attorney General certified the following ballot title for IP 5:

"Amends Constitution: Transfers legislative redistricting to commission; commission over-represents rural areas; changes redistricting requirements; limits judicial review
"Result of 'Yes' Vote: 'Yes' vote transfers legislative redistricting to commission; commission over-represents rural areas. Changes redistricting requirements; limits "aggregate linear distance" of borders. Fewer hearings. Limits judicial review.
"Result of 'No' Vote: 'No' vote retains redistricting by legislature. Statutory, constitutional criteria. Minimum ten public hearings. Upon default, Secretary of State adopts plan. Elector can seek court review.
"Summary: Amends Constitution. Currently, legislature reapportions legislative districts after census, following at least 10 public hearings. Criteria set by statute and Constitution. If legislature defaults, Secretary of State completes redistricting. Any *198elector may petition Oregon Supreme Court to review compliance with law; if deficient, court may create plan. Measure replaces current process with 11-member commission. County Commissioners appoint members (excluding recent elected officials, spouses, and some political party officials).

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Related

Chung v. Rosenblum
550 P.3d 977 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2024)
Ady v. Rosenblum
Oregon Supreme Court, 2023
Mason/Turrill v. Rosenblum
508 P.3d 504 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2022)
Hurst/Van Dusen v. Rosenblum
461 P.3d 978 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2020)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
442 P.3d 193, 365 Or. 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fletchall-v-rosenblum-or-2019.