By Bricca Sweet, guest-posting
[Editor's Note: For additional background on the redistricting of Watauga's County Commission by Sen. Ralph Hise, see "Does Senator Hise Hate Watauga?" and "Watauga County Commission Sues Over Gerrymander"]
The Hise map for Watauga County Commissioner Districts |
This statute governs how Watauga’s County Commissioner elections will proceed for the 2024 election, unless there is a very expensive lawsuit on the part of the now disenfranchised voters in District 1 or 2. The June 4 County Commission meeting focused on how our elections should proceed in the future. Democratic Commission Chair Larry Turnbow proposed that a referendum be placed on our 2024 ballot, allowing Watauga voters to choose a map of three electoral districts for three commissioners who reside in each of those districts, while two additional commissioners can be elected at-large from a county-wide vote. Turnbow further proposed to seek the services of an independent professional map-maker to provide three proposed maps for the commissioners to consider in selecting one map for the referendum. He imposed these criteria in developing the maps: no use of current voter registration statistics (voter party affiliations); the districts must be equal in population; districts must be contiguous; and no voting precincts can be split. Commissioner Russell added that existing municipalities should be kept intact within proposed districts.
Chair Turnbow stated that the districts in Statute 153A-22, along with the rotation of elections for those districts, were imposed by Raleigh, and did not reflect home rule. All county commissioners have previously stated on record that no one in Raleigh, including Senator Hise, had consulted with them at all in developing these districts or the statute. None of the commissioners had any issue concerning within-district voting, other than the likely consequence of the commission becoming divisive and losing sight of county-wide issues. The ensuing discussion revolved around allowing Watauga citizens to choose how we vote via a referendum, as allowed by state law.
Republican Commissioners Todd Castle and Braxton Eggers repeatedly echoed that they liked the maps as drawn by Senator Hise. They offered no explanation of why they wouldn’t want Watauga voters to decide on district maps along with at-large commissioners. Democratic Commissioner Wallin expressed curiosity as to why, since the terms for Castle and Eggers are not up until 2026, yet the Hise redistricting put their seats up for election in 2024. Again, there was no reasonable explanation for this. Incredibly, Castle and Eggers explained that they would stay on the commission regardless of the 2024 election. Obviously, if they each win their county commission elections, they would remain commissioners. Astonishingly, they argue that if either or both of them lose, they would then become commissioners for the new Districts 1 and 2. They argued that because they were elected at-large in the 2022 election, this was indeed representation. They couldn’t explain how this would be representation of districts that didn’t even exist in 2022, or how they could be considered commissioners for districts in which they don’t even reside. Neither Castle nor Eggers expressed any concern for the issues that voters from the new District 1 and 2 have over being excluded from the opportunity to vote for their county commissioners.
After all of this laborious and at times heated debate, Chairman Turnbow asked if there was any more discussion of the motion to put the proposed referendum on the 2024 ballot. Commissioner Eggers once again stated that he supported Senator Hise’s maps. The motion passed three to two, with the two Republican Commissioners opposed. It is beyond me to comprehend why there was so much furor over allowing Watauga voters to choose how we would like to elect our county commissioners. I thought that Republicans were all about local control. It’s a quandary.
The point is that we Watauga voters will now be able to exercise home rule in determining how we vote for our own county commissioners. The other bottom-line is that it sadly appears that voters from the new District 1 and 2 (population: 22,696) will likely have no say in their own representation until 2026. It’s vital that we make sure that our fellow voters understand the importance of voting YES on this referendum!
I'm looking forward to voting for a representative for my district that is not subject to election interference from Boone.
ReplyDeleteWhose woods these are I think I know, his house is up in Raleigh though.
ReplyDeleteHow is the election being interfered with from Boone?
ReplyDeleteBoone's politics are not the county's politics.
ReplyDeleteWhy should someone in Boone vote for MY representative?
Wolf's Head: "I'm looking forward to voting for a representative for my district that is not subject to election interference from Boone." Me too, but under this Raleigh scheme, my district doesn't get to vote for who will represent us until November 2026. How is that fair?
ReplyDeleteBoone is in Watauga county too?
ReplyDeleteGood for the Goose, I agree that you should have the chance to vote for new representatives this year. I think it's because some of the commissioner seats are 2 year and some are four. But with the district changes every district should have an election to select a representative that better represents their district.
ReplyDeleteAnon 5:32, Yes, Boone is in Watauga, but it is incorporated and has a Town Council (spit), and the needs of a small town are very different than the needs of a rural district.
Small town citizens still pay Watauga county taxes?
ReplyDeleteIf you do or don't, you still have representation on the County Commissioners.
ReplyDeleteCounty residents have no representation on the Boone Town Council. (spit)
Boone residents have representative on town council and county commissioners because they reside in both?
ReplyDeleteTown of Boone and all other Watauga Towns pay BOTH town AND Watauga County taxes.
ReplyDeleteOnly if you're a property owner.
ReplyDeleteI live in Deep Gap. My family has since long before the Civil War. We have always made a living from the land and its resources. Never depended on the college or tourism for our income. Boone is not the town I once loved. ASU holds far too much power in local government, and that influence should remain within the town limits.
ReplyDelete