Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Two Maps Under Consideration for Clovis Unified Trustee Area Elections
By admin
Published 2 years ago on
September 19, 2023

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

Two proposed maps outlining the Clovis Unified trustee areas for next year’s elections have been submitted for consideration and will be reviewed Wednesday at a public hearing during the School Board meeting.

One is being presented by the district and uses the current trustee area boundaries, while the other would shift a huge portion of the northeast portion of the district that’s now in the unincorporated county from Area 2 to Area 4. Map 201 also would move part of Area 1 into Area 2, shift Area 5 eastward, and would square off most boundary lines.

Clovis Unified is switching to electing trustees by specific areas instead of at-large in time for the 2024 elections. It had received a letter this summer from a law firm warning that if it continued to elect trustees at large it could face a civil lawsuit for violating the California Voting Rights Act. But district officials said plans were already underway to transition to by-area elections before the letter arrived.

Voting rights advocates consider by-area elections important for minority representation on elected bodies.

Trustees had argued that by representing the district at large through districtwide elections, it reduced the likelihood of favoritism for specific areas or schools.

No Change in District’s Proposal

District officials decided to submit the current map because it was approved a year ago and is up to date, district spokeswoman Kelly Avants said.

“Having just completed an extensive process using data from the decennial census to update trustee areas and balance population counts, etc. the Board is proposing to adopt the current trustee map for the district-based election process,” she said.

That map, which was finalized last year, shifted a few boundary lines but retained each trustee in a separate area that encompassed more than one high school region. The map had been one of four prepared by district demographers, and a fifth map was proposed by Trustee Steven Fogg.

Fogg, whose Area 5 seat will be up for election next year, told GV Wire that he doesn’t plan to introduce an alternate map this time.

“I was thinking about it but it didn’t get much support last time — everyone is pretty happy with what we have,” he said in a text message. “It does a good job at keeping our district unified. I just like straight lines and logical boundaries.”

Following Best Practices

Map 201 , submitted by the Equitable Maps Coalition, contains more straight lines than the current trustee map, and it also would more evenly divide the district’s population across north Fresno and Clovis into the seven trustee areas. Under the current map the population ranges from 32,485 in Area 4 to 34,032 in Area 6. The population range in Map 201 is much tighter, from 33,096 in Area 2 to 33,260 in Area 7.

Map 201 also provides a higher percentage of Hispanic residents in two of the seven trustee areas, although there would be no majority in any. Area 1’s Hispanic population would increase from 29.8% to 32.4%, while Area 7’s Hispanic population would grow from 30% to 34%, but Area 5’s Hispanic population would shrink from 31% to 26% under the Map 201 proposal.

In addition to providing a bigger voice for Hispanic residents, the reconfiguring of Areas 6 and 7 would give greater voice to Asian communities, said the coalition’s demographer, Jesus Garcia.

Garcia said the goal was to follow best practices of drawing trustee election areas, which includes balancing overall population as well as looking for opportunities to increase percentages of some ethnic and racial groups that have been underrepresented on the School Board

Another goal was to create uniform communities that are more contiguous without “arms” stretching into other trustee areas, as Area 1 does on the current map, Garcia said. Map 201 also follows natural boundaries, such as freeways and the inflow and outflow of the Fresno-Yosemite International Airport, he said.

Having More Options

Garcia said he thought it was “arrogant” of the district to present the current map instead of taking advantage of the opportunity to provide alternatives. “You limit yourself,” he said.

The coalition became involved this time upon the request of several community members, Garcia said, but was not involved in the prior redistricting effort because it came at the same time other School Districts were redrawing trustee lines. Garcia said he submitted three “beautiful” maps for Central Unified’s redistricting, none of which was selected by the Central trustees.

What is not best practices, Garcia said, is including in mapping considerations the location of trustees’ home, which Clovis Unified did in the past so trustees wouldn’t wind up living in the same area after redistricting. “We’re not building maps for the current board members. We’re building maps for the future,” he said.

In addition to Fogg, the three Clovis Unified School District seats that will be up for election in 2024 are held by David DeFrank (Area 2), Hugh Awtrey (Area 4), and Yolanda Moore (Area 7). Moore is the board’s only person of color.

Once the draft maps are created, the district then must hold at least two public hearings over a 45-day period for more public input.

The proposed maps then must go to the Fresno County Commission on School District Reorganization, which has to hold at least one public hearing before voting to approve or reject the district’s change from at-large to by-area elections.

Map 201

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Trump Administration Freezes Future Grants to Harvard

DON'T MISS

Trump Denies Posting Image of Himself as Pope, Laughs Off Critics

DON'T MISS

Old Merced Sun-Star Newspaper Building Reduced to Rubble

DON'T MISS

US Seeks to Weaken Global Development Finance Efforts, UN Document Shows

DON'T MISS

Trump Signs Executive Order to Encourage US Drug Manufacturing

DON'T MISS

Dollar Slides Against Peers Weighed Down by Fresh Tariff Worries

DON'T MISS

Rivian to Build $120 Million Supplier Park in Illinois

DON'T MISS

Trump Signs Order Restricting Research That Enhances Pathogens

DON'T MISS

US Appeals Court Rejects Trump Bid to Revoke 400,000 Migrants’ Legal Status

DON'T MISS

Trump Orders the Reopening of Alcatraz Prison

UP NEXT

Warren Buffett Shocks Shareholders by Announcing His Intention to Retire at the End of the Year

UP NEXT

Don’t Have a REAL ID Yet? That Could Cause You Travel Headaches After May 7

UP NEXT

Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs Trial to Delve Into the Seediest Side of Rap’s ‘Bad Boy’

UP NEXT

Robbie Ray’s Gem Leads the Giants Over the Rockies

UP NEXT

World’s Tallest and Smallest Dogs Meet Up for a Playdate

UP NEXT

University of Texas Chancellor Is Named President of the University of California

UP NEXT

Here’s Why May the 4th Is Celebrated as Star Wars Day Across the Galaxy

UP NEXT

Fresno State Announces 2025 Undergraduate Deans’ Medalists

UP NEXT

Military Parade on Trump’s Birthday Could Include More Than 6,500 Troops

UP NEXT

Fresno Unified’s New Supe Makes 500% More Than a New Teacher

US Seeks to Weaken Global Development Finance Efforts, UN Document Shows

6 hours ago

Trump Signs Executive Order to Encourage US Drug Manufacturing

7 hours ago

Dollar Slides Against Peers Weighed Down by Fresh Tariff Worries

7 hours ago

Rivian to Build $120 Million Supplier Park in Illinois

7 hours ago

Trump Signs Order Restricting Research That Enhances Pathogens

7 hours ago

US Appeals Court Rejects Trump Bid to Revoke 400,000 Migrants’ Legal Status

7 hours ago

Trump Orders the Reopening of Alcatraz Prison

8 hours ago

Will CA Law Change to Allow Councilmembers to Govern While on Military Duty?

9 hours ago

Former Proud Boys Leader Enrique Tarrio Says He Met With Trump in Florida

9 hours ago

Trump Is About to Steal My Friend’s Christmas … and Yours

9 hours ago

Trump Administration Freezes Future Grants to Harvard

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. Department of Education informed Harvard University on Monday that it was freezing billions of dollars...

4 hours ago

Harvard University’s campus in Cambridge, Mass., Sept. 6, 2024. The Trump administration said on Monday, March 31, 2025, that it was reviewing roughly $9 billion in federal grants and contracts awarded to Harvard, accusing the school of allowing antisemitism to run unchecked on its campus. (Sophie Park/The New York Times)
4 hours ago

Trump Administration Freezes Future Grants to Harvard

Trump Takes Questions about Pope Image
5 hours ago

Trump Denies Posting Image of Himself as Pope, Laughs Off Critics

Merced Sun-Star building before demolition
5 hours ago

Old Merced Sun-Star Newspaper Building Reduced to Rubble

A 3D-printed miniature model of U.S. President Donald Trump with the United Nations logo in the background is seen in this illustration taken April 23, 2025. (REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File photo)
6 hours ago

US Seeks to Weaken Global Development Finance Efforts, UN Document Shows

Signage is seen outside of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) headquarters in White Oak, Maryland, U.S., August 29, 2020. (REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File Photo)
7 hours ago

Trump Signs Executive Order to Encourage US Drug Manufacturing

U.S. dollar banknotes are seen in this illustration taken May 4, 2025. (REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration)
7 hours ago

Dollar Slides Against Peers Weighed Down by Fresh Tariff Worries

The Rivian logo is shown on one of their new electric SUV vehicles in San Diego, U.S., December 16, 2022. (REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo)
7 hours ago

Rivian to Build $120 Million Supplier Park in Illinois

President Donald Trump announces the NFL draft will be held in Washington, at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., May 5, 2025. (REUTERS/Leah Millis)
7 hours ago

Trump Signs Order Restricting Research That Enhances Pathogens

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend