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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Northeast Spokane lags in voter turnout

Northeast Spokane has an electoral problem that needs to be examined after the 2010 census is complete. The problem isn’t who gets elected, but how few people do the electing.

Results from this year’s general election follow a pattern evident in city elections since districts were drawn earlier this decade, and in legislative elections for decades before that. Northeast Spokane’s Council District 1, which shares many of the same precincts and voters with the 3rd Legislative District, has significantly fewer voters than the neighboring districts. And the voters it has are less likely to cast ballots than other regions of the city and county.

That was particularly true this year. Although District 1 had a fairly contentious council race between Amber Waldref and Mike Fagan, the district – which is roughly everything north of Interstate 90 and east of Division Street – had eight of the city’s 10 lowest-turnout precincts, 17 of the bottom 20. District 1 also has about three registered voters for every four in the other two districts.

While this means a District 1 voter has more impact on picking his or her council member, it also means that on citywide issues, the area’s voters as a group have less impact than those in Indian Trail or the South Hill where registration and turnout are much heavier. In this fall’s Spokane School Board races, for example, northeast Spokane voters went overwhelmingly for the challengers while the south and far northwest precincts backed incumbents.

Last March, Spokane Public Schools passed its $288 million bond issue despite meager support in District 1. Bond issues need at least 60 percent approval, and most of northeast Spokane was below that, even though many precincts gave it a simple majority. Districtwide, it passed with almost 63 percent of the vote on the strength of heavy margins and heavy turnout in the south and west precincts.

One could argue the power was reversed in this fall’s $33 million fire bond issue, which fell a few hundred votes shy of 60 percent citywide, despite getting supermajorities in most precincts south of I-90 and downtown. It failed to get simple majorities in nine precincts – seven of them in Council District 1. But the fire bond failure may be more a result of falling below 60 percent in the heavy turnout areas of far northwest Spokane, where supermajorities could have more than made up for the no votes in precincts south of Francis between Division and Market.

Both political parties and other groups have tried for decades to increase registration and turnout in northeast and north-central Spokane, Spokane County Auditor Vicky Dalton said. Nothing has worked, even though Washington is among the most accommodating of states for registering and getting ballots to voters.

It’s not likely to change, said Blaine Garvin, a Gonzaga University political science professor who has studied local politics for years: “That’s a problem you will find every place in the country with relative poverty and low education. If you create a district with poorer and less-educated voters, you’re going to have lower turnout.”

The move from citywide council elections to districts was spurred in part by a lack of representation from northeast Spokane. Districts are drawn based on total population, not voter registration, and when these were set up in 2000, supporters and opponents agreed it was a standard way of looking at the city.

Redrawing the lines so north Spokane is divided horizontally and some of the northeast’s lightest voting precincts are put in with heavier voting precincts in the northwest wouldn’t really solve the problem, Garvin said. If anything, that would mute the electoral voice of the low-income residents who do vote by mixing them in with the more numerous affluent voters.

Turnout isn’t as big a problem as true representation for different areas of the city, he argues. To get better representation, he suggests giving the city six districts, each with one council member, rather than the current three districts with two members. That would ensure that smaller areas have equal voice on picking the council, and it may mean more voters knowing about the candidates.

That would take a charter change. And charter changes are difficult. But recent history suggests passing a charter change is easier than increasing voter participation in northeast Spokane.

Spin Control is a weekly column by political reporter Jim Camden. For maps on voter turnout and results from the recent elections, go to the online version, www.spokesman.com/ blogs/spin control.