Santa Barbara County Citizens Independent Redistricting Commission Chair Glenn Morris, second from right, speaks during Friday’s meeting in Santa Barbara.
Santa Barbara County Citizens Independent Redistricting Commission Chair Glenn Morris, second from right, speaks during Friday’s meeting in Santa Barbara.  (Giana Magnoli / Noozhawk photo)

Redistricting commissioners met Friday to review proposed Santa Barbara County supervisor district maps submitted by members of the public.

More meetings are scheduled in the next two weeks to narrow down the field to four or five focus maps.

On Dec. 8, the commissioners will choose one map to adopt.

The Santa Barbara County Citizens Independent Redistricting Commission is charged with picking a map with boundaries for the five county supervisor districts based on 2020 U.S. Census Bureau data.

Map-drawing criteria include districts that are about equal in population, minimize dividing cities and communities of interest, and be geographically contiguous and compact.

County residents have been weighing in on the maps and which communities they think should be linked in a district together. Comments are accepted during public comment at the meetings and by sending written comments redistricting@countyofsb.org. 

You can review and compare the proposed maps in a map view here and view them all in PDF form on the website at https://drawsantabarbaracounty.org/view-draft-maps/.

The current map for Santa Barbara County districts used to elect the Board of Supervisors.

The current map for Santa Barbara County districts used to elect the Board of Supervisors.  (Santa Barbara County photo)

Santa Barbara County’s South Coast communities have a population too large to fit fully into two supervisorial districts and too small to completely fill three districts, and it’s the same situation for North County and Mid-County communities.

So the question becomes, which South Coast communities are split off from the rest, and to join which North County and/or Mid-County communities for the Third District? 

The current map for the Third District groups together Isla Vista and southwestern Goleta with the Santa Ynez Valley, part of the Lompoc Valley and Guadalupe. 

At Friday’s meeting, some speakers advocated for Isla Vista to be in the same district as Goleta, and for Guadalupe to be with Santa Maria. 

Upcoming Meetings

» Monday, Nov. 16 at 6 p.m. meeting in person in Santa Maria and accessible via Zoom. 

Meeting held at Joseph Centeno Betteravia Government Administration Building Board Hearing Room, 511 East Lakeside Parkway, Santa Maria.

» Thursday, Nov. 18 at 12 p.m. meeting accessible via Zoom only. 

» Monday, Nov. 22 at 6 p.m., meeting in person in Santa Barbara and accessible via Zoom. Narrow down submitted maps under consideration to a group of four or five focus maps. 

Meeting held at Planning Commission Room, 123 East Anapamu Street, Santa Barbara.

» Wednesday, Dec. 1 at 6 p.m., meeting in person in Santa Maria and accessible via Zoom. Narrow to two or three focus maps. 

Meeting held at Joseph Centeno Betteravia Government Administration Building Board Hearing Room, 511 East Lakeside Parkway, Santa Maria.

» Wednesday, Dec. 8 at 6 p.m., meeting in person in Santa Barbara and accessible via Zoom. 

All meetings can be viewed live via Zoom, with links on the agenda website here: https://drawsantabarbaracounty.org/calendar-agenda/.

The county redistricting page with the meeting calendar, draft maps and other information is available here: https://drawsantabarbaracounty.org/.

Noozhawk managing editor Giana Magnoli can be reached at gmagnoli@noozhawk.com. Follow Noozhawk on Twitter: @noozhawk, @NoozhawkNews and @NoozhawkBiz. Connect with Noozhawk on Facebook.