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Transition to District Elections
District Elections
On January 16, 2024, to complete the transition from at-large citywide election to by-district elections and comply with state law, the City Council adopted Ordinance No. 2023-226, establishing by-district elections, defining district boundaries, and scheduling elections within the districts. With this action, all five City Council members shall be elected on a "by-district" basis from the Council districts shown and numbered on the adopted map titled, 'City of Laguna Niguel District Map'.
Commencing with the November 2024 General Municipal election, and every four years thereafter, the following three City Council districts shall be elected by-district: District 1; District 3; and District 5. In November 2026, and every four years thereafter, the following two City Council districts shall be elected by-district: District 2 and District 4.
While the district formation process is now complete, this webpage shall remain live to serve as an archive of the election changes including the schedule, draft maps submitted/considered, and background information.
City of Laguna Niguel District Map
Please click the website button below to view the adopted District Map:
The District Formation Process & Background Information
The City of Laguna Niguel, like numerous of other cities and school districts across the state, had to change the process of how voters elect its City Council Members. As of 2024, voters will vote for one City Council Member who lives in their district. This has replaced the City's previous system of at-large citywide elections in which voters had the ability to vote for all City Council Members.
Local governments use data from the U.S. Census Bureau to draw district lines to reflect the changing local population demographics. State law requires cities to engage communities in the districting process by holding public hearings and conducting public outreach.
One of the City's primary goals when drawing City Council Districts was to draw lines that respect neighborhoods and communities of interest.
Public Participation
The City held 4 Public Hearings to receive public input on where district lines should be drawn. Those public input hearings were held on:
| Date & Time | Public Hearings & Location | Meeting Documents |
|---|---|---|
| September 5, 2023 at 7 p.m. | Public Hearing #1 (Pre-Map) Laguna Niguel Council Chamber 30111 Crown Valley Parkway Laguna Niguel, CA 92677 | |
| September 19, 2023 at 7 p.m. | Public Hearing #2 (Pre-Map) Laguna Niguel Council Chamber 30111 Crown Valley Parkway Laguna Niguel, CA 92677 | Public Hearing Notice PowerPoint Presentation - Public Hearing #2 Public Hearing #2 |
| November 7, 2023 at 7 p.m. | Public Hearing #3 Introduce Draft Maps Laguna Niguel Council Chamber 30111 Crown Valley Parkway Laguna Niguel, CA 92677 | Public Hearing Notice PowerPoint Presentation - Public Hearing #3 Public Hearing #3 |
| December 5, 2023 at 7 p.m. | Public Hearing #4 Revised Draft Maps Laguna Niguel Council Chamber 30111 Crown Valley Parkway Laguna Niguel, CA 92677 | Public Hearing Notice PowerPoint Presentation - Public Hearing #4 Public Hearing #4 |
| January 16, 2024 at 7 p.m. | Meeting to Adopt Final Vote Laguna Niguel Council Chamber 30111 Crown Valley Parkway Laguna Niguel, CA 92677 | Staff Report Ordinance No. 2023-226 City Council Meeting |
Public Map & Demographer Map Submissions
The City Council was the ultimate decision-making authority throughout the districting process, and the City Council reviewed every map submitted by the public.
Additionally, the City contracted a professional demographer to assist as an educator and facilitator during the process to transition to a District-based election system. The professional demographer also provided draft map submittals to the City Council based upon themes found in the public map submittals and known communities of interest.
Below are all the maps that were submitted by the public and the demographer.
| MAP NAME, SUBMITTED DATE & TIME | MAP PACKET | WEB MAP |
|---|---|---|
| Public Plan 1 (4 Districts) 09/19/23 | View PDF | View Web Map |
| School Boundaries ID: 197512 09/20/23, 3:38 p.m. | View PDF | View Web Map |
| Balanced Districts ID: 198185 09/26/23, 7:43 a.m. | View PDF | View Web Map |
| ID: 198698 09/28/23, 10:23 a.m. | View PDF | View Web Map |
| 4 Districts ID: 198783 09/28/23, 3:17 p.m. | View PDF | View Web Map |
| ID: 198819 09/28/23, 10:52 p.m. | View PDF | View Web Map |
| ID: 199726 10/04/23, 10:08 a.m. | View PDF | View Web Map |
| ID: 199731 10/04/23, 10:20 a.m. | View PDF | View Web Map |
| ID: 199999 10/05/23, 4:11 p.m. | View PDF | View Web Map |
| ID: 200931 10/11/23, 12:54 p.m. | View PDF | View Web Map |
| ID: 201331 10/13/23, 9:40 a.m. | View PDF | View Web Map |
| ID: 201897 10/16/23, 12:58 p.m. | View PDF | View Web Map |
| Fair District Map ID: 203004 10/20/23, 4:37 p.m. | View PDF | View Web Map |
| ID: 203079 10/20/23, 2:52 p.m. | View PDF | View Web Map |
| Balanced Fair District Map ID: 203521 10/23/23, 2:58 p.m. | View PDF | View Web Map |
| ID: 203848 10/24/23, 3:05 p.m. | View PDF | View Web Map |
| Citizen ID: 207599 11/06/23, 12:38 p.m. | View PDF | View Web Maps |
| Best Guess ID: 207774 11/07/23. 8:53 a.m. | View PDF | View Web Map |
| MAP NAME | MAP PACKET | WEB MAP |
|---|---|---|
| Draft A | View PDF | View Web Map |
| Draft A2 | View PDF | View Web Map |
| Draft B | View PDF | View Web Map |
| Draft C | View PDF | View Web Map |
| Draft D | View PDF | View Web Map |
| Draft E | View PDF | View Web Map |
| Draft F | View PDF | View Web Map |
NOTE: Per the requirements of the law, the City’s map drawing process began following the initial two public hearings held on September 5, 2023, and September 19, 2023. The public was encouraged and permitted to utilize ranking criteria to create proposed district maps for consideration; and, was also provided with an opportunity to submit said maps prior to October 25, 2023. In accordance with state law, all public submittal and draft maps for Council’s consideration at the third public hearing (November 7, 2023), were posted on the City website on or before October 31, 2023, at least seven days prior to the public hearing. In accordance with state law, all public submittal and draft maps for Council’s consideration at the fourth public hearing (December 5, 2023), were posted on the City website on or before November 28, 2023, at least seven days prior to the public hearing.
On June 16, 2023, the City of Laguna Niguel received a letter (PDF) challenging the City’s current election system and asserting that the City’s at-large election system violates the California Voting Rights Act (CVRA).
The City of Laguna Niguel is not unique in this situation. Agencies throughout the State have received similar demand letters prompting a shift from at-large to district-based elections. While it is unclear if the City’s current system runs afoul of existing law, the cost of litigation to defend the at-large system, coupled with the track record of other public agencies that have fought similar challenges, poses a significant financial and legal risk to the City.
In light of the letter and to protect the City from financial and legal risks, Laguna Niguel is taking steps to consider transitioning its election process to district-based elections. To read the City's Official Press Release, please CLICK HERE.
To read the Mayor Kelly Jennings' official statement on the City's response to the demand to convert to district-based elections, please CLICK HERE or click the image below.
What is districting?
Simply put, districting is the establishment of election districts. It determines who can run and who can vote in each district. Candidates and voters must live within their respective election districts. This does not impact city services to the public. The only change the districting process creates is how City Council Members are elected.
Districting only happens once. After City Council boundaries are established, the City will conduct redistrictings to balance the district populations following the results of each decennial census, with the next U.S. Census collection being 2030. This ensures that each elected official represents about the same number of constituents. All district lines must be reviewed to meet strict requirements for population equality and voting rights protections in accordance with the Federal Voting Rights Act and the California Elections Code.
Why is district formation important?
District formation determines which neighborhoods and communities are grouped together into a district for purposes of electing a Council Member to represent that district. The formation process provides residents the opportunity to share how you think district boundaries should be drawn to best represent your community.
What criteria is used to determine district lines?
1. Federal Laws
- Equal Population (based on total population of residents as determined by the most recent Federal decennial Census and adjusted by the State to reassign incarcerated persons to the last known place of residence)
- The Voting Rights Act of 1965
- Prohibits Racial Gerrymandering
2. California Criteria for Cities
- The California Voting Rights Act
- The FAIR MAPS Act
- Geographically contiguous
- Minimize splits of neighborhoods and “communities of interest”
- Easily identifiable boundaries
- Compact (Do not bypass one group of people to get to a more distant group of people)
Prohibited: drawing lines to favor or discriminate against an incumbent, candidate, or political party
What are Communities of Interest?
A community of interest is a “contiguous population that shares common social and economic interests that should be included within a single district for purposes of its effective and fair representation.” They are the overlapping sets of neighborhoods, networks, and groups that share interests, views, cultures, histories, languages, and values and whose boundaries can be identified on a map. The following elements help define communities of interest:
- Shared interests in schools, housing, community safety, transit, health conditions, land use, environmental conditions, and/or other issues;
- Common social and civic networks, including churches, mosques, temples, homeowner associations, and community centers, and shared use of community spaces, like parks and shopping centers;
- Racial and ethnic compositions, cultural identities, and households that predominantly speak a language other than English;
- Similar socio-economic status, including but not limited to income, home-ownership, and education levels;
- Shared political boundary lines from other jurisdictions, such as school districts, community college districts, and water districts
Who serves as the decision marker in the final City Council District Map?
The City Council is the decision-making authority throughout this entire process. Every map submitted will be reviewed by the City Council. The City Council serves as the ultimate decision maker in the final City Council District Map.