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  • Glendale: Suit challenges voting system

    Glendale News Press, CA
    Sept 1 2012

    Suit challenges voting system


    Action alleges that Armenian Americans currently dominate GCC board.

    August 31, 2012|By Kelly Corrigan, [email protected]


    A group of voters who claim Armenian Americans have become so
    `politically sophisticated and well-financed' that they've monopolized
    the Glendale Community College Board of Trustees has filed a lawsuit
    seeking a change in how elections are carried out.

    The lawsuit, filed in Los Angeles Superior Court on Aug. 15, alleges
    that the district is in violation of the California Voting Rights Act.
    It comes after months of discourse about altering the way college
    trustees are elected from the current at-large method to a
    district-based model.

    The college's existing at-large system `has produced a situation in
    which one highly-motivated, politically sophisticated and
    well-financed ethnic minority group' - identified by the plaintiffs as
    Armenian Americans - `effectively monopolizes membership on the
    board,' according to the lawsuit.

    The five-member board of trustees currently includes two Armenian
    Americans, two Anglos and one Latina.

    `We feel pretty good about the representation we have on the board,'
    said College Board President Armine Hacopian. `We already have a very
    diversified board of trustees, which is the purpose of the [suit].'

    The lawsuit was filed by attorney Michael Miller, a volunteer speech
    and debate coach at the college who is representing five plaintiffs in
    the case who claim Armenian, mixed-race, Latino, Asian and
    African-American descent.

    In at-large elections, such as those in Glendale, candidates can run
    and be elected regardless of their address within overall school
    district boundaries. In a district-based system, candidates compete to
    represent specific geographic areas within the district's boundaries.

    `We treat all the students the same,' Hacopian said. `Giving one group
    of people more attention and the other groups not - it's unethical,'
    she said.

    Passed in 2002, the CVRA seeks to protect the voting clout of minority
    groups by mandating a district-based system in elections where the
    at-large process dilutes their vote.

    The law has gained increased attention during the last year,
    especially amid protests in Anaheim where an at-large system has
    produced an all-white city council in a city with a large Latino
    population.

    Last November, a redistricting consultant warned Glendale Community
    College officials that there were enough examples of racially
    polarized voting to make the district vulnerable to litigation.

    `It's the job of the trustees to interpret the analysis we provided
    and work with their own counsel to determine their own election
    system,' said Paul Mitchell, a consultant with Redistricting Partners.
    `There's nothing in this lawsuit that sheds new light on that need to
    transition.'

    http://articles.glendalenewspress.com/2012-08-31/news/tn-gnp-0902-suit-challenges-glendale-community-college-voting-system_1_gcc-board-glendale-community-college-board-suit-challenges



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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