Hoffmann Publishing Group

Publication Development Services

2669 Shillington Road
Box 438, Reading, PA 19608

  • 610.685.0914
  • Home
  • About
    • Our Team
    • Association Partnerships
    • Client Testimonials
    • Employment
  • Advertising
    • Readership Profile
    • Markets & Associations
    • Advertiser Benefit
    • Ad Sizes
  • Magazines
    • Bar Associations
    • Medical Society
    • Homeowner Magazines
    • Business, Consumer
      & Trade
    • Guides, Directories & Books
    • Discontinued Titles
  • Contact

Redistricting Reform

August 15, 2017 by admin

How a Citizens Commission Can End Gerrymandering, Return Sanity to our Political Process and Even Improve Our Economy

It has famously been described as Goofy kicking Donald Duck. Is it a cartoon drawing? A Rorschach inkblot test? No, it’s Pennsylvania’s 7th Congressional District, one of the most gerrymandered congressional districts in the country. It stretches, dips, cuts, and curves in a highly contorted fashion over five separate counties, lumping together Pennsylvania voters from the Maryland border with voters north of Reading and those living east of Blue Bell.

Is there a reason anyone should care? Haven’t politicians been engaging in gerrymandering since Eldridge Gerry, its namesake, approved a salamander shaped district in Massachusetts back in 1812? Whether you are a Republican, a Democrat or an Independent, there is plenty of reason to care.

Competitive Elections Create Robust Representation

With the advent of mapping technologies and voter sorting software, partisan legislators now use very precise tools to draw the district lines around the voters that they want, creating exceptionally safe seats. When legislators are in safe seats, they have no incentive to work with their colleagues across the aisle or even to address the concerns of constituents. Elections are not competitive and are usually decided in the low-voter-turnout primaries. In 2016, in a shocking 57% of Pennsylvania state house general election races, there was just one person on the ballot. The opposition party did not even field a candidate. Over 91% of races had an incumbent running for reelection and 86% of races had no primary opponent. Pennsylvania voters feel disenfranchised, and rightly so.

Pennsylvania is one of the most gerrymandered states in the country — and there are numbers to prove it. The Brennan Center for Justice, a nonpartisan law and policy institute dedicated to improving our democracy, analyzed the 2012, 2014 and 2016 congressional elections using three separate quantitative measures of partisan bias.1That quantitative analysis found Pennsylvania to be one of three states with consistently extreme levels of partisan bias.2 The Brennan Center considers this level of gerry-mandering to be an alarming threat to democracy.3

Without competitive elections, legislators pander to their extreme base to stay in office. Compromise becomes impossible, the important business of governing is mired in gridlock, and our infrastructure, educational system, economy, and prosperity suffer. A September 2016 report of Harvard Business School’s U.S. Competitiveness Project includes this key finding: “The U.S. political system was once the envy of many nations… Today, we believe that our political system is now the major obstacle to progress on the economy…”4 How to fix that broken political 2017system? Harvard Business School alumni believe that gerrymandering reform is the top priority.

How to Solve the Gerrymandering Problem

As lawyers, we are trained to look for and to avoid conflicts of interest. Shouldn’t legislators do the same? Drawing the boundaries of their own districts, choosing the people they want to vote for them, is a clear conflict of interest. Voters should choose their legislators, not the other way around. The good news is that there is something we can do about this problem.

The Pennsylvania Constitution currently provides for state house and senate redistricting to be accomplished by a reapportionment commission consisting of five legislators, two each from the majority and the minority party with the fifth member, the chairperson, to be selected by the four members.6 If the four are unable to agree on the fifth member, which has historically been the case, a majority of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court appoints the fifth member. The fifth member tilts the balance in favor of one party or the other, and the gerrymandering begins.A bipartisan group of Pennsylvania legislators is seeking to reform this broken system. Senate Bill 22, introduced by Senators Lisa Boscola (D) and Mario Scavello (R) and co-sponsored by 10 other senators, and House Bill 722, introduced by Steve Samuelson (D) and Eric Roe (R) and cosponsored by 90 other representatives, would put redistricting into the hands of an independent citizens commission that would redraw the district lines in an open and fair manner. The commission would be composed of 11 willing citizens randomly chosen from a vetted pool of registered voters, four of whom are registered with the largest political party, four of whom are registered with the second-largest party, and three of whom are unaffil-iated with either of the largest political parties.

The process for redistricting would be transparent, with opportunity for public input, and the commission would not be permitted to consider prior election results, the party affiliations of voters or the addresses of any individual.

Time is Critical

To accomplish these common-sense reforms, the Pennsyl-vania Constitution must be amended. In order to do so, a bill establishing the citizens commission must pass both the Pennsylvania House and the Senate in two consecutive legislative sessions and then be approved by voters. Both SB22 and HB722 have been introduced and referred to committee. Each is waiting to be scheduled for action by the committees’ chairs. Time is of the essence as the decennial census, and hence redistricting, is only a few short years away.As lawyers, we are well-positioned to advocate for passage of redistricting reform by getting involved in the process, making our views known to our legislators and spreading the word about this crucial issue. Tired of partisan extremism and bickering? Don’t just complain, get involved! Redistricting reform, a bipartisan cause, is a vitally important first step to ending the fanatical partisanship that has gripped our state and country and created virtual gridlock in our legislatures. Our democratic system deserves better. It is time to return the power to the people of the Commonwealth and to make our political system, once again, the envy of the world.

1 Brennan Center for Justice, Extreme Maps, published May 2017 (Efficiency Gap Analysis, Seats-to-Votes Curve Analysis and Means-Median Difference Analysis).
2 Id. at page 15.
3 Id. at page 1.
4 https://www.hbs.edu/competitiveness/Documents/problems-unsolved-and-a-nation-divided.pdf, page 48.
5 https://www.hbs.edu/competitiveness/Documents/problems-unsolved-and-a-nation-divided.pdf, page 55.
6 Section 17 of Article II of the Constitution of Pennsylvania.

Reprinted with permission from Bucks Writs, Summer 2017 Issue, bw.hoffmannpublishing.com, written by Theresa Martin Golding, Esq. Golding Heefner

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Magazines in Reception Rooms

June 22, 2017 by admin

I love going into an office or a business and seeing one of our niche market specialty magazines there. Sometimes they are displayed nicely on a coffee table or a magazine rack on the wall, while other times they might be in a pile with a bunch of other magazines. Either way, I make a point of looking for them. I guess this is a habit I picked up years ago when I lived in the DC area and trained on phone systems. When I went to a business, store or restaurant, I always looked at what phone system they had. Years later, when I worked for a copy company, I found myself looking at the copy machines a business had. Honestly it does not surprise that I am looking for our magazines everywhere I go now.
Just last week when I went to get my hair done, I went straight to the messy pile of magazines in a basket by the front door and looked through it to find one to read while I waited. I was pleasantly surprised to find a Women2Women magazine and, of course, I had to say to my hairdresser that this was one of the magazines we publish where I work.
Similar thing happened when I went to a networking event at the Bar Association a few weeks ago. I walked in and looked at the table to right of the entrance and was pleased to see several of our magazines on display. While I was networking at the event, I made a point to say several of our magazines were on that table downstairs.
Now our At Home in Berks issues can be picked up at Redners, Turkey Hill, WAWA and Weis locations, so you know each time I visit one of these places I will be looking for them displayed in a rack! Is it a sense of pride I have to see these magazines and know that I had a part in bringing them to print, or that fact that I am just a curious minded person? Those who really know me know the answer!

Joanie

Filed Under: Uncategorized

NEPA Vital Signs, the Lackawanna County Medical Society Journal, Coming Soon

April 12, 2017 by admin

Coming in June 2017, NEPA Vital Signs, the Lackawanna County Medical Society Journal. More news to come soon! Contact Joanie@hoffpubs.com

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Lehigh County Health & Medicine Magazine Newest Hoffmann Publication

April 12, 2017 by admin

Lehigh County Health & Medicine is the newest Hoffmann publication to hit the streets. Published for the Lehigh County Medical Society, Lehigh County Health & Wellness magazine features locally written health and wellness content centered on healthy families and health communities.

See the latest copy online…https://www.nxtbook.com/hoffmann/LehighCountyHealth_Medicine/LCHMSpring2017/index.php

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Susan Shelly Joins Hoffmann Publishing as Director of Media Content

February 14, 2017 by admin

We are delighted to share the news that Susan Shelly has joined Hoffmann Publishing Group as Director of Media Content, Contributing Writer. In this role she will organize, manage, develop and coordinate editorial content between our partner associations, contributing authors and design team.

Susan has been a professional writer for more than 30 years, writing for newspapers, colleges and universities, magazines, hospitals, businesses and agencies. She has authored, co-authored or contributed to more than 40 books.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • Next Page »

Recent Posts

  • The Chester County, PA, Coroner’s Office – Then and Now – 334 Years
  • Advertise in our New Spring Township Publication
  • 2017 Changes in School Vaccine Requirements
  • Is There a Gender Bias in Medicine?
  • Lyme Disease

Archives

  • September 2019
  • April 2018
  • August 2017
  • June 2017
  • April 2017
  • February 2017
  • January 2017
  • June 2014
  • August 2013
  • March 2013
  • November 2012

Categories

  • Magazine Articles
  • News & Events
  • Uncategorized

Hoffmann Publishing Group
2669 Shillington Road
Box 438, Reading, PA 19608

  • 610.685.0914
Facebook Twitter Linkedin Youtube
  • Readership Profile
  • Markets & Associations
  • Advertiser Benefit
  • Bar Associations
  • Medical Society
  • Home Builder Association
  • Specialty Business Consumer
  • Books, Directories & Programs Guides
  • Discontinued Titles
  • Meet The Team
  • Partnerships
  • Testimonials
  • Employment

Copyright © 2025 · Outreach Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in

Scroll Up