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You can search the entire site. or go to the recent opinions, or the chronological or subject indices. In the Matter of the 2021 Redistricting Cases (4/21/2023) sp-7646

In the Matter of the 2021 Redistricting Cases (4/21/2023) sp-7646

          Notice:    This  opinion   is  subject   to  correction  before  publication   in   the  PACIFIC  REPORTER.  

          Readers  are r   equested  to  bring  errors to the attention  of  the  Clerk  of  the  Appellate C  ourts,  

          303  K  Street, Anchorage, Alaska  99501, phone   (907)  264-0608, fax   (907)  264-0878,  email  

          corrections@akcourts.gov.  



                     THE  SUPREME  COURT  OF  THE  STATE  OF  ALASKA  



IN  THE  MATTER  OF  THE  2021                                 )  

REDISTRICTING  CASES                                           )    Supreme         Court       Nos.      18332/18419  

                                                                                                         

(Matanuska-Susitna  Borough,  S-18328)                         )    (Consolidated)  

(City  of  Valdez,  S-18329)                                   )  

(Municipality  of  Skagway,  S-18330)                          )    Superior Court No. 3AN-21-08869 CI  

                                                                                                                          

(Alaska  Redistricting  Board,  S-18332)                       )  

(Alaska  Redistricting  Board,  S-18419)                                               

                                                               )    O P I N I O N  

                                                               )  

                                                                                                     

                                                               )    No. 7646 - April 21, 2023  



                                                                                                         

                    Petitions for Review from the Superior Court of the State of  

                                                                                                        

                    Alaska,  Third  Judicial  District,  Anchorage,  Thomas  A.  

                                     

                    Matthews, Judge.  



                                                                                                   

                    Appearances:   Matthew  Singer, Lee  C. Baxter,  and Kayla  

                                                                                                   

                    J.   F.    Tanner,       Schwabe,   Williamson                &   Wyatt,   P.C.,  

                                                                                         

                    Anchorage, for Petitioner/Respondent Alaska Redistricting  

                                                                                                          

                    Board.  Robin O. Brena and Jon S. Wakeland, Brena, Bell &  

                                                                       

                    Walker,       P.C.,     Anchorage,           for   Petitioners/Respondents  

                                                                                                         

                    Municipality of Skagway Borough and Brad Ryan. Robin O.  

                                                                                                   

                    Brena, Jake W. Staser, Jon S. Wakeland, and Laura S. Gould,  

                                                                                                     

                    Brena,        Bell       &      Walker,         P.C.,       Anchorage,             for  

                                                                                                             

                    Petitioners/Respondents  City  of  Valdez  and  Mark  Detter.  

                                                                                                   

                    Stacey   C.        Stone,   Holmes           Weddle         &   Barcott,        P.C.,  

                                                                                

                    Anchorage, for Petitioners/Respondents Matanuska-Susitna  

                                                                                                         

                    Borough  and  Michael  Brown.                    Holly  C.  Wells,  Mara  E.  

                                                                                                         

                    Michaletz,  and  Zoe  A.  Danner,  Birch  Horton  Bittner  &  

                                                                                                 

                    Cherot, Anchorage, for Respondents Felisa Wilson, George  

                                                                              

                    Martinez, and Yarrow Silvers.  Eva R. Gardner, Michael S.  

                                                                                                      

                    Schechter, and Benjamin J. Farkash, Ashburn & Mason, P.C.,  

                                                                                                

                    Anchorage,  for Respondents  Calista  Corporation, William  

                                                                                                       

                   Naneng,  and  Harley  Sundown  in  No.  S-18332  and  for  

                                                                                               

                    Respondents   Louis   Theiss,   Ken   Waugh,   and   Jennifer  


----------------------- Page 2-----------------------

                    Wingard   in  No.   S-18419.   Nathaniel   H.   Amdur-Clark   and  

                    Whitney  A.  Leonard,  Sonosky,  Chambers,  Sachse,  Miller  &  

                    Monkman,   LLP,   Anchorage,   for   Intervenor   Respondents  

                    Doyon Limited; Tanana Chiefs Conference; Fairbanks  Native  

                    Association;   Ahtna,   Inc.;   Sealaska   Corporation;   Donald  

                    Charlie,   Sr.;   Rhonda   Pitka;   Cherise   Beatus;   and   Gordon  

                    Carlson  in   No.   S-18332.     Susan   Orlansky   and   Richard  

                    Curtner,        American          Civil      Liberties        Union        of    Alaska  

                    Foundation,   Anchorage,   for   Amici   Curiae   Alaska   Black  

                    Caucus;   National   Association    for   the   Advancement    of  

                    Colored  People  Anchorage,  Alaska  Branch  #1000;  Enlaces;  

                    The   Korean   American   Community   of   Anchorage,   Inc.;  

                    Native   Movement;   and   First   Alaskans   Institute   in   No.   S- 

                     18332.  



                    Before:   Winfree,  Chief  Justice,   Borghesan  and  Henderson,  

                    Justices,   and   Matthews   and   Eastaugh,    Senior   Justices.*  



                     [Maassen and Carney, Justices, not participating.]  

                                                                            



                    WINFREE, Chief Justice.
  

                                                  

                    EASTAUGH, Senior Justice, concurring.
  

                                                                   



I.        INTRODUCTION  

    



                    Alaska's  legislative  redistricting  occurs  every  decade  shortly  after  the  

                                                                                                                               



United   States  decennial  census  is  released,  governed  primarily  by  the  Alaska  

                                                                                                                        



Constitution.  The most recent redistricting efforts began in earnest  in August 2021,  

                                                                                                                            



shortly after the 2020 census information was received.  On November  10 the Alaska  

                                                                                                                          



Redistricting Board adopted a final redistricting plan for 40 House of Representative  

                                                                                                              



districts and 20  Senate districts (each composed of 2 House districts).  Five separate  

                                                                                                                        



challenges to the  final plan  were  filed in  superior court.   In mid-February  2022 the  

                                                                                                                               



superior court concluded that two House districts were unconstitutional on due-process- 

                                                                                                                  



          *          Sitting by assignment made under article IV, section 16 of the Alaska                                



Constitution.  



                                                                -2-                                                         7646  


----------------------- Page 3-----------------------

                                                                                                                                

related  grounds  and  that  one  unrelated   Senate  district  was  unconstitutional  on  



                                                                                                                           

gerrymander grounds.  The superior court directed further redistricting efforts.  



                                                                                                                                      

                    Four petitions for our review quickly were filed, and we granted review.  



                                                                                                                               

The primary competing claims were that the superior court erred (1) by concluding that  



                                                                                                                                

the two House districts and the  Senate district were unconstitutional,  and (2) by  not  



                                                                                                                         

concluding that (a) the two House districts were unconstitutional for additional reasons  



                                                                                                                             

and (b) other House districts also were unconstitutional.  In an expedited summary order  



                                                                                                                                

we reversed the superior court's ruling regarding the two House districts, affirmed the  



                                                                                                                     

superior court's ruling regarding the  Senate district, and, with one limited exception,  



                                                                                                                        

affirmed the superior court's ruling that the remaining disputed House districts satisfied  



                                                                                                                              

constitutional requirements. We remanded for further redistricting efforts consistent with  



       

our order.  



                                                                                                                         

                    The Board adopted an amended final plan in mid-April 2022 and another  



                                                                                                                                

challenge was filed in superior court; in mid-May the superior court concluded that the  



                                                                                                                                 

amended plan's revision for the previously unconstitutional Senate district also was an  



                                                                                                                       

unconstitutional gerrymander.  The superior court directed that an alternative amended  



                                                                                                                                 

plan, previously considered by the Board but not adopted as the amended final plan, be  



                                                                                                                  

used as an interim plan for the November 2022 elections and that further redistricting  



                                                                                                                                 

efforts be undertaken  for a second amended final plan  for the rest  of the decade.  A  



                                                                                                                                

petition for our review quickly was filed, challenging the superior court's rulings on the  



                                                                                                                                      

merits of the amended plan and contending that using the interim plan was erroneous.  



                                                                                                                                 

We  granted  review  and  stayed the  superior  court's  order pending  our  ruling;  in  an  



                                                                                                                         

expedited summary order we affirmed the superior court's conclusion that the relevant  



                                                                                                                        

Senate district pairings were  an unconstitutional  gerrymander,  affirmed the  superior  



                                                                                                                                  

court's order for the interim redistricting plan, and lifted the stay except for the stay of  



                                                                                     

further redistricting efforts pending our formal written decision.  



                                                                -3-                                                         7646
  


----------------------- Page 4-----------------------

                   We  now  explain  the  reasoning  behind  our  summary  orders.   For  context  we  



start  with  Alaska's  constitutional  framework  for  redistricting.   We  then  detail  the  parties'  



arguments  in  the  first  round  of  petitions  for  review  and  explain  our  first  summary  order.   



We  next  detail  the  parties'  arguments  in  the  final  petition  for  review  and  explain  our  



second  summary  order,  including  the  implementation  of  an  interim  redistricting  plan  for  



the  November  2022  election  cycle.   Finally,  we  lift  the  stay  on  further  redistricting  efforts  



and  explain  what  must  be  accomplished  to successfully implement a final redistricting  



plan  for  the  remainder  of  the  decade.  



II.	      CONSTITUTIONAL  BACKDROP  



          A.	      Article   VI,   Section   6:     Substantive   Standards;   Gerrymandering  

                   Concerns  

                   Article VI,  section 6 sets out House and Senate  district  requirements.1  A  



House  district  shall   "contain  a  population  as  near  as  practicable"  to  1/40th  of  the  State's  



                        2  

total  population.   House  districts  must  be  contiguous  and  compact  and  must  "contain[]  



                                                                                                          3  

as   nearly   as   practicable   a   relatively   integrated   socio-economic   area."     We   have  

explained  that  a  House  district  is  contiguous  if  it  is  not  split  into  separate  parts.4  

                                                                                                                   But,  of  



course:   "Absolute  contiguity  of  land  masses  is  impossible  in  Alaska,  considering  her  



numerous archipelagos.  Accordingly, a contiguous district may  contain some amount  



          1        Article   VI,   §   4   provides   for   40   House   districts   and   20   Senate   districts  



composed  of  2  House  districts  each.   Cf.  article  VI,  §  6  (stating  that  Senate  district  "shall  

be   composed   as   near   as  practicable   of   two   contiguous   [H]ouse   districts"   (emphasis  

added)).  



          2        Alaska Const. art. VI, § 6.  

                                                        



          3        Id.  

                         



          4        See Hickel  v. Se.  Conf., 846 P.2d 38, 45 (Alaska  1992), as modified on  

                                                                                                                          

denial of reh'g (Mar. 12, 1993).  

                                      



                                                             -4-	                                                     7646
  


----------------------- Page 5-----------------------

                   5  

of  open  sea."    



                    Compactness  and  socioeconomic  integration  are  important  constraints  on  



                                                                                                              6  

technically  contiguous  House  districts  stretching  to  Alaska's  distant  regions.   A  House  



                                                                                                              7  

district   is   more   compact   when   its   perimeter   is   small   relative   to   its   area;   although  



irregular  shapes  are  expected because of Alaska's  geography,  oddly  placed  corridors  and  

appendages are suspect.8  Socioeconomic integration is a more  nebulous concept.  We  



have  explained  that,  in  general,  the  constitutional  convention  delegates  intended  House  



districts  to  group  people  living  in  neighboring  areas  and  following  "similar  economic  

pursuits."9  

                  Although   the   Constitution   uses   flexible   language,   such   as   "as   nearly   as  



practicable"  and  "relatively,"  to  describe  the  socioeconomic  integration  requirement,  we  



have  said  that  socioeconomic  integration  may  be  sacrificed  "only  to  maximize  the  other  

                                                                                     10  A House district contained  

constitutional requirements of contiguity and compactness."                                                      



entirely   within   a   borough   by   definition   meets   the   socioeconomic   integration  

                                                                                                             

                   11  But socioeconomic integration otherwise generally requires "proof of  

requirement.                                                                                                                



          5        Id.  



          6        Id.  at  45-46.  



          7        Id.  at  45.  



          8        Id .  at  45-46.  



          9        Id.  at  46-47.  



          10       Id.  at  45  n.10.  



          11       In  re  2001  Redistricting   Cases   (2001  Redistricting  I),  44  P.3d   141, 146  



(Alaska   2002)   (referring   to   Anchorage,  a   consolidated   city   and   borough,   as   "by  

definition   socio-economically   integrated");   Hickel,   846   P.2d   at   51   ("By   statute,   a  

borough  must  have  a  population  which   'is  interrelated and integrated  as  to  its   social,  

cultural,  and  economic  activities.'  "  (quoting  AS  29.05.031)).   Cf.  id.  at  51  n.20  (stating  

                                                                                                          (continued...)  



                                                             -5-                                                       7646
  


----------------------- Page 6-----------------------

                                                                                                                12  

actual  interaction  and  interconnectedness  rather  than  mere  homogeneity."                                      



                    A   "[S]enate   district   shall   be   composed   as   near   as   practicable   of   two  



                                             13  

contiguous  [H]ouse districts,"                 meaning  that the two House districts comprising a Senate  



district   must   share   a   border.     Compactness  and   relative   socioeconomic   integration  



                                                                                           14  

requirements   do   not   explicitly   apply   to   Senate   districts.                          But   local   government  



                                                                                                                15  

boundaries   may  be   given   consideration  when   creating   election   districts,                               and,  when  



describing  election  district  boundaries,  "[d]rainage  and  other  geographic  features  shall  



              16  

be  used."        These  factors  -  contiguity,  adherence  to  local  boundaries,  and  reliance  on  



geographic   features   -   reflect   a   desired   measure   of   interconnectedness between   the  



          11         (...continued)  



that  splitting  "a  borough  which  otherwise  [could]  support  an  election  district  will  be  an  

indication  of  gerrymandering  .  .  .  for  not  preserving  the  government  boundaries").   



          12        Hickel, 846P.2d at 46 (quoting Kenai Peninsula Borough v. State, 743 P.2d  

                                                                                                                              

 1352, 1363 (Alaska 1987)).  

                                



          13        Alaska Const. art. VI, § 6.  

                                                           



          14         Cf.     id.    (expressly         requiring         consideration           of    compactness            and  

                                                                                                                             

socioeconomic integration only for House districts); see also Kenai Peninsula, 743 P.2d  

                                                                                                                              

at 1365 & n.21 (explaining, under former article VI, § 6, that "provisions of article VI,  

                                                                                                                                

section  6  which  set  forth  socio-economic  integration,  compactness  and  contiguity  

                                                                                                                    

requirements are inapplicable to redistricting and reapportionment of [S]enate districts"  

                                                                                                                       

but also noting that "[S]enate districts which meander and ignore political subdivision  

                                                                                           

boundaries and communities of interest will be suspect under the Alaska equal protection  

                                                                                                                      

clause"); Braun v. Denali Borough, 193 P.3d 719, 730 (Alaska 2008) (noting we have  

                                                                                                                              

declined to  extend  socioeconomic integration requirement  to  Senate districts  (citing  

                                                                                                                          

Kenai Peninsula, 743 P.2d at 1365)).  

                                                            



          15        Alaska  Const. art. VI,  § 6; cf. Hickel, 846 P.2d  at 51 n.20  (stating that  

                                                                                                                               

splitting "a borough  which  otherwise  [could] support an  election  district will be  an  

                                                                                                                                 

indication of gerrymandering for not preserving the government boundaries").  

                                                                                                                          



          16        Alaska Const. art. VI, § 6.  

                                                           



                                                                -6-                                                         7646
  


----------------------- Page 7-----------------------

House  districts  that  are  combined  to  form  a  Senate  district.  



                   Ample  evidence  illustrates  the  constitutional  convention  delegates'  intent  



                                                                                                    17  

to  protect  against  gerrymandering  when  they  drafted  article  VI,  section  6.                    As  adopted,  



section  6  contained  guiding  language  for  constructing  House  districts  nearly  identical  to  



its  current  text:   "Each  new  district  so  created  shall  be  formed  of  contiguous  and  compact  



territory  containing  as  nearly  as  practicable  a  relatively  integrated  socio-economic  area.   



Each  shall  contain  a  population  at l  east  equal  to  the  quotient  obtained by dividing  the  

total  civilian population by [40]."18  Delegate John Hellenthal, chair of the Committee  



on   Suffrage,  Elections,   and  Apportionment,   explained  that  the   committee's  proposed  



         17        See  generally  Gordon  S.  Harrison,  Comment,  The  Aftermath  of   In  Re  2001  



Redistricting   Cases:     The   Need  for   a   New   Constitutional   Scheme  for   Legislative  

                                      ALASKA  L.  REV.  51,  55-57  (2006)  (discussing  constitutional  

Redistricting  in  Alaska ,  23  

convention  proceedings  in  which  delegates  explained  desire  to  prevent  gerrymandering  

and  how  proposed  provisions  would  prevent  such  practices).   Although  the  delegates  

usually   referred   to   "gerrymandering"   in   general,   without   specifying   concerns   about  

partisan  gerrymandering  in  particular,  context  clues  discussed  next  plainly  demonstrate  

that  partisan  gerrymandering  was  at  the  front  of  their  minds.   Furthermore,  the  delegates  

likely  used  "gerrymander"  in  accordance  with  its  contemporaneous  legal  usage:    



                   A   name   given   to   the   process   of   dividing   a   state   or   other  

                   territory  into  the   authorized   civil   or  political   divisions,  but  

                   with   such   a   geographical   arrangement   as   to   accomplish   a  

                   sinister   or   unlawful   purpose,   as,   for   instance,   to   secure   a  

                   majority   for   a   given   political   party   in   districts   where   the  

                   result would be otherwise if they were divided according  to  

                   obvious  natural  lines  .  .  .  .  



Gerrymander,  BLACK 'S  LAW  DICTIONARY  (4th  ed.   1951).   



         18        Former  Alaska  Const.  art.  VI,  §  6  (1956).   In  Egan  v.  Hammond  we  struck  



down  the    language    specifying   that   reapportionment   be   based    on   the    "civilian  

population,"  excluding military personnel as a class, under the U.S. Constitution.   502  

P.2d  856,  869  (Alaska   1972).  



                                                          -7-                                                    7646
  


----------------------- Page 8-----------------------

contiguity,        compactness,           socioeconomic            integration,        and      population         quotient  



requirements  acted  together  to  "prohibit[]  gerrymandering  which  would  .  .  .  take  place  



                                                                                            19  

were  40  districts  arbitrarily  set  up  by  the  [redistricting  entity]."                   As  we  discuss  below,  



he  expressed  similar  gerrymandering  concerns  when  discussing  who  would  apply  these  



standards.  



                      In   Hickel   v.   Southeast   Conference   we   expressly   noted   that   "[t]he  



requirements    of    contiguity,    compactness    and    socio-economic    integration    were  



incorporated          by     the    framers       of    the     reapportionment            provisions         to    prevent  



                          20  

gerrymandering."              We  also  pointed  to  both  Carpenter  v.  Hammond  and  Black's  Law  



Dictionary   when   defining   gerrymandering   broadly   as   "the   dividing   of   an   area   into  



political  units  'in  an  unnatural  way  with  the  purpose  of  bestowing  advantages  on  some  



                                                  21  

and  thus  disadvantaging  others.'  "                 

                    Gerrymandering often takes one of two forms, "packing" or "cracking."22  

                                                                                                             

                                                                                                                                 



          19        3   Proceedings   of   the   Alaska   Constitutional   Convention   (PACC)   1846  



(Jan.  11,  1956)  (statement  of  Del.  John  S.  Hellenthal);  see  Harrison,  supra  note  17  at  56  

(providing  Delegate  Hellenthal's  title).  



          20        846 P.2d at 45; see also Kenai Peninsula Borough v. State, 743 P.2d 1352,  

                                                                                                                        

1367-68 (Alaska 1987) (discussing how gerrymandering that purposefully "exclude[s]  

                                                                                                               

a  certain  group  from political  participation"  may  violate  right  to  fair  and  effective  

                                                                                                                  

representation under equal protection analysis).  

                                                         



          21       Hickel, 846 P.2d at 45 & n.11 (quoting Carpenter v. Hammond, 667 P.2d  

                                                                                                                         

1204,  1220  (Alaska  1983)  (Matthews,  J.,  concurring)  and  citing  BLACK 'S    LAW  

                                                                                                         

DICTIONARY  (6th  ed.  1990)).   We  understand  the  words  "natural"  and  "unnatural"  in  the  

definitions  of  gerrymandering  (see  text  above  and  supra  note   17)  to  be  relative  terms  

denoting  the  extent  to  which  districts  comply  with  or  depart  from traditional  redistricting  

principles  such  as  those  set  out  in  article  VI,  §  6  of  the  Constitution.  



          22        Royce        Crocker,         Congressional            Redistricting:               An      Overview,  

                                                                                                              

CONGRESSIONAL  RESEARCH  SERVICE   15  (Nov.  21,  2012).  



                                                             -8-                                                        7646
  


----------------------- Page 9-----------------------

"Packing"   occurs   when   groups   of   voters   of   similar   expected   voting  behavior   are  



unnaturally  concentrated  in  a  single  district;  this  may  create  a  "wasted"  excess  of  votes  



                                                                                                                        23  

that  otherwise  might  have  influenced  candidate  selection  in  one  or  more  other  districts.                        



"Cracking"  occurs  when  like-minded  voters  are  unnaturally  divided  into  two  or  more  



districts;  this  often  is  done  to  reduce  the  split group's  ability  to elect  a  candidate  of  its  

choice.24  

              But  if  a  group  constitutes  a  supermajority,  splitting  it  into  two  districts  also  



may  enhance  its  power  by  enabling  it  to  elect  candidates  in  both  districts.   Another  form  



is incumbent gerrymandering:   "a redistricting plan that favors incumbents, often without  



regard for their partisan affiliation, and aims to maintain the status quo with respect to  

the  parties'  distribution  of  seats  within  a  state  and  to  protect  incumbents."25  



         B.	       Article VI,  Sections  3 And 8:  Redistricting  Entity; Gerrymandering  

                   Concerns  



                   The  Constitution  originally  placed  redistricting  powers  with  the  governor,  

who  was  to  appoint  an  independent  advisory  board  to  assist  in  the  redistricting  process.26  

                                                                                                                            

The advisory  board  was  to  consist  of  five  members.27  

                                                                              At least  one  member  was  to  be  



selected  from  each  of  four  specified  areas  of  the  state,  none  could  be  a  public  employee  



         23        Id.  



         24        Id.  at  5,   15.  



         25        Id.  at  6.  



         26        Former Alaska  Const. art. VI, §§ 3, 8 (1956);  see Carpenter, 667 P.2d at  



1206   &   n.1   (discussing   process   for  1980  redistricting   cycle;   noting   article   VI,   §   3  

authorizing  governor  to  conduct  redistricting  and  article  VI,   §  8  directing  governor  to  

appoint  advisory  redistricting  board).  



         27        Former Alaska Const. art. VI, § 8.  

                                                                  



                                                           -9-	                                                    7646
  


----------------------- Page 10-----------------------

                                                                                                                                28  

or   official,   and   all  were   to   be   appointed   "without   regard   to   political   affiliation."                         



Delegate  Hellenthal  explained  that  a  governor's  reliance  on  the  advisory  board's  advice  



                                                                                                       29  

and  compliance  with  article  VI,  section  6  would  limit  gerrymandering.                             He  also  focused  



on   limiting   gerrymandering   when   discussing   nuances   of   proposed   terminology   for  



                                  30  

article   VI,   section   8.            He   unsuccessfully   advocated   for   the   use   of   the   word  



"nonpartisan"  in  section  8's  description  of  advisory  board  members,  explaining  that  "the  



                                                                                               31  

whole  purpose   of  this   article   [was]   to   de-emphasize  politics."                         But  he   successfully  



advocated  for  a  prohibition  against  board  members  also  simultaneously  serving  as  public  



officials  or  employees,  reasoning  that  "a  public  official  was  too  politically  inclined"  and  



                                                                                                             32  

that  public  employees  "likewise  would  be  subject  to  political  pressures."                               



                    When  Delegate  Hellenthall  presented  his  committee's  proposal  for  

                                                                                                                             



constitutional redistricting provisions, he said:  

                                                                        



                    [T]he goal of all apportionment plans is simple[.]  [T]he goal  

                                                                                                         

                    is  adequate  and true  representation  by  the  people  in  their  

                                                                                                       

                    elected legislature[:] true, just,  and fair representation.  And  

                                                                                

                    in deciding and in weighing this plan, never lose sight of that  

                                                                                                         



          28        Id.  



          29        3  PACC   1846  (Jan.   11,   1956)  (statement  of  Del.  John  S.  Hellenthal).   



          30        3  PACC   1846  (Jan.   11,   1956)  (statement  of  Del.  John  S.  Hellenthal).   



          31        3  PACC  1958-60  (Jan.  12,  1956)  (statement  of  Del.  John  S.  Hellenthal  and  



ensuing  debate).  



          32        3  PACC 1955 (Jan. 12, 1956) (statement of Del. John  S. Hellenthal);  see  



also  3  PACC 1956-57  (Jan.  12,  1956)  (statement  of  Del.  Steve  McCutcheon)  (expressing  

concerns    about    special    interest    groups    influencing   redistricting    and    supporting  

prohibition  against  public  officials  serving  as  Board  members  because  "[i]t  is  one  small  

board  that  sits o     nce  every   10  years  and  certainly  we  should  be  able  to find five  or six  

people  out  of  the  whole  of  Alaska  [who]  would  qualify  .  .  .  and  who  will  be  objective  in  

their  consideration").  



                                                              -10-                                                        7646
  


----------------------- Page 11-----------------------

                    goal,  and  keep  it foremost in your  mind;  and  the  details  that  

                    we   will   present   are   merely  the   details   of   achieving   true  

                    representation,  which,  of  course,  is  the  very  cornerstone  of  a  

                    democratic  government.[33]  



Delegate Hellenthall clearly believed the end result was a "modern and progressive"  

                                                                                                                

framework  for  true, just,  and  fair  legislative  representation  for  all  Alaskans.34                                   But  

                                                                                                                              

                                                                                                          

litigation  during  the  first  three  redistricting  cycles  after  statehood35                                led  to  1999  

                                                                                                                           

                                                                                             



constitutional  amendments  removing  redistricting  from  the  governor's  control  and  

                                                                                                                             



          33        3  PACC   1835  (Jan.   11,   1956)  (statement  of  Del.  John  S.  Hellenthal).  



          34        John S.  Hellenthal,  Alaska's Heralded Constitution:   The Forty-Ninth State  



Sets  an  Example,  44  A.B.A.                

                                          J. 1447,  1148-49  (1958)  (describing  one  of  several  "modern  

and  progressive   features"   of   Alaska   Constitution   as   creating   "truly   representative  

legislature"  and  "[a]utomatic  reapportionment  every  ten  years  by  the  governor  acting  on  

the  advice  of  an  independent  board"  (emphasis  added)).     



          35        See generally Harrison, supra note  17, at 58-60 (describing redistricting  

                                                                                                                 

litigation  in  1990,  1980,  and  1970  redistricting  cycles  when  governors  controlled  

                                                                                                                    

process).  As the Comment reflects, we resolved challenges in those redistricting cycles  

                                                                                                                          

by  twice  agreeing  with  challenges  (one  led  by  future  Republican  Governor  Jay  

                                                                                                                              

Hammond and one by Republican Senator Cliff Groh) to Democrat Governor William  

                                                                                                                       

Egan's  redistricting  efforts;  agreeing  with  challenges  to  Republican  Governor  Jay  

                                                                                                              

Hammond's  redistricting  efforts;  agreeing  with  challenges  to  Democrat  Governor  

                                                                                                                    

William Sheffield's redistricting efforts (in redistricting efforts begun by Republican  

                                                                                                                  

Governor Jay Hammond); and agreeing with challenges to Alaskan Independence Party  

                                                                                                                            

Governor Walter Hickel's redistricting efforts. Id. ; see also Hickel v. Se. Conf., 846 P.2d  

                                                                                                                             

38, 57 (Alaska  1992) (holding plan unconstitutional  for several article VI,  section 6  

                                                                                                                                  

violations); Kenai  Peninsula  Borough  v. State, 743 P.2d  1352,  1373 (Alaska  1987)  

                                                                                                                          

(holding         Senate       district      unconstitutional            due      to     discriminatory           intent      and  

                                                                                                                            

disproportionality  though  not  remanding  due  to  de  minimis  effect);  Carpenter  v.  

                                                                                                                                

Hammond, 667 P.2d  1204, 1215 (Alaska  1983) (holding plan unconstitutional due to  

                                                                                                                                 

record "devoid of evidence of" socioeconomic integration within the House district at  

                                                                                                                                 

issue); Groh v. Egan, 526 P.2d 863, 882 (Alaska 1974) (holding plan unconstitutional  

                                                                                                           

due to unjustifiable population variances); Egan  v. Hammond, 502 P.2d  856, 866-68  

                                                                                                                         

(Alaska 1972) (same).  

                        



                                                              -11-                                                         7646
  


----------------------- Page 12-----------------------

placing  it  in  the  hands  of  a  constitutionally  created  Redistricting  Board,  while  preserving  



                                                               36  

essentially  the  same  redistricting  standards.                  The  existing  board  member  qualifications  

               37                                                                         38  Appointments now  are  

remained,         but a new appointment process was put in place. 



made  in  the  following  order:   the  governor  appoints  two  members,  the  presiding  officer  



of  the  Senate  appoints  a  member,  the  presiding  officer  of  the  House  of  Representatives  



appoints  a  member,  and  the  Chief  Justice  of  the  Alaska  Supreme  Court  appoints  the  final  



             39  

member.           There   must   be   at   least   one   member   from   each   of   the   four   state  judicial  



             40  

districts.       The  members  serve  until  all  redistricting  plan  challenges  have  been  resolved  



                                                                            41  

and  a  final  redistricting  plan  has  been  implemented.                     No  member  may  be  a  legislative  

candidate in the general  election  following  the final redistricting plan's implementation.42  



                    Legislative  history  and  information  presented  to  those  voting  on  the  

                                                                                                                            



amendments reflect considerable  focus on  limiting  gerrymandering.   Representative  

                                                                                                          



          36        Compare   former  Alaska   Const. art. VI,   §§   6,   8   (instructing  governor  to  



appoint   each   member   of   board,   which   serves   in   advisory   role   to  governor,   and   to  

redistrict    according    to    contiguity,   compactness,    socioeconomic    integration,    and  

population  quotient  requirements),  with  Alaska  Const.  art.  VI,  §§  6,  8  (expanding  board  

member appointment authority to other government  officials,  removing limitation that  

board serve in  advisory  capacity,  and maintaining substantive redistricting requirements).  



          37        Alaska Const. art. VI, § 8(a) (providing appointments shallbe made without  

                                                                                                                      

regard to political  affiliation and members may not be public  officials or employees  

                                                                                                                 

while  serving  on  board);  Alaska  Const.  art.  VI  §  8(b)  (providing  for  geographic  

                                                                                                               

representation).  



          38        Alaska Const. art. VI, § 8(b).  

                                                         



          39        Id.  



          40        Id.  



          41        Id.  



          42        Alaska Const. art. VI, § 8(c).  

                                                         



                                                             -12-                                                        7646
  


----------------------- Page 13-----------------------

Brian   Porter,    a   legislative    sponsor    of   the    constitutional    amendment   resolution,   



repeatedly  emphasized  the  intent  to  have  a  more  objective  and  non-partisan  redistricting  



            43  

                                                                                                                 

process.            Representative   Jeannette   James   supported  the   goal   of   eliminating  



                                                                                                                               

gerrymandering because "to make [redistricting] be an advantage for one party or the  



                                                                               44  

                                                                                                                    

other, no matter which it is," did not serve the public.                          Representative Ethan Berkowitz  



                                                                                        45  

                                                               

recognized the need to reduce historical gerrymandering,                                                                     

                                                                                           while Representative Con  



                                                                                                       46  

                                                                                                                      

Bunde  also  noted  the  judiciary's  check  against  gerrymandering.                                        State  senators  



                                                                                                                                47  

                                                                                                                     

similarly indicated an intent to deter partisan politics during the redistricting process, 



          43        Testimony  of  Brian  Porter,  Representative,  Resolution  Sponsor,  Tape  98- 



44,  Side  B,  No.  128,  Hearing  on  H.J.R.  44  Before  Sen.  Jud.  Comm.,  20th  Leg.,  2d  Sess.  

(Apr.  29,   1998);  Testimony  of  Brian  Porter,  Representative,  Resolution  Sponsor,  Tape  

98-49,  Side  B  at  1:14:58-15:17,  1:19:31-20:24,  Hearing  on  H.J.R.  44  Before  the  H.  Fin.  

Comm.,  20th  Leg.,  2d  Sess.  (Mar.  3,   1998).  



          44        Comment of Jeannette James, Representative, Tape 98-12,  Side A, No.  

                                                                                                                              

1669, Hearing on H.J.R. 44 Before the H. Jud. Comm., 20th Leg., 2d  Sess. (Feb. 6,  

                                                                                                                       

1998).  



          45        Statement  of  Ethan  Berkowitz,  Representative,  Tape  98-15,  Side  A,  

                                                                                                                               

No. 2326, Hearing on H.J.R. 44 Before the H. Jud. Comm., 20th Leg., 2d Sess. (Feb. 11,  

                                                                                                                               

1998).  



          46        Statement of  Con Bunde,  Representative,  Vice  Chairman,  Tape  98-15,  

                                                                                                                         

Side B, No. 241 at 53:25-54:05, Hearing on H.J.R. 44 Before the H. Jud. Comm., 20th  

                                                                                                                             

Leg., 2d Sess. (Feb. 11, 1998).  

                                      



          47        Senator Drue  Pearce  suggested  support for an  earlier  draft  amendment  

                                                                                                                  

under which the Board would have been appointed entirely by supreme court justices,  

                                                                                

keeping elected  officials  completely  out  of the  process.   Comment  of Drue  Pearce,  

                                                                                                                        

Senator, Tape 98-161, Side A, Hearing on H.J.R. 44 Before the Sen. Fin. Comm., 20th  

                                                                                                                             

Leg.,  2d  Sess. (May 8, 1998).   Responding  to  critiques  from a Department  of Law  

                                                                                                                             

representative that Board appointments by the governor "provide[d] an important safety  

                                                                                                                           

valve" that would "protect the interest of the people," Senator Sean Parnell insisted that  

                                                                                                                              

                                                                                                               (continued...)  



                                                              -13-                                                         7646
  


----------------------- Page 14-----------------------

and   a   formal   legislative   analysis   referred   to   avoiding   partisan   political   influence   on  



                                                                            48  

redistricting  as  the  amendments'  reason  and  intent.                       To  the  extent  we  can  determine  the  



                                                                                49  

voters'  intent  when  approving  the   1999  amendments,                           both  proponents  and  opponents  



                                                                                                       50  

of  the  amendments  believed  their  positions  limited  gerrymandering.                                  



          C.        Related  Constitutional  Provisions  And  Concerns  



                    1.         Equal  protection  



                    The  United  States  and  Alaska  Constitutions  guarantee  equal  protection   



          47        (...continued)  



the  pre-amendment  system  was  the  most  partisan  option  and  that  the  courts  were  the  true  

safety  valve.   Comment  of  Sean  Parnell,  Senator,  Tape   161,  Side  A,  Hearing  on  H.J.R.  

44  Before  the  Sen.  Fin.  Comm.,  20th  Leg.,  2d  Sess.  (May  8,   1998).   



          48        See H. Jud. Comm., Sectional Analysis of Proposed H.J.R. 44, 20th Leg.,  

                                                                                                                            

2d Sess. at 1 (Feb. 4, 1998) (explaining changes to board selection process as "intended  

                                                                                                                     

to remove reapportionment and redistricting as far as possible from the partisan political  

                                                                                                                        

arena").  

               



          49        See Wielechowski v. State, 403 P.3d 1141, 1150 (Alaska 2017) (looking to  

                                                                                                                                 

"any published arguments . . . to determine what meaning voters may have attached to  

                                                                                                                                 

the  [proposed constitutional amendment]," including ballot  initiative language, news  

                                                                                                                            

articles, and sponsor statements (alterations in original) (quoting Alaskans for a Common  

                                                                                                                       

Language, Inc. v. Kritz, 170 P.3d 183, 193 (Alaska 2007))).  

                                                                               



          50        The statement supporting the amendments, advocated by Representatives  

                                                                                                            

Brian S. Porter and Eldon Mulder, criticized the former redistricting procedure and plans  

                                                                                                                            

for "being partisan and gerrymandered rather than creating redistricting plans based on  

                                                                                                                                

bipartisan  fairness and objectivity."   State  of Alaska  Official Election Pamphlet  100  

                                                                                                                              

(Region III ed., Nov. 3, 1998). Amendment opponents represented by Deborah Bonito,  

                                                                                                                         

then-Chair of the Alaska Democratic Party, were concerned that the amendment would  

                                                                                                                          

"allow[] legislators to be directly involved in who determines the legislative lines they  

                                                                                                                             

are  subject to"  and reduce  the  role  of the  governor,  "Alaska's  only  elected  official  

                                                                                                            

without a direct interest in the shape of individual election districts."  Id. at 100-01.  

                                                                                                                                



                                                              -14-                                                         7646
  


----------------------- Page 15-----------------------

                      51  

under the  law.            "In  the  context  of  voting  rights  in  redistricting  and  reapportionment  



litigation,  there  are  two  principles  of  equal  protection,  namely  that  of 'one person, one  



vote'  -   the   right   to   an   equally   weighted   vote   -   and   of    'fair   and   effective  



                                                                                                                        52  

representation'  -  the  right  to  group  effectiveness  or  an  equally  powerful  vote."                                  Fair  



representation,   although   "not   a   fundamental   right,   .   .   .   represent[s]   a   significant  



                                   53  

constitutional  interest."             We  have  explained  that,  unlike  the  "quantitative"  one  person,  



                                                                                                                                54  

one  vote  inquiry,  the  fair  representation  question  is  "qualitative"  and  "more  nebulous."                                  



But  Alaska's fair  representation   standard  is   stricter  than  the  federal   standard  because  



Alaska's   equal   protection   clause   requires   a   more   demanding   review   than   its   federal  



           55  

analog.        



          51        U.S.  Const.  amend.  XIV,  §   1;  Alaska  Const.  art.  I,  §   1.  



          52        Hickel  v.   Se.   Conf.,   846   P.2d   38,   47   (Alaska   1992)   (quoting   Kenai  



Peninsula  Borough  v.  State,  743  P.2d   1352,   1366  (Alaska   1987)).  



          53        Kenai  Peninsula,  743  P.2d  at   1372.  



          54        Hickel,  846  P.2d  at  47,  48-49.  



          55        Braun v. Denali Borough, 193 P.3d 719, 731 (Alaska 2008) ("In the context  

                                                                                                                         

of reapportionment cases, the Alaska Constitution's equal protection standard is stricter  

                                                                                                                          

than its federal counterpart."); Hickel, 846 P.2d at 49 ("The equal protection clause of  

                                                                                                                      

the Alaska Constitution imposes a more strict standard than its federal counterpart."); see  

                                                                                                                               

also Ross v. State, Dep't of Revenue, 292 P.3d 906, 910-11 (Alaska 2012) (explaining  

                                                                                            

that Alaska's  equal protection clause is "more demanding" than its federal counterpart);  

                                                                                                                

Kenai Peninsula, 743 P.2d at 1371 (explaining that when "no fundamental right [is] at  

                                                                                                                                 

stake, the equal protection clause of the Alaska Constitution imposes a stricter standard  

                                                                                                                       

than its federal counterpart").  

                                               



                    A redistricting plan satisfying Alaska's more stringent requirements thus  

                                                                                                         

likely survives federal scrutiny; a plan failing to meet Alaska's requirements is invalid  

                                                                                                                         

regardless  of federal law.   Cf. Ross, 292 P.3d at 910-11 (explaining that, because  of  

                                                                                                                                

"more demanding" standards, "if  [a] rule does not violate Alaska's Equal Protection  

                                                                                           

                                                                                                               (continued...)  



                                                              -15-                                                         7646
  


----------------------- Page 16-----------------------

                    In  Kenai  Peninsula  Borough  v.  State  we  set  out  the  controlling  three-step  



equal  protection analysis  in  redistricting,  requiring  an  inquiry  into  and  a  balancing  of  



                                                       56  

competing   voter   and   state   interests.                 First,   what   is   the   nature   of   the   individual's  



                                                                                               57  

constitutional  interest  at  stake  and  what  weight  should  it  be  given?                      Second,  what  is  the  



purpose  of the state  action  and,  to  counterbalance the  weight  given to  the individual's  

interest, what level of importance must it have?58  Third, assuming the  state action has  



a  proper  purpose,  how  close  must  the  relationship  be  between  the  state's  purpose  and  its  

chosen  means?59  

                          Nonetheless,  if  the  purpose  is  intended  discrimination  against  a  class  



of voters, the purpose will be considered illegitimate  without  needing  to ask  about  the  



relationship   between   purpose   and   efficacy;   an   equal   protection  violation   will   be  



established  absent  a demonstration that a greater proportionality  of representation will  



                               60  

result  from  its  action.           



          55        (...continued)  



Clause,  it  does  not  violate  the  federal  Equal  Protection  Clause").  



          56        743  P.2d  at   1371;  see  also  Braun,   193  P.3d  at  731.  



          57       Kenai Peninsula, 743  P.2d at 1371  (stating that nature of interest is most  



important variable  and that primacy of interest fixes review level and burden state has  

to  justify  action).  



          58       Id.  (stating that,  depending  on review  level,  state purpose  ranges  from  

                                                                                                                        

legitimate objective (low end) to compelling state interest (high end)).  

                                                                                               



          59       Id. (stating that, depending on review level, fit between state's means and  

                                                                                                                           

ends ranges  from  substantial relationship  (low  end) to  close  fit  (high  end)  and that  

                                                                                                                          

purpose must be implemented with least restrictive alternative).  

                                                                             



          60       Id.  at  1372; Braun,  193  P.3d  at  731  (summarizing  Kenai  Peninsula  

                                                                                                      

holding).   To the  extent that Braun, id., and 2001 Redistricting  1, 44 P.2d  141, 144  

                                                                                                                          

(Alaska 2002),  might suggest that intentional discrimination is a required element of an  

                                                                                                                             

equal protection claim in the redistricting context, we disavow that language.  

                                                                                                                   



                                                             -16-                                                       7646
  


----------------------- Page 17-----------------------

                    When determining whether a Board has  discriminatory  intent, courts should  



look   to   the   "totality   of   the   circumstances,"   including   the   Board's   process   and   the  



                                     61  

substance  of  its  decision.            As  we  explained  in  Kenai  Peninsula :  



                    Wholesale   exclusion  of    any   geographic   area   from   the  

                    reapportionment   process    and   the   use    of    any    secretive  

                    procedures         suggest       an    illegitimate    purpose.              District  

                    boundaries  which   meander   and   selectively   ignore  political  

                    subdivisions   and   communities   of   interest,   and   evidence   of  

                    regional partisanship are also suggestive.   The presentation of  

                    evidence  that  indicates,  when  considered  with  the  totality  of  

                    the   circumstances,   that   the   Board   acted   intentionally   to  

                    discriminate  against  the  voters  of  a  geographic  area  will  serve  

                    to   compel   the   Board   to   demonstrate   that   its   acts   aimed to  

                    effectuate  proportional  representation.[62]  



                    Districts drawn with an illegitimate purpose are unconstitutional even if the  

                                                                                                                             

negative effect on proportional representation is slight,63 but the harm's extent becomes  

                                                                                                                    

                                                                        

more relevant when fashioning a remedy.64  For example, in Kenai Peninsula we granted  

                                                 

                                                                                                                      



declaratory relief, as opposed to requiring the Board to redraw the challenged district,  

                                                                                                                      

because the disproportionate representation was de minimis.65  

                                                                             



          61        Kenai  Peninsula,  743  P.2d  at   1372.  



          62        Id.  



          63        Id.  



          64        Id.   at   1373   ("[T]he   degree   of   disproportionality   will   be   considered   in  



determining  the  appropriate  relief  to  be  granted.").  



          65        Id.  



                                                             -17-                                                        7646
  


----------------------- Page 18-----------------------

                    2.        Due  process  



                    The  Alaska  Constitution  mandates  that  "[n]o  person  shall  be  deprived  of  



                                                                                     66  

life,   liberty,   or   property,   without   due   process   of   law."                                                      

                                                                                           Due  process  has  both  a  



                                                                67  

                                                                      Procedural   due   process  "requires   that  

procedural  and  a  substantive  component. 



adequate   and   fair  procedures  be   employed  when   state   action  threatens  protected  life,  

liberty,  or  property  interests."68  

                                                 "At  a  minimum,  due  process  requires  that  the  parties  



                                                                     69  

receive  notice  and  an  opportunity  to  be  heard."                   "Substantive  due  process  is  a  doctrine  



that  is  meant  to  guard  against  unfair,  irrational,  or  arbitrary  state  conduct  that  'shock[s]  



                                                 70  

the  universal   sense   of  justice.'   "           As  the   superior   court  pointed   out,   courts   in   other  



jurisdictions have  found  due  process  violations  if  state  action  "seriously undermine[s]  



                                                                          71  

the  fundamental  fairness  of  the  electoral  process."                     



                    We  have  not  previously  explored  how  the  due  process  clause  may  apply  to  



                                    72  

redistricting  challenges,             but  due  process  issues are  raised  tangentially  in  the  matters  



before  us.   We  note  these  issues  when  relevant,  but,  as  we  will  explain,  we  see  no  need  



to  delve  into  them  at  this  time.   



          66        Alaska  Const.  art.  I,  §  7.  



          67        Doe  v.  State,  Dep't  of  Pub.  Safety,  444  P.3d   116,   124-25  (Alaska  2019).  



          68        Id.  at   124.  



          69        Haggblom  v.  City  of  Dillingham,   191  P.3d  991,  995  (Alaska  2008).  



          70        Doe,  444  P.3d  at  125  (alteration  in  original)  (quoting  Church  v.  State,  Dep't  



of  Revenue,  973  P.2d   1125,   1130  (Alaska   1999)).  



          71        See, e.g., Duncan v. Poythress, 657 F.2d 691, 700 (5th Cir. 1981).  

                                                                                                             



          72        Cf.  2001  Redistricting  I,  44  P.3d  141,  147  (Alaska  2002)  (holding  only  that  



challengers'  due  process  claims  "ha[d]  no  merit").  



                                                             -18-                                                        7646
  


----------------------- Page 19-----------------------

                    3.        The "Hickel  Process"  and  the  Voting  Rights  Act  



                    The   federal Voting  Rights  Act   (VRA)  -  intended  to  protect  the  voting  

                                                                                         73   "Under section 5 of the  

power   of  racial  minorities  -   applies  to   state  redistricting.                                                       



[VRA], a reapportionment plan  is  invalid  if  it  'would lead to a retrogression  in the  

                                                                                                                              



position  of racial  minorities  with  respect  to  their  effective  exercise  of  the  electoral  

                                                                                                                     

franchise.' "74  

                       We  have  noted  that  a  "state  may  constitutionally  reapportion  districts  to  



enhance   the   voting   strength   of   minorities   in   order   to   facilitate   compliance   with   the  



             75  

[VRA]."    



                    In Hickel we issued a remand order directing the Board to follow an order  

                                                                                                                           



of priorities relating to redistricting affected by the VRA:  

                                                                              



                    Priority  must  be  given  first  to  the  Federal  Constitution,  

                                                                                          

                    second to the federal [VRA], and third to the requirements of  

                                                                                                            

                    article  VI,  section  6  of  the  Alaska  Constitution.                            The  

                                                                                                        

                    requirements  of  article VI,  section  6  shall receive priority  

                                                                                                   

                    inter  se  in  the  following  order:                 (1)  contiguousness  and  

                                                                                                         

                    compactness,            (2)     relative       socioeconomic             integration,  

                                                                                           

                    (3)  consideration  of  local  government  boundaries,  [and]  

                                                                                                      

                    (4)  use   of  drainage  and  other  geographic  features   in  

                                                                                            

                    describing boundaries.[76]  

                                      



                    But we cautioned that "[t]he [VRA] need not be elevated in stature so that  

                                                                                                                             



          73        Hickel  v. Se.  Conf., 846 P.2d  38, 49  (Alaska 1992); 52 U.S.C.  §§ 10301- 



508.   



          74        Hickel,  846  P.2d  at  49  (quoting  Kenai  Peninsula  Borough  v.  State,  743  P.2d  



1352,   1361  (Alaska   1987)).  



          75        Id. at 49-50 (quoting Kenai Peninsula, 743 P.2d at 1361).  

                                                                                                  



          76        Id. at 62.  

                              



                                                              -19-                                                        7646
  


----------------------- Page 20-----------------------

                                                                                                              77  

the  requirements  of  the  Alaska  Constitution  are  unnecessarily  compromised."                                We  later  



clarified:  



                   The    Hickel   process    provides    the    Board    with    defined  

                   procedural   steps   that,   when   followed,   ensure   redistricting  

                    satisfies  federal  law  without  doing unnecessary  violence  to  

                   the  Alaska  Constitution.   The  Board  must  first  design  a  plan  

                    focusing   on   compliance   with   the   article   VI,   section   6  

                   requirements          of    contiguity,        compactness,          and    relative  

                    socioeconomic  integration; it  may  consider  local  government  

                   boundaries   and   should   use   drainage   and   other   geographic  

                    features  in  describing  boundaries  wherever  possible.   Once  

                    such  a  plan  is  drawn,  the  Board must  determine  whether  it  

                    complies       with      the    [VRA]        and,     to    the     extent     it   is  

                   noncompliant,  make  revisions  that  deviate  from  the  Alaska  

                    Constitution  when  deviation  is  "the  only means available  to  

                    satisfy  [VRA]  requirements."[78]  



We   also  noted   United   States   Supreme  Court   decisions   subsequent  to  Hickel  

                                                                                                                    



"establish[ing] that under the  [VRA], a jurisdiction  cannot unnecessarily depart from  

                                                                                                                        



traditional  redistricting  principles  to  draw  districts  using  race  as  'the predominant,  

                                                                                                           

overriding factor.' "79          We observed that "[f]ollowing the Hickel process will facilitate  

                                                                                                                  

                             



compliance  with  federal  constitutional  law by  ensuring  that  traditional  redistricting  

                                                                                                             

principles are not 'subordinated to race.' "80  

                                                             



          77       Id.  at  51  n.22.   



          78       In  re 2011 Redistricting Cases  (2011  Redistricting  I),  274 P.3d 466, 467-68  



(Alaska  2012)  (quoting  Hickel,  846  P.2d  at  51  n.22).  



          79       Id. at 468 (footnote omitted) (quoting Miller v. Johnson, 515 U.S. 900, 920  

                                                                                                                          

(1995)).  



          80       Id. (quoting Bush v. Vera, 517 U.S. 952, 959 (1996)).  

                                                                                       



                                                            -20-                                                       7646
  


----------------------- Page 21-----------------------

                    The   Board's   compliance   with   the   Hickel   process   is   challenged   in   the  



matters  before  us.  



          D.        Article  VI,  Section  10:   Redistricting  Process  



                    Article  VI,  section   10(b)  requires  a  majority  vote  of  the  Board  to  approve  

a  redistricting  plan.81  

                                                                                                                           

                                   Section  10(a) outlines an expedited procedure the Board must  



                                                                

follow when crafting a redistricting plan:  



                                                                                                 

                    Within thirty days after the official reporting of the decennial  

                                                                                                        

                    census of the United  States or thirty  days after being  duly  

                                                                                                         

                    appointed, whichever occurs last, the board shall adopt one  

                                                                                                        

                    or more proposed redistricting plans.  The board shall hold  

                                                                                                     

                    public  hearings  on  the  proposed  plan,  or,  if  no  single  

                                                                                                          

                    proposed  plan  is agreed  on,  on  all plans  proposed  by  the  

                                                                                                       

                    board.   No  later than ninety  days after the board has been  

                                                                                

                    appointed and the official reporting of the decennial census  

                                                                                             

                    of the United States, the board shall adopt a final redistricting  

                                                                                                        

                    plan and issue a proclamation of redistricting.  The final plan  

                                                                                                        

                    shall set out boundaries of house and senate districts and shall  

                                                                                               

                    be  effective for the  election of members  of the  legislature  

                                                                                                     

                    until after the official reporting of the next decennial census  

                                          

                    of the United States.  



                                                                                                                              

                    We  have  yet to construe  several portions  of  section  10.  We  have  not  



                                                                                                                             

previously decided whether a "proposed redistricting plan" includes both House and  



                                                                                                                     

Senate districts.   We  also have  not  previously  decided whether  the public  hearings  



                                                                                                                

requirement applies to all plans put forward by the Board or only those promulgated  

                                        82  And we have not previously determined whether a plan  

                                                                                                                            

                                

within the initial 30 days. 



          81        Alaska  Const.  art.  VI,  §   10(b).  



          82        We  have  characterized  section   10's  public  hearings  requirement  as:   



                    Under  article  VI,  section   10  of  the  Alaska  Constitution,  the  

                    Alaska   Redistricting   Board   .   .   .   must   adopt   one   or   more  

                                                                                                              (continued...)  



                                                              -21-                                                        7646
  


----------------------- Page 22-----------------------

drafted  by  a  third  party  and  offered  for  public  comment  counts  for  the  30-day  deadline's  



purposes.   These  questions  are  before  us  now.  



          E.	       Article  VI,  Section  11:   Plan  Challenges  



                    Article VI,  section 11 gives  "[a]ny qualified voter" the right to  challenge  

the  Board's  final  redistricting  plan  or  compel  the  Board  to  perform  its  duties.83  

                                                                                                                   Original  



                                                                                     84  

                                                                                         Appellate  jurisdiction  rests  

jurisdiction for such challenges lies with the superior court. 



                                                                                                          85  

with  this c   ourt,  and  we  must r   eview  the c   ase  "on  the  law  and  the  facts."                          

                                                                                                               We review  



                                                                                                                  86  

                                                                                                                     but,  as  

redistricting plans "de novo upon the record developed in the superior court," 



in  other  matters,  we  afford  some  deference  to  the  superior  court's  findings  when  it  was  

"in  the  best  position  to  decide  the  issue,"  such  as  for  witness  credibility.87  



          82	       (...continued)
  



                    proposed  redistricting  plans  within   30   days   after receiving
  

                    official  census  data  from  the  federal  government.   The  Board
  

                    must  then  hold  public  hearings   on   the  proposed  plans   and
  

                    adopt  a  final  plan  within  90  days  of  the  census  reporting.
  



In  re  2011  Redistricting   Cases  (2011  Redistricting  III),  294  P.3d   1032,   1033  (Alaska  

2012).   Although  not  based  on  any  holding,  this  characterization  implies  that  the  public  

hearings  requirement  applies  only  to  plans  proposed  within  the  30-day  window.   



          83	       Alaska Const. art. VI, § 11.  

                                                         



          84	       Id.  



          85	       Id .  



          86	       Groh v. Egan, 526 P.2d 863, 867 (Alaska 1974).  

                                                                                   



          87        See In re Hospitalization of Lucy G., 448 P.3d 868, 877-78 (Alaska 2019)  

                                                                                                                       

(explaining that involuntary commitment and medication proceedings warrant clear error  

                                                                                                                         

review of factual findings but independent review of superior court's decisions based on  

                                                                                                                            

those  factual  findings); Miller  v. Fenton,  474  U.S.  104,  114-15 (1985)  (discussing  

                                                                                                               

situations, such as evaluating witness credibility, in which appellate court should defer  

                                                                                                                        

                                                                                                           (continued...)  



                                                             -22-	                                                      7646
  


----------------------- Page 23-----------------------

                    Courts   review   Board   redistricting   plans   as   if   they   were   "a   regulation  



adopted  under  a  delegation  of  authority  from  the  legislature  to  an  administrative  agency  



to  formulate  policy  and  promulgate  regulations[:]  .  .  .  first  to  ensure  that  the  agency  has  



not  exceeded  the  power  delegated  to  it,  and  second  to  determine  whether  the  regulation  



                                                  88  

is   reasonable   and   not   arbitrary."               Determining   whether   a   regulation   is   reasonable  



primarily  concerns  whether  "the  agency  has  taken  a  hard  look  at  the  salient  problems  and  



                                                                              89  

has  genuinely  engaged  in  reasoned  decision  making."                         "[W]e  always  have  authority  to  



review   the   constitutionality   of   the   action   taken,  but  we   .   .   .   may  not   substitute   [our]  



                                                                                                                             90  

judgment   as   to the   sagacity   of   a   regulation   for   that   of   the   administrative   agency."                      



 Similarly  we   do  not   substitute   our  judgment   as  to  the   sagacity   of   a  redistricting  map  



          87        (...continued)  



to  trial  court's  application  of  law  to  fact);  HARRY   T.   EDWARDS   &   LINDA  A.   ELLIOTT,  

  EDERAL STANDARDS OF  REVIEW: REVIEW OF DISTRICT  COURT  DECISIONS  AND  AGENCY  

F                                                   

ACTIONS 24  (3d  ed.  2018)  (quoting  Inwood  Labs.,  Inc.  v.  Ives  Labs.,  Inc.,  456  U.S.  844,  

               

 855  (1982)).  



          88        Groh, 526 P.2d at 866;  see  also 2011 Redistricting  III,  294  P.3d  at 1037.   



In   Groh   we  justified   this   deferential   standard   of   review   to   the   Board   based   on   the  

contemporary   constitutional   mandate   that   the   executive   branch   was   in   charge   of  

reapportionment.   See  526  P.2d  at  866.   We  have  not yet  considered the deference due  

a  Board's  decisions  in  light  of  the  1999  constitutional  amendments,  instead  citing  earlier  

cases  for  justification  that  the  Board  is  treated  the  same  as  an  administrative  agency.   See,  

e.g.,   2011  Redistricting  III,  294  P.3d  at  1037  &  nn.16-19.   Although  the  justification  for  

deferring  to  the  Board's  decision  no  longer  is  the  same,  we  still  treat  the  Board  as  an  

administrative  agency  and  afford  it  a  more  deferential  standard  of  review  given  that  its  

decision-making power   is   constitutionally   vested,   although   it   is   unclear   whether   the  

Board  has  any  particular  "expertise"  beyond its initial  training  sessions  for  appointed  

members.    



          89        2001 Redistricting I, 44 P.3d 141, 143 n.5 (Alaska 2002) (quoting Interior  

                                                                                                                     

Alaska Airboat Ass'n v. State, Bd. of Game, 18 P.3d 686, 690 (Alaska 2001)).  

                                                                                                                    



          90        Groh, 526 P.2d at 866-67.  

                                                



                                                             -23-                                                       7646
  


----------------------- Page 24-----------------------

adopted  by  the  Board.  



III.	    2021  REDISTRICTING  PROCESS  ROUND  1:   BOARD'S  FINAL  PLAN;  

         SUPERIOR  COURT'S  DECISION;  PETITIONS  FOR  REVIEW  



         A.	      Board  Proceedings  



                  The   Board's   five   members   were   appointed   in   July   and  August   2020.   



Governor  Mike Dunleavy  appointed  Budd  Simpson  (from Juneau,  First  Judicial  District)  



and  Bethany  Marcum  (from  Anchorage,  Third  Judicial  District);  Senate  President  Cathy  



Giessel   appointed   John   Binkley   (from   Fairbanks,   Fourth   Judicial   District);  House  



Speaker  Bryce  Edgmon  appointed  Nicole  Borromeo  (from  Anchorage,  Third  Judicial  



District);  and  Chief  Justice  Joel  Bolger  appointed  Melanie  Bahnke  (from  Nome,  Second   



Judicial  District).   The  members  elected  Binkley  as  Board  Chair.   



                  The  Board  first  met  in  September  2020,  and  it  met  numerous  times  through  



July  2021  for  "organizational  work,  procurement,  training  and  planning."   Among  other  



things,   the   Board   selected   an   executive   director,   adopted   policies,   interviewed   and  



selected   legal   counsel,  hired   a  VRA   consultant,  received  training   on  the  redistricting  



software,   and   attended   the   National   Conference   of   State   Legislatures   "Ready   to  



Redistrict"  conference.   



                  On  August   12  the  United  States  Census  Bureau  reported  the  2020  census  



results   to  Alaska.     The   Board   then   had   until   September   11   to   "adopt   one   or   more  



proposed  redistricting  plans"  for  public  hearings  and  until  November  10  to  adopt  a  final  

plan.91     The  Board  held  meetings  and  took  public  testimony  August  23-24  and  

                                                                                                               



September 7-9.  On September 9 - within the required 30-day period - the Board  

                                                                                                             



adopted two proposed redistricting plans with 40 House districts, but no Senate district  

                                                                                                            



         91       Alaska   Const.   art.   VI,   §   10(a)   (requiring   Board   to   adopt   one   or   more  



proposed  redistricting  plans  within  30  days  of  receiving  official  census  information;  to  

hold  public  hearings;  and  to  adopt  final  plan  within  90  days).  



                                                       -24-	                                                 7646
  


----------------------- Page 25-----------------------

                                                                                                                       

pairings.   On  September 20 -  after the initial  30-day period - the Board  adopted  



                                                                                                                             

updated versions of the first two plans, as well as four third-party plans.  The Board then  



                                                                                                                        

took the six adopted plans on a "road show" from September 27 to November 1, holding  



                                                                                                                           

public  hearings  throughout  Alaska.   These hearings  included  some testimony  about  



                                     

possible Senate district pairings.  



                                                                                                                                

                    The Board reconvened in Anchorage November 2-5.  On November 5 the  



                                                                                                                         

Board  voted  4-1  (with  Member  Marcum  disagreeing)  to  approve  the  final  House  



                                                                                                                       

redistricting map.  On November 8 the Board began working on Senate district pairings,  



                                                                                                                     

and took two hours of public testimony.  On November 9 the Board exited an executive  



                                                                                                                             

session and without meaningful discussion immediately adopted, by  a 3-2 vote with  



                                                                                                                      

Board  Members  Bahnke  and  Borromeo  disagreeing,  a  number  of  Senate  pairings,  



                                                                                                                    

including pairing House Districts 21 and 22 to create Senate District K.  On November  



                                                                                                                       

10 the Board adopted its final state-wide redistricting plan; Board Members Binkley,  



                                                                                                                    

Marcum, and Simpson signed in support and Board Members Bahnke and Borromeo  



                                   

signed in opposition.  



                                               

          B.        Superior Court Proceedings  



                                                                                                                               

                    Five separate challenges to the Board's plan were filed in superior court and  



                                                                                                                       

consolidated into one case.  The challengers included:  (1) Matanuska-Susitna Borough  



                                                                                                                         

(Mat-Su Borough) and voter Michael Brown (collectively Mat-Su); (2) City of Valdez  



                                                                                                                              

and voter Mark Detter (collectively Valdez); (3) Municipality of Skagway Borough and  



                                                                                                                       

voter  Brad  Ryan  (collectively  Skagway);  (4)  East  Anchorage  voters  Felisa  Wilson,  



                                                                                                                         

George Martinez, and Yarrow  Silvers (collectively East Anchorage); and (5) Calista  



                                                                                                                        

Corporation, William Naneng, and Harley Sundown (collectively Calista). The superior  



                                                                                                                 

court also heard from several intervenors:  Doyon, Limited; Tanana Chiefs Conference;  



                                                                                                                              

Fairbanks Native Association; Ahtna, Inc.; Sealaska Corporation; Donald Charlie, Sr.;  



                                                                                                                           

Rhonda Pitka; Cherise Beatus; and Gordon Carlson. Participating jointly as amici curiae  



                                                              -25-                                                         7646
  


----------------------- Page 26-----------------------

                                                                                                                        

were  Alaska  Black  Caucus; National  Association  for  the  Advancement  of  Colored  



                                                                                                                                 

People Anchorage, Alaska Branch #1000; Enlaces; Korean American Community of  



                                                                                                                            

Anchorage, Inc.; Native Movement; and First Alaskans Institute.  We refer to this group  



                                                

as "amici curiae Alaska Black Caucus."  



                                                                                                                                

                    The  superior court conducted  a  12-day bench  trial  starting January 21,  



                                                                                                                              

2022. Pretrial proceedings took place on a highly condensed schedule: The parties took  



                                                                                                                                

depositions  of  Board  members  and  other  witnesses  and  filed  direct  testimony  by  



                                                                                                                      

depositions and affidavits in advance of trial.  Cross-examination and redirect testimony  



                                  

were permitted at the trial.  



                                                                                                                      

                    The superior court issued its decision on February 15, making the following  



                                                                                                                             

legal conclusions and remanding to the Board to remedy deficiencies in the final plan:  



                                                                                                

                     1.	       The Board violated the rights of the East Anchorage  

                                                                                                           

                               Plaintiffs  under  the  Equal  Protection  Clause  of  the  

                                                                                                            

                              Alaska Constitution . . . by pairing House District 21- 

                                                                                                        

                               South       Muldoon           with      the      geographically            and  

                                                                                    

                               demographically  distinct  House  District  22-Eagle  

                                                                                          

                               River Valley to create Senate District K.  



                                                                                                

                    2.	        The Board violated the rights of the East Anchorage  

                                                                                                 

                               and  Skagway  Plaintiffs  under  the  Due  [Process]  

                                                                                                           

                               Clause of the Alaska Constitution . . . by failing to take  

                                                                                                     

                               a "hard look" at House District 3 and Senate District  

                                                                                           

                               K in light of the clear weight of public testimony.  



                                                                                                              

                    3.	        The Board violated Article VI, Section 10 by failing to  

                                                                                                      

                              hold meaningful public hearings on proposed Senate  

                                                          

                               Districts prior to adoption.  



                                                                                                              

                    4.	        The Board violated Article VI, Section 10 by failing to  

                                                                                                          

                               include Senate District pairings in any proposed plan  

                                                                                              

                               adopted before the 30-day constitutional deadline.  



                                                                                                              

                     5.	       The Board violated Article VI, Section 10 by failing to  

                                                                                                      

                               make  a  good-faith  effort  to  accommodate  public  

                                                                                                      

                               testimony  in regard  to  House  District  3  and  Senate  



                                                               -26-	                                                        7646
  


----------------------- Page 27-----------------------

                             District  K.  



                    6.	      The  Board  violated  the  Open Meetings  Act  . . .  in  its  

                             improper  use   of   executive   session,  but   the   violation  

                             does   not,   on   balance,  require   the   Court   to   void   all  

                             actions  taken  by  the  Board  in  executive  sessions.  



                    7.	      In   all   other   respects,   the   Board   did   not   violate   the  

                             Plaintiffs'  rights  under  Article  I,  Sections   1 and  7,  or  

                             Article  VI,  Sections  6  and   10.  



                   This matter should be remanded to  the  Board  to  address the  

                   deficiencies  in  the  Board  plan  consistent  with  this  order.   



          C.	       Petitions  For  Review  



                   The   Board,   Skagway, Mat-Su,   and  Valdez  petitioned   for   our  review   of  

                                                           92   We granted review, later issuing a summary  

portions  of  the  superior  court's  decision.                                                                   

order resolving the petitions and noting that a full explanation would follow.93  

                                                                                                      



                    1.	      The Board's petition  

                                                  



                   The Board's petition focuses on East Anchorage's successful challenge to  

                                                                                                                            



Senate District K and on Skagway's successful challenge to House Districts 3 and 4.  

                                                                                                                                



The Board contends that its mapping of House Districts 3 and 4 and Senate District K  

                                                        



did not violate article VI, section 10  and that the superior court's textual interpretation  

                                                                                                           



of section 10 and reasoning by analogy to federal administrative procedures law were  

                                                                                                                        



erroneous.  The Board adds that Senate District K did not discriminate against distinct  

                                                                                



communities of interest in East Anchorage  and thus  did not violate the right  to  fair  

                                                                                                                         



representation under Alaska's equal protection law.  The Board further argues that it did  

                                                                                                                           



          92       See   Alaska   R.   App.   P.   216.5(h)   (providing   for   immediate   petition  for  



review  to  supreme  court  of  superior  court  decision  remanding  to  Board).  



          93       We   attach   as   Appendix   A   copies   of   relevant   election   district   maps   the  



Board   published   with   its   November   2021   redistricting   proclamation.     Our   earlier  

summary  order  resolving  the  petitions  for  review  is  attached  as  Appendix  B.  



                                                            -27-	                                                      7646
  


----------------------- Page 28-----------------------

not  violate  the  Open  Meetings  Act;  that,  even  if  it  did,  a waiver  of  attorney-client  

                                                                                                            



privilege is not an appropriate remedy for violations of the Act; and that the superior  

                                                                                                                      



court  erred  in  its  handling  of the  Board's  discovery requests  and proposed  witness  

                                                                                                                       



testimony.  



                    2.	       Skagway's petition  

                                                 



                     Skagway contends that, although the superior court correctly invalidated  

                                                                                                                  



House Districts 3 and 4 on due process grounds, the court also should have invalidated  

                                                                                                                  



the districts for violating article VI, section 6's socioeconomic integration requirement.  

                                                                                                                                    



Skagway also contends the superior court erred by concluding that the Board followed  

                                                                                                                     



the Hickel process and by not addressing Skagway's equal protection argument.  

                                                                                                                          



                    3.	       Mat-Su's and Valdez's petitions  

                                                                     



                    Mat-Su and Valdez primarily challenge the superior court's determinations  

                                                                                                             



that  House  Districts  29  and  36  satisfy  Alaska's  constitutional  requirements.                                     They  

                                                                                                                           



contend that the  superior court erred when  it concluded the Board had  followed the  

                                                                                                                              



Hickel process, the Board's Open Meeting Act violations did not justify  voiding any  

                                                                                                                             



action taken, and the Board gave salient issues a "hard look" when creating the House  

                                                                                                                    



district combining portions of the Mat-Su Borough and the Valdez area.  

                                                                                                              



IV.	      RESOLUTION OF ROUND 1 PETITIONS FOR REVIEW  

                                                                                                            



          A.	       Common Issues  

                                     



                    1.	       The superior court did not err when it concluded that the Board  

                                                                                                                         

                              sufficiently followed the Hickel Process.  

                                                                                 



                    Not  long  after receiving  the  2020  census data in mid-August 2021 the  

                                                                                                 



Board held a mapping work session, and the members learned that the mapping software  

                                                                                                                      



could display race data.  Although Board members clearly were interested in how race  

                                                                                                                             



data  changed  based  on  district  boundary  lines,  they  made  comments  reflecting  an  

                                                                                                                               



understanding that race data and VRA requirements should not be considered until later  

                                                                                                                            



                                                              -28-	                                                       7646
  


----------------------- Page 29-----------------------

                                                                                                                           

in the process.  At this work session Member Bahnke drew what would become House  



                                                                                                                               

Districts 37, 38, 39, and 40, covering much of Alaska; as she drew the districts, she  



                                                                  

nonetheless asked about certain race data.  



                                                                                                                         

                    On September 8 the Board orally affirmed that it would proceed without  



                                                                                                                           

the  race  data being  visible  on the  districting  software.   On  September  9 the  Board  



                                                                                                                        

adopted  two  proposed  redistricting  plans,  "Board  Composite                                        v.1"  and  "Board  



                                                                                                                           

Composite v.2."  Member Bahnke requested that the Board engage with its VRA expert  



                                                                                                                               

"as soon as practicable" after adopting the proposed plans, "at least to look at what [has  



                                                                                                                                 

been]  developed."              House  Districts  37,  38,  39,  and  40  -  referred  to  as  early  as  



                                                                                                                         

November  2  as  the  "VRA  Districts"  by  the  Board  -  did  not  significantly  change  



                                                                                                   

between September 9 and the final redistricting plan adopted in November.  



                                                                                                                       

                    From  September  17 to  20  the  Board  took  public  testimony,  replaced  



                                                                                                                             

Composites v.1 and v.2 with Composites v.3 and v.4, and adopted four third-party plans  



                                                                                                                                 

for consideration.  It then embarked on its public hearing road show from September 27  



                                                                                                                               

to November 1. After the road show the Board received a VRA compliance report.  The  



                                                                                                                               

report found that Districts 37, 38, 39, and 40 complied with the VRA.  It also noted that  



                                                                                                                       

because three of these four districts "experienced population growth which outpaced  



                                                                                                                      

increases  in  the  overall  state  population,"  the  Board  was  able  "to  draw  compact,  



                                                                                                                        

contiguous districts which retain[ed] existing socio-economic integration while retaining  



                                                                                                                                

core  constituencies."               The  Board  then  adopted  the  final  House  districts  map  on  



                      

November 5.  



                                                                                                                                

                    At trial challengers contended that the Board "locked in" Districts 37, 38,  



                                                                                                                          

39, and 40  as "VRA Districts"  at an early stage of the process,  violating the Hickel  



                                                                                                        

process.        They  argued  that,  having  done  so without  entertaining  modifications, the  



                                                                                                                                 

Valdez area was paired with portions  of the Mat-Su Borough because the Board no  



                                                                            

longer had anywhere else to put the Valdez area.  



                                                               -29-                                                         7646
  


----------------------- Page 30-----------------------

                                                   

                    The superior court found:  



                                                                                                               

                    The transcripts and videos of public Board meetings make it  

                                                                                                  

                    abundantly   clear   that              Board   Members   were                   actively  

                                                                                                            

                    considering VRA-related issues since the beginning  of the  

                                                                                                  

                    process.  And the fact that all four of the Board's proposed  

                                                                                                           

                    plans contained identical versions of Districts 37, 38, 39, and  

                                                                                                         

                    40 also creates a strong inference that the Board never truly  

                                                                         

                    considered available alternatives.  



                                                                                                                       

The superior court particularly noted that there were "very few changes to the so-called  



                                                                                                                               

VRA districts throughout the entire process"; that "the Board [was] made aware of past  



                                                                                                                              

VRA districts and requirements"; that "it was capable of viewing and had racial data  



                                                                                                                        

displayed during several public work sessions in August and September"; that Member  



                                                                                                                           

Bankhe made  comments  "throughout the redistricting process  evidenc[ing]  a  strong  



                                                                                                                                  

preoccupation with both VRA requirements and the percentage of Alaska Natives in  



                                                                                                                    

rural areas"; and that "by early September, the Board was requesting its VRA consultants  



                                                                                     

to analyze the proposed plans 'as soon as practicable.' "  



                                                                                                                                      

                    Despite these findings the  superior court ultimately  determined that the  



                                                                                                                                 

Board sufficiently followed the Hickel process, and the court declined to grant relief on  



                                                                                                      

the basis  of any deviations.  The court discussed how the Board clearly would have  



                                                                                                                            

violated  the  Hickel  process  if  it  meant  "that  the  Board  can  never  consider  VRA  



                                                                                                                     

implications  prior  to  adoption  of  the  final  house  plan."                             But  the  court  ultimately  



                                                                                                                           

interpreted Hickel and our subsequent case law to mean that the Board may take "VRA  



                                                                                                                               

requirements into account during the final stretch of the redistricting process"  and that  



                                                                                        

the Board sufficiently complied with the Hickel process.  



                                                                                                                                  

                    Mat-Su,  Skagway, and Valdez contend the  superior court erred when it  



                                                                                                                       

determined that the Board sufficiently followed the Hickel process.  The Board responds  



                                                                                                                       

that it completed "all of its proposed plans without analyzing or applying the VRA, or  



                                                                                                                                

even considering racial  data  .  .  . until  the proposed  plans  were  set."   Disputing  the  



                                                               -30-                                                         7646
  


----------------------- Page 31-----------------------

assertion  that  "VRA  Districts"  were  locked  in, the  Board  points  to  the  superior  court's  



observation  that  House  Districts  37,  38,  and  39  were  modified  up  until  the  last  day.   



                    Whether  the  Board  violated  the  Hickel  process  is  much  less  obvious  in  the  



matters  now  before  us  compared  with  Hickel  or  the  2011  redistricting  cases.   The  Board  



clearly  was  aware  of  race  data  at  the  start,  but  we  agree  with  the  superior  court  that  this  



seemed  to  be  a  part  of  learning  "the  basics  of  the  redistricting  process  and  how  to  use  the  



districting  software."   Referring  to  these  districts  as  "VRA  districts"  early  in  the  process  



                                                                                                          94  

also  seems  reasonable  given  their  historic  consideration  under  the  VRA,                             and  it  would  



not necessarily  mean that these districts were  drawn with the VRA  in mind during  the  



redistricting process.  We agree with the  superior court  that, given  Hickel 's avoidance  



of  the  constitutional  language  of  "proposed"  and  "final"  plans,  the  Board  is  not  required  



to  save  VRA  considerations  until  the  very  end  of  the  90-day  period  for  adopting  a  final  

redistricting  plan.95        Designing a proposed plan without specific attempts to meet VRA  

                                                                                                                        



requirements and then submitting it to VRA experts, regardless of where the Board is in  

                                                                                                                             



its timeline for adopting a final plan, satisfies the Hickel process.  

                                                                                                 



                    We thus affirm the superior court's conclusion that the Board sufficiently  

                                                                                                               



complied with the Hickel process.  

                                       



                    2.	      The superior court did not err by concluding that it was not in  

                                                                                                                             

                             the public's best interest to vacate Board actions resulting from  

                                                                                                                        

                             Open Meetings Act violations.  

                                                              



                    Many times throughout its work the Board met in executive session under  

                                                                                                                        



          94        See   2011   Redistricting  III,   294   P.3d    1032,    1035-36   (Alaska   2012)  



(identifying  2011  VRA  regions  that  are  similar  to  those  identified  in  2021).   



          95        See  Hickel  v.  Se.  Conf.,  846  P.2d  38,  51  n.22  (Alaska   1992).  



                                                             -31-	                                                      7646
  


----------------------- Page 32-----------------------

                                             96  

the  Open  Meetings  Act  (OMA),                 and  the  Board's  executive  sessions  were  a  significant  



issue   at   trial.     The   executive   sessions  were   particularly   problematic   because   they  



hindered  the  superior  court's  ability  to  review  the  Board's  actions.   



                   Toward   the   end  of   the   Board's   November   3   meeting,   the   members  



discussed  the  Valdez  area's  House  district  placement.   The  Board  appears  to  have  been  



deciding  between  pairing  the  Valdez  area  with  portions  of  the  Mat-Su  Borough  or  with  



some  Prince  William  Sound communities.   Several  members  opined  that  an  executive  



session  might  be  necessary  to  discuss  legal  issues  about  pairing  the  Valdez  area  with  



portions  of  the  Mat-Su  Borough.   The  Board  took  a  short  break;  immediately  upon  return  



Member   Simpson   moved   to   enter   into   executive   session   "under   AS   44.62.310(c),  

subsections  (3)  and  (4),"  without  further  specification.97                   The executive session lasted  

                                                                                                                     



          96       The  OMA,  instructing  governmental  bodies  to  make  meetings  open  to  the  



public,  applies  to  "[a]ll  meetings  of  a  governmental  body  of  a  public  entity  of  the  state."   

AS   44.62.310(a).     The   OMA   is   meant   to   maintain   open   deliberations,   prevent  

governmental  agencies  from  deciding  "what  is  good  for  the  people  to  know  and  what  is  

not good for them to  know,"  and  protect  "the  people's  right to  remain  informed . . . so  

that  they may  retain  control  over  the  instruments  they  have  created."   AS  44.62.312.   

Consideration  of  matters  required  by  law  to  be  kept  confidential  or  matters  "not  subject  

to  public  disclosure" need not  be open to the public and  can instead  be "discussed at  a  

meeting  in  executive  session."   AS  44.62.310(b),  (c)(3),  (c)(4).    The  OMA's  remedy  for  

executive  sessions  held  contrary  to  the  statutory terms is  that,  subject  to a  lawsuit,  the  

hidden   action   is   voidable   but   can   be   cured by "conducting   a   substantial   and   public  

reconsideration  of  the  matters  considered  at  the  original  meeting."   AS  44.62.310(f).  



          97       Cf. AS 44.62.310(b) ("The motion to convene in executive session must  

                                                                                                                      

clearly  and  with  specificity  describe  the  subject  of  the  proposed  executive  session  

                                                                                                                  

without defeating the purpose of addressing the subject in private.  Subjects may not be  

                                                                                                                          

considered at the executive session except those mentioned in the motion calling for the  

                                                                                                                         

executive session unless auxiliary to the main question.").  As the superior court noted,  

                                                                                                                    

vague motions to enter into executive session hinder the ability to determine "whether  

                                                                                                                

a particular executive session was held in accordance with the law."  We are unable to  

                                                                                                                          

                                                                                                         (continued...)  



                                                           -32-                                                      7646
  


----------------------- Page 33-----------------------

through   the   end   of   the   day's   meeting.     That   evening   Member   Borromeo   sent   text  



messages  to  two  individuals  asking  for  case  law  supporting  a  pairing  of  the  Valdez  area  



and  portions  of  the  Mat-Su  Borough.   



                  November 4 was a full-day mapping work session.  The Board  reviewed  



a  map pairing  the  Valdez  area  with  portions  of  the  Mat-Su  Borough.   Board members  



discussed  that t  he  pairing  was  socioeconomically  integrated  and  compact a   nd  that  the  



Board's  legal counsel  had  advised  them  there  was  historical  precedent  for the  pairing.   



There  was  no  further  discussion  of  pairing  the  Valdez  area  with  Prince  William  Sound  



communities.   When  Member  Marcum   suggested  that  the  Board  reconsider,  Member  



Borromeo  explained  that  three  Board  members  were  not  willing  to  place  the  Valdez  area  



in  "the  Interior"  House  district  and  that  the  Anchorage  area  apparently  was  not  a  viable  



pairing  option  due  to  other  constitutional  concerns.   The  Board eventually  agreed  that  



Member  Marcum  could  propose  pairing  the  Valdez  area  and  the  Anchorage  area.    



                  On  November   5   the   Board   entered   into   executive   session   twice.    After  



Member  Simpson  mentioned  "a  Voting  Rights  issue"  he  moved  to  enter  into  executive  



session "for  the  purpose  of  receiving  legal  advice   .   .   .  under  AS  44.62.310,  involving  



matters  which  by  law  or  ordinance  are  required  to  be  confidential,  and  matters  involving  

consideration  of  government  records  that  by  law  are  not  subject  to  public  disclosure."98  

                                                                                                                         



The  Board  returned  from  executive  session  and  entered  a  mapping  work  session.  

                                                                                                                         



Member Marcum mentioned that, despite public testimony demonstrating Valdez area  

                          



         97        (...continued)  



discern  how  these  allowances  for  executive  session  applied  to  the  Board's  discussion  

about  pairing  the  Valdez  area  with  portions  of  the  Mat-Su  Borough.  



         98       We   are   unable   to   discern   how   these   allowances  for   executive   session  



applied  to  the  Board's  discussion  about  pairing  the  Valdez  area  with  portions  of  the  Mat- 

Su  Borough.  



                                                         -33-                                                   7646
  


----------------------- Page 34-----------------------

voters and Mat-Su Borough voters did not want to be paired together, after consulting  



with  legal  counsel  the  pairing  appeared  to  be  the  only  available  option.   Following  more  



public  testimony,  Member  Bahnke  suggested  that  the  Board  enter  into  executive  session  



for   legal   advice   on   the   "whole   new   map   that   [was]   on   the   table   for   consideration."   



Member  Borromeo  moved  to  enter  into  executive  session  under  AS  44.62.310(c)(3)  and  

(4),  again  without  offering  an explanation beyond  the statutory language;99 the  motion  



passed.    When   the   Board   exited   executive   session   it   appeared   to   have   narrowed its  



choices  to  two  maps,  both  pairing  the  Valdez  area  with  portions  of  the  Mat-Su  Borough.   



The  Board  ultimately  voted  and  approved  a  final  House  district  map  with  that  pairing.  



                   On  November 8,  when  the  Board  began  work  on  Senate  district pairings,  



it  took  two  hours  of  public  testimony  before  entering  into  executive  session.   This  was  



the  only  public  testimony  taken  specifically  for   Senate  district  pairings,  and  residents  



from  both  Anchorage  and  Eagle  River  tended  to  support  pairing the  North  and   South  



Muldoon  House  districts  together  and  the  North  and  South  Eagle  River  House  districts  



together.   The  Board  entered  into  executive  session  to  "speak  with  [its]  legal  counsel  and  



voting  rights consultant"  upon  a  motion  by Member Borromeo  citing  "legal  and  other  

.  .  .  purposes  relating  to  receiving  legal  counsel."100  

                                                                           



                   After the executive session ended, the Board conducted a work session for  

                                                                                                                       



over three hours.  During the work session Member Bahnke "strongly" recommended  

                                                                                       



pairing the Eagle River House districts together, but Member Marcum stated there was  

                                                                                                                      



a "socioeconomic connection between [Joint Base Elmendorf - Richardson (JBER)] and  

                                                                                                                      



         99        We   are   unable   to  discern   how   these   allowances   for   executive   session  



applied  to  the  Board's  discussion  about  pairing  the  Valdez  area  with  portions  of  the  Mat- 

Su  Borough.  



          100      We are unable to discern how this topic fit within the statutory allowances  

                                                                                                           

for executive session.  

                     



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----------------------- Page 35-----------------------

[North]  Eagle  River"  and  said  their  two  House  districts  should  be  paired  together.   The  



Board  ended  the  day  with  an  executive  session,  apparently  seeking  legal  advice  on  the  

Senate  district  pairings.101  



                  When   the   Board   reconvened   on   November   9   it   continued   in   executive  



session.   The  Board  then  resumed  public  session,  and  without  any  substantive  discussion  



on  the  record, Member Marcum moved that the Board combine the South Eagle  River  



House   district  with  the   South  Muldoon  House   district to  make  up   Senate  District  K.   



Members  Binkley,  Marcum,  and   Simpson  voted  in  favor,  with  Members  Bahnke  and  



Borromeo  opposed.  



                  The  propriety  of  the  Board's  various  executive  sessions  first  came  before  



us  in  January  2022  after  challengers  asked  the  superior  court  to  conduct  a  private  review  



of  certain  Board  communications,  contending  that  "the  Board  [had]  improperly  utilized  



executive sessions to conduct what should have been public deliberations."   The superior  

court  found  that  the  challengers  had  a  reasonable  basis  to  believe  that  in  camera  review102  



may  show  that  some  of  the  documents  might  not  be  subject  to  the  attorney-client  

                                                                                                  



         101      We  are  unable  to  discern  how  this  topic  fit  within  the  statutory  allowances  



for  executive  session.  



         102      When   a   party   asserts   that   a   requested   document   or   communication  is  



privileged,   the   superior   court   may   privately   review   evidence   "to  determine   the  

applicability  of  the"  asserted  privilege  only  upon  "  'a  showing  of  a  factual  basis  adequate  

to support a good  faith  belief  by  a  reasonable  person,'  .  .  .  that  in  camera  review  of  the  

materials  may  reveal  evidence  to  establish"  whether  the  asserted  privilege  applies.   Cent.  

Constr.   Co.   v.  Home  Indem.   Co.,   794   P.2d   595, 598-99 (Alaska   1990)   (omission   in  

original)  (quoting   United  States  v.  Zolin,  491  U.S.  554,  572  (1989)).  



                                                        -35-                                                   7646
  


----------------------- Page 36-----------------------

             103                                                                                         104  

privilege         due   to   the   interplay   of   the   OMA,   the   Public   Records   Act                 and   the  



appearance  of  the  Board  utilizing  executive  sessions  to  obtain  general  redistricting  legal  



advice rather than specific litigation advice.   Shortly before trial began, the superior court  



ordered  a  private  review  of  some  documents  the  Board  had  claimed  were  privileged.  



                   The  Board  filed  an  emergency  petition  for  review,  asking  us  to  decide  that  



the   order for   in   camera   review   would   violate   its   privilege   rights   and   that   the   OMA  



neither applies to the Board  nor  provides  for in  camera review of otherwise privileged  



documents  as  a  remedy  for  violation.   We  denied  the  petition  for  review.   Although  the  



superior   court   ultimately   determined   that   most   of   the   documents   were   privileged,   it  



ordered  a  few  "be  produced  over  the  Board's  objection."   The  superior  court  explained  



in   its   February   15   decision   that   it   would   have   ordered   production  of   additional  



documents  regarding  whether  "discussions  held  during  executive  session"  violated  the  



OMA  but  that  the  violations  did  not  appear  to  be  in  bad  faith  and  the  current  state  of  the  



law  made  it  unclear  whether  doing  so  was  an  available  remedy.  



                   In  its  February  15  decision  the  superior  court  additionally  determined  that  



the   Board   likely   violated   the   OMA   when   "at   least   three   Board   members   reached   a  

'consensus'  outside  of  the  public  view"  regarding  Senate  District  K.105   But because the  

                                                                                                                      



         103       See  Alaska  R.  Evid.  503  (establishing  scope  of  lawyer-client  privilege).  



         104       See   AS   40.25.120   (affording   right   to   every   person   "to   inspect   a   public  



record  in  the  state"  subject  to  specific  exceptions).  



         105       The  court  found  the  Board  also  violated  procedural  requirements  under  the   



OMA  when the Board convened executive  sessions "following  a  vague  motion which  

did  not  specify  the  meeting's  subject."   Although  stating  that  these  violations  "harm[]  the  

public  confidence  in  public  entities  generally  and  more  importantly  in  the  highly  visible  

and  consequential  redistricting  process,"  the  superior  court  concluded  that  they  did  not,  

on   balance,   "outweigh   the   harm   that   would   be   caused   were   [it]   to   void   the   Senate  

                                                                                                      (continued...)  



                                                          -36-                                                    7646
  


----------------------- Page 37-----------------------

Board  publicly  voted  to adopt  Senate  District K              ,  the  court  concluded  that i  t w    as  not  a  



voidable  action.   The  court  noted  that  it  had  struggled  to  discern  the  extent  to  which  the  



Board  conducted  executive  session  for  inappropriate  reasons.   The  court  also  suggested  



that  an  "appropriate  remedy  for  violation  of  the  OMA  would  include  opening  the  door  



to  discussions  held  during  executive  session,  regardless  of  the  presence  of  an  attorney"  



in  light  of  the  "strong  public  policy  in  favor  of  open  government."  



                           a.       The  Board's  OMA  arguments  



                  The  Board   challenges  the   superior   court's   determination  that  the  Board  



engaged  in  "secret  deliberations  on  senate  pairings"  and  the  superior  court's  suggestion  



that   improperly   entering   into   executive   sessions   might   waive   the   attorney-client  



privilege.   Unlike  the  Board's  position  in  the   superior  court,  the  Board  does  not  now  



                                                    106  

assert  that  it  is  exempt  from  the  OMA.            Because  the  superior  court  did  not  invalidate  



         105      (...continued)  



pairings  on  that  basis  alone."   



         106      The   OMA's   plain   language    seems   to    support   the    superior   court's  



conclusion  that  the  OMA  applies  to  the  Board.   Subject  to  certain  exceptions  not  relevant  

here,  the  OMA  applies  to  "[a]ll  meetings  of  a  governmental  body  of  a  public  entity  of  the  

state,"  and  "governmental  body"  is  defined  broadly  to  mean:   "[A]n  assembly,  council,  

board,  commission,  committee,  or  other  similar  body  of  a  public  entity  with  the  authority  

to establish policies or make decisions for  the  public  entity."   AS  44.62.310(a),  (h)(1).   

Prior  to  the 1999 constitutional amendments  creating  the independent  redistricting board,  

we  held  that  the  governor's  advisory  board  was  subject  to  the  OMA.   See  Hickel  v.  Se.  

Conf.,   846  P.2d   38,   57   (Alaska   1992).   And  in  2001  Redistricting  I  we  reviewed  the  

Board's alleged OMA violations without reconsidering whether it  still applied in light  

of  the   1999 amendments   changing  Board   appointment  procedure.   44  P.3d   141,   147  

(Alaska  2002).   The  OMA  is  unenforceable  against  the  legislative  and  judicial  branches  

of  government.   See  Abood  v.  League  of   Women   Voters,  743  P.2d  333,  337-40  (Alaska  

1987)  (holding  that whether OMA applied  to legislature was nonjusticiable issue because  

"[t]he Alaska  Constitution  expressly  commits  to  the  legislature  authority  to  adopt  its  own  

rules  of  procedure"  and  that  whether  to  conduct  business  "in  open  or  closed  sessions  is  

                                                                                                    (continued...)  



                                                        -37-                                                   7646
  


----------------------- Page 38-----------------------

 Senate   District  K   due  to   OMA   violations   and  because  we  view  the   alleged   abuse   of  



executive  session  as  more  pertinent  to  the superior  court's  blended  due process  and  "hard  



look"  analysis  we address later, we focus solely  on  the superior  court's  suggested  remedy  



that  OMA  violations  might  act  to  waive  the  Board's  attorney-client  privilege  in  some  



 situations.   We  address  this  issue  because  of  the  Board's  continuing  work.  



                    The  Board  contends  that  the  only  remedy  for  an  OMA  violation  is  voiding  



the  action  wrongfully  taken  in  executive   session,  not  "abrogat[ing]  the  government's  



attorney-client  privilege."   We  agree  with  the  Board  that  the  only  remedy  for  an  action  



taken  during  an  OMA  violation  is  voiding  the  action,  "if  the  court  finds  that,  considering  



all  of  the  circumstances,  the  public  interest  in  compliance  with  [the  OMA]  outweighs  the  



harm  that  would  be  caused  to  the  public  interest  and  to  the  public  entity  by  voiding  the  

            107   But we also recognize that the OMA reflects a body of law distinct from the  

action."                                                                                                                  

law  of  privilege108   and  that  matters  discussed  during  an  executive  session  are  not  

            

                                                                                                                         



automatically privileged merely because an attorney for the governing body is present  

                                                                 



          106       (...continued)  



a  procedural  question  .  .  .  traditionally  .  .  .  the  subject  of  legislative  rules").   But  there  is  

no express  constitutional  reservation  of  authority  to  the  Board  to  promulgate  its  own  

procedural  rules,  and  the  Board  thus  is s   ubject  to  Alaska  Statutes  that d                  o  not i  nterfere  

with its constitutionally granted powers.   Compare  Alaska  Const.  art.  II,  §   12,  and  art.  

IV,  §§  8,  15,  with  art.  VI,  §  9  (expressly  reserving  rule-making  powers  to  the  legislature,  

judiciary,  and  judicial  council,  but  not  to  the  Board).  



          107       AS 44.62.310(f).  

                          



          108       Generally,  "[c]ourts  consistently  'find no  language  in  the  [OMA] that  

                                                                                                                        

would support the assertion that the Legislature intended to create an absolute privilege  

                                                                                                                 

for all communications occurring while a public body is in a closed session.' "  ANN  

                                                                                                                       

TAYLOR  SCHWING,  OPEN  MEETING  LAWS   §  7.11  F.  (3d  ed.  2011) (quoting  State ex  rel.  

 Upper  Republican  Nat.  Res.  Dist. v. Honorable Dist.  Judges,  728 N.W.2d 275, 279 (Neb.  

2007)).  



                                                            -38-                                                      7646
  


----------------------- Page 39-----------------------

for  the  discussions.   There  are  limits  on  using  the  OMA's  executive  session  provisions  



                                                                                             109  

for  legal  advice  pertaining  to  the  business  of  a  government  agency.                     But  we  do  not  



need  to  explore  those  limits  at  this  time.  



                           b.       Mat-Su's  OMA  arguments  



                  Mat-Su  contends  that  the  superior  court  failed  to  address  a  potential  OMA  



violation  raised  by  Mat-Su  at  trial  and  that  the  court  erred  when  it  failed  to  void  Board  



actions  after  the  Board  violated  the  OMA.   At  trial  Mat-Su  raised  the  question  whether  



the  Board  violated  the  OMA  by  improperly  entering  into  executive session  on  November  



3  and  deciding  to  place  the  Valdez  area  with  portions  of  the  Mat-Su  Borough  in  House  



District   29.     Mat-Su   asserted   that   the   Board   improperly   discussed   the   placements  



"outside  the  view   of  the  public   eye"   and  that,   in   combination  with   some   other   "very  



egregious   actions"   by  the   Board,   it   warranted   remanding   the   entire   final   plan   for  



reconsideration.  



                  Mat-Su is  correct  that  the  superior  court's  February  15 decision overlooked  



Mat-Su's challenge to the November 3 executive session, and we therefore  give it our  

independent  review.110  

                                 Mat-Su  argues  that,  procedurally,  the  Board's  motions  to  enter  



         109      See   Cool  Homes,  Inc.  v.  Fairbanks  North  Star  Borough,   860  P.2d   1248,  



1262   (Alaska   1993) ("It  is  not   enough  that  the  public  body  be  involved  in  litigation.   

Rather,  the  rationale  for  the  confidentiality  of  the  specific  communication  at  issue  must  

be  one  which  the  confidentiality  doctrine  seeks  to  protect:   candid  discussion  of  the  facts  

and  litigation  strategies.").   We  recognize  that  our  case  law  addressing  the  intersection  

of statutory or  constitutional public hearings requirements  and privileged  communication  

has   room   for   development.     Cf.  Detroit News,   Inc.   v.   Indep.   Citizens   Redistricting  

Comm'n,   976  N.W.2d   612,   628-29   (Mich.  2021)   (holding  privilege  did  not   attach  to  

recording  and  materials   stemming   from   improperly   held   closed-session   meeting  

discussing    work    within    Redistricting    Commission's    core    business    in    light    of  

constitutional  mandate  for  open  meetings).  



         110      See Alaska Const. art. VI, § 11 ("On appeal from the superior court, the  

                                                                                                                   

                                                                                                    (continued...)  



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----------------------- Page 40-----------------------

into  executive  sessions  were  not  sufficiently  specific.   Mat-Su  argues  that  substantively  



the  Board  violated  the  OMA  because:   it  started  discussing  placing  the  Valdez  area  with  



Prince  William  Sound  communities  on  November  3;  it  entered  into  an  executive  session  



that   lasted  until  the   end   of   the   day;   Member   Borromeo   sent   texts   to   two   individuals  



asking  for  case  law  permitting  the  Valdez  area  to  be  paired  with  portions  of  the  Mat-Su  



             111  

Borough;         and  when  the  Board  returned  to  open  session  on  November  4,  a  majority  of  



the  members  seemed  to  be  in  agreement  that  the  Valdez  area  and  portions  of  the  Mat-Su  



Borough  could  be  paired  together, but  the  Board  had  "never  engage[d]  in  a  mapping  



session   of   the   [Valdez   area]   with   the   Prince   William   Sound   communities"   despite  



Member  Marcum  continuing  to  state  that  other  combinations  might be  more  compact,  



contiguous,  and  socioeconomically  integrated.   Mat-Su  contends  that,  taken  together,  



these facts demonstrate the Board improperly deliberated outside  the public eye about  



placing  the  Valdez  area.  



                  The   Board   responds   by   pointing   to   parts   of   the   November   4   public  



proceedings  when  members  were  discussing  the  Valdez  area.   The  Board  also  asserts  that  



the   public   interest   would   not   be   served   by   voiding   its   final  plan   because   of   any  



procedural  mistakes  it  made  when  calling  executive  sessions.   



                  We  agree  with  Mat-Su  that  on  November  3,  4,  and  5  the  Board  entered  into  



executive  sessions  without clearly and specifically describing  the subject  of  the  proposed  



         110      (...continued)  



cause  shall  be  reviewed  by  the  supreme  court  on  the  law  and  the  facts.").  



         111      Mat-Su  argues,  without  citing authority,  that  these  text  messages  during  



executive   session   violated   the   OMA,   but   the   statutory  language   has   no   prohibition  

against  such  communications.   We  do  not  further  address  this  issue.  



                                                         -40-                                                   7646
  


----------------------- Page 41-----------------------

                                           112  

session   as   required   by   law.               Instead   of   merely   reciting   the   statutory   language  



explaining  broad   subject   categories  that  may  be   considered   in   executive   session, the  



Board  should  have  been  more  specific  about  the  matters  to  be  discussed,  though  not  to  



                                                                                                       113  

the  extent  of  defeating  "the  purpose  of  addressing  the  subject  in  private."                      The  Board's  



actions   appear   suspect,   defeat  the  public's   ability  to  witness   deliberations,   and   cause  



courts  to  struggle  in  reviewing  the  constitutionality  of  the  Board's  actions.   But  despite  



likely   inappropriate   uses   of   executive   session,   the   Board's   public   discussions   about  



where   to   place   the   Valdez   area   are   sufficient   for   appellate   review   and   allow   us  to  



determine  whether  the  Board  gave  the  issue  a  hard  look.   Under  the  circumstances  -  



particularly   given   the   compressed   timeline   for   the   Board's   work   and   redistricting's  



importance  to  all  Alaskans  -  the  superior  court  did  not  err  by  concluding  that  it  would  



not  be   in   the  public   interest  to  void   the   Board's   entire   final  plan   due   to   some   OMA  

violations.114  



                   3.	       Making  the  traditional  hard  look  analysis  more  restrictive  by  

                             blending  it  with  other  constitutional  concerns  was  error.   



                   A   court's   review   of   a   redistricting   plan   is  similar   to   its   review   of   "a  



regulation    adopted   under    a    delegation    of    authority    from   the    legislature   to    an  



administrative   agency  to   formulate  policy   and  promulgate  regulations[:]   .   .   .   .   first  to  



          112      See  AS  44.62.310(b)  (requiring  that  motion  for  executive   session  "must  



clearly  and  with  specificity  describe  the  subject"  to  be  discussed).  



          113	     Id.  



          114      See  AS  44.62.310(f)  ("A  court  may  hold  that  an  action  taken  at  a  meeting  



held  in  violation  of  this  section  is  void  only  if  the  court  finds  that,  considering  all  of  the  

circumstances,  the  public  interest  in  compliance  with  this  section  outweighs  the  harm  

that   would   be   caused   to   the   public   interest   and   to   the   public   entity   by   voiding   the  

action.").   However,  if  in  future  redistricting  efforts  the  Board  appears  to  abuse  executive  

sessions,  injunctive  relief  under  Alaska  Civil  Rule  65(a)  or  (b)  may  be  warranted.  



                                                            -41-	                                                     7646
  


----------------------- Page 42-----------------------

insure   that   the   agency   has   not  exceeded   the   power   delegated   to   it,   and   second   to  



                                                                                          115  

determine  whether  the  regulation  is  reasonable  and  not  arbitrary."                     The  superior  court  



conducted  a "first impression" analysis to  determine  "the  legal  standards  by  which  the  



concept of 'unreasonableness' should be measured" for  the Board's redistricting plan.   



After reviewing  Constitutional  Convention  minutes,  legislative  history  from  the   1999  



amendments   to   article   VI,   and   federal   statutes   and   case   law,   the   superior   court  



concluded:   



                   [T]he  spirit  of  [a]rticle  VI,  [s]ection  10  .  .  .  compels  the  Board  

                   to  present  the  public  with  a  number  of  equally  constitutional  

                   redistricting  plans  and  then  let the  people  have  a  say  about  

                   which  plan  they  prefer.   While  the  Board  need  not  respond  to  

                   every  single  comment  received,  the  Board  must  make  a  good- 

                   faith   effort  to   consider   and   incorporate  the   clear  weight   of  

                   public    comment,    unless    state    or    federal    law    requires  

                   otherwise.  .  .  .  [T]he  Board  must  give  some  deference  to  the  

                   public's  judgment.   If  the  Board  adopts  a  final  plan  contrary  

                   to  the  preponderance  of  public  testimony,  it  must  state  on  the  

                   record legitimate reasons for its decision.   (Footnote omitted.)   



This  appears  to  be  the  standard  the  superior  court  used  for  its  blended  "hard  look"  and  

due  process  analysis.116  



         115       Groh   v.   Egan,    526   P.2d    863,    866   (Alaska    1974);   see   also   2011  



Redistricting  III,  294  P.3d   1032,   1037  (Alaska  2012).   



         116       The  superior  court  adopted  this  blended  approach  based  on  our  traditional  



hard   look   requirement   and   constitutional   procedural   and   substantive   due   process  

requirements,  as  well  as  the  public  hearings  requirement  under  article  VI,  section   10.   

Although  before  us  there  were  challenges  to  the  court's  overall  "hard  look"  test,  they  did  

not  detail   the   extent   to   which   substantive   due   process   concerns   might   apply.    We  

accordingly  do  not  parse  the  applicability  of  substantive  due  process  to  the  "hard  look"  

analysis.   See  Balough  v.  Fairbanks  North  Star  Borough,  995  P.2d  245,  263  (Alaska  

2000)  (describing  heavy  burden  on  party  asserting  substantive  due  process  violation  "for  

if  any conceivable legitimate public policy for the [state action]  is apparent on its  face  

                                                                                                      (continued...)  



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----------------------- Page 43-----------------------

                   The  superior  court  then  concluded  that  the  Board  gave  a  hard  look  to  House  



District   29's   combination   of   the   Valdez   area   with portions of   the   Mat-Su   Borough,  



noting   that   the   Board   had   "carefully   considered   the   available   options[,]   .   .   .   acted  



reasonably,"  and  "certainly  did  not  ignore  public  testimony."   Regarding  Senate  District  



K,   however,   the   court   concluded   that   "the   Board   obviously   violated   the   'hard   look'  



standard   by    ignoring   public    comment    on    the    senate   pairings,"    apparently    "to  



accommodate the wishes  of  a  single  Member."  The court similarly concluded that  the  



Board  "failed  to  take  a  hard  look  at  [House]  Districts  3  and  4"  because  it  did  not  "make  



a   good-faith   attempt   to   incorporate   the   public   testimony."    The   Board,   Mat-Su,   and  



Valdez  challenge  aspects  of  the  superior  court's  hard  look  analysis.  



                            a.       Our  view  of  the  superior  court's  hard  look  analysis    



                   Rather  than  requiring  the  Board  to  "make  a  good-faith  effort  to  consider  



and  incorporate  the  clear  weight  of  public  comment"  or  "give   some  deference  to  the  



public's  judgment,"  the  hard   look   analysis  has  more  nuance.   A  redistricting  plan   is  



reasonable   if   "the   [Board]   has   taken   a   hard   look   at   the   salient   problems   and   has  

genuinely   engaged  in  reasoned  decision  making."117  

                                                                            If  public  comments  introduce   a  



"salient  problem,"  such  as  a  defect  under  article  VI,  section  6,  it  would  be  unreasonable  



to   ignore   the   problem   when   drawing   district   boundaries;   absent  some   evidence  



explaining the Board's action and how  it took  the problem  into account,  a court could  



conclude  that  the  Board  failed  to  take  a  hard  look.   But  if  public  comments  merely  reflect  



          116      (...continued)  



or  is  offered  by  those  defending  the  [action],  the  opponents  of  the  [action]  must  disprove  

the   factual   basis   for   such   a  justification"   (quoting   Concerned   Citizens   of   S.   Kenai  

Peninsula  v.  Kenai  Peninsula  Borough,  527  P.2d  447,  452  (Alaska  1974))).   If  relevant  

in  future  redistricting  litigation,  parties  should  more  robustly  address  this  concept.  



          117      2001 Redistricting I, 44 P.3d 141, 143 n.5 (Alaska 2002) (quoting Interior  

                                                                                                               

Alaska Airboat Ass'n v. State, Bd. of Game, 18 P.3d 686, 690 (Alaska 2001)).  

                                                                                                               



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----------------------- Page 44-----------------------

preferences   for    district    boundaries    without    implicating    substantive    redistricting  



requirements,      drawing      district    boundaries    based      on   demonstrated       substantive  



redistricting  requirements   and  not   the   "weight   of  public   comment"   likely would  not  



violate  the  hard  look  requirement.   We  nonetheless  note  that  a  Board's  failure  to  follow  



a   clear majority   preference   between   two   otherwise   equally   constitutional   legislative  



districts  under  article  VI,  section  6  may  be  evidence  supporting  a  gerrymandering  claim.  



                         b.      The  Board's  arguments  



                 The  Board  contends  that  the  superior  court's  erroneous  hard  look  analysis  



caused  the  court  to  err  when  it  invalidated  House  Districts  3  and  4  and  Senate  District  K.   



Because   the   court   invalidated   Senate   District   K   on   grounds   beyond   the   hard   look  



analysis  -  specifically  for  unconstitutional  political  gerrymandering,  a  ruling  which  we  



affirm  below  -  we  do not  address  the  Board's a   rgument o         n  this  point.   But  the  court  



ruled  that  House Districts 3 and 4 were unconstitutional based  solely  on  its  "weight  of  



public   testimony"   approach   to   the   hard   look   analysis.    Because   the   court   otherwise  



agreed substantive redistricting requirements were satisfied  and no salient problems  were  



raised that  the  Board  failed  to  consider,  we  reverse  the  court's  invalidation  of  House  



Districts  3  and  4  and  its  accompanying  remand  to  the  Board.  



                         c.      Mat-Su's  and  Valdez's  arguments  



                 Mat-Su  contends  that  in  light  of  the  superior  court's  approach  to  the  hard  



look  requirement,  "the  court  erred  when  it  found  that  the  Board  took  a   'hard  look' at  



testimony  offered  by  Valdez  and  [Mat-Su]"  regarding  House  District  29.   Because  Mat- 



Su's  assertion  relies  entirely  on  the  misguided  standard for the hard  look  analysis  without  



pointing  to  any  discrete  salient  problems  (beyond  the  weight  of  public  preference)  that  



the  Board  did  not  consider,  we  reject  its  argument  and  turn  to  Valdez's  arguments  about  



the  Board's  creation  of  House  Districts  29  and  36.  



                 Valdez   first   argues  that  the  Board   did  not   engage   in  reasoned   decision- 



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----------------------- Page 45-----------------------

                                                                                                                              

making about forming District 29 because the Board "spent minimal time analyzing how  



                                                                                                                               

to  accommodate  the  strong  public  testimony  against  pairing  [the Valdez  area]  and  



                                                                                                                                  

[portions of the Mat-Su Borough] together in a district."  Again, this argument alone is  



                                                                                                                            

insufficient to invalidate House District 29 without the public comments having raised  



                                                                       

some salient problem that the Board failed to address.  



                                                                                                                          

                    Valdez  also  argues  that  it  is  evident  the  Board  did  not  give  House  



                                                                                                                    

District 29 a hard look because (1) "District 29 in the Final Plan is virtually unchanged  



                                                                                                                         

from Member Borromeo's proposed plan, . . . which was developed prior to the Board's  



                                                                                                                        

public hearing tour with minimal involvement of other Board members," and (2) what  



                                                                                                                               

turned out to be the final plan "was adopted outside of the constitutionally mandated [30- 



                                                                                                                                

day] deadline for adopting proposed plans set forth in article VI, section 10" and was "an  



                                                                                                                         

entirely new 40[-]district plan with radically different districts than those" of the original  



                                                                                                                                 

version  it replaced.   But  a proposed  election  district's  evolution  over the  course  of  



                                                                                                                             

redistricting, without more, lends little insight into whether the Board gave it a hard look,  



                                                                                                                           

and the superior court discussed this factor when rejecting the argument that the Board  



                                                                                                                               

violated the Hickel process.  And Valdez presents no legal support for its argument that  



                                                                                                                  

adopting a final redistricting plan developed after the first 30 days of the redistricting  



                                                                                                                          

process is unconstitutional; such a position would make the constitutional public hearing  



                                  

requirement virtually meaningless.  



                                                                                                                                 

                    Valdez also appears to argue that the Board impermissibly "constrained the  



                                                                                                                  

range of redistricting options it considered based upon the mistaken legal premise that  



                                                                                                                               

the  [Fairbanks North  Star Borough (FNSB)] could not be included in more than one  



                                                                                                         

district that  included population  from outside of FNSB."   Valdez  asserts that "[t]he  



                                                                                                                 

[superior]  court  erred  in  holding  that  the  Board  properly  viewed  any  redistricting  



                                                                                                                     

alternative that placed population from FNSB in more than one district [with population  



                                                                                                                            

from outside FNSB] as not viable."  The Board responds that Hickel  instructs, when  



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----------------------- Page 46-----------------------

                                                                                                               118  

possible,  to  "include  all  of  a borough's  excess  population  in  one  other  district"                       and  that  



                                                                              119  

"2001  Redistricting   [I]   does  not   suggest   otherwise."                      We   conclude,   given   that the  



Board  was  able  to  keep  FNSB's  excess  population  together  in  one  House  district  while  



abiding   by   other   constitutional   requirements,   the   Board   did   not   act   arbitrarily   or  



unreasonably  by  doing  so  without  considering  additional  plans  that  would  split  FNSB's  



excess  population  between  multiple  House  districts.  



                   Valdez's  remaining  hard look   arguments   about  District  29   focus   on  the  



Valdez area being more socioeconomically integrated  with  communities other  than those  



in  the  Mat-Su  Borough  and  the  Board  making  only  passing  mention  of  the  other  article  



VI,  section 6 requirements.   But,  as  we  note  throughout  this  opinion,  the  Constitution  



does   not   require   the   most   possible   socioeconomic   integration,   particularly   if   other  

                                                                            120   The  superior  court  described  

constitutional   requirements   may   be   compromised.                                                         



Board-identified socioeconomic connections between the Valdez area and the Mat-Su  

                                                                                                                    



Borough,  and  we  agree  with  the  superior  court  that  the  described  socioeconomic  

                                                                                                        



integration  level  satisfied  section  6's  "relatively  integrated  socio-economic  area"  

                                                                                                                      



          118      See  846  P.2d  38,  52  (Alaska   1992)  ("This  result  is  compelled  not  only  by  



the  article  VI,  section  6  requirements,  but  also  by  the  state  equal  protection  clause  which  

guarantees  the  right  to  proportional  geographic  representation.").  



          119      See  44  P.3d  at  144  (instructing  that  Board  may  combine  excess  populations  



from  adjoining  boroughs).  



          120      See Kenai Peninsula Borough v. State, 743 P.2d  1352, 1362-63 (Alaska  

                                                                                                                   

 1987)  (discussing  socioeconomic  integration  under  sufficiency  standard);  see  also  

                                                                                                                        

Hickel, 846 P.2d at 45 n.10 (explaining that socioeconomic integration requirement is  

                                                                                                                            

more  flexible  than  contiguity  and  compactness  requirements  such  that  degree  of  

                                                                                                                           

integration  can  be  reduced  if  necessary   "to  maximize  the  other  constitutional  

                                                                                                          

requirements of contiguity and compactness").  

                                               



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----------------------- Page 47-----------------------

                  121  

requirement.          The  court's  February  15  decision  discussed  the Board's  impressive  steps  



when   drawing   the   Valdez   area   House   district   boundaries, and   we   affirm   the   court's  



conclusion that - for the hard  look analysis - the Board  acted reasonably in making  



ultimately  unsuccessful  efforts  to  keep  the  Valdez  and  Mat-Su  Borough  areas  in  separate  



House  districts.  



                  Valdez  relatedly  argues  that  the  Board  improperly  neglected  constitutional  

redistricting  criteria  while  prioritizing  individual Board  member  goals.122  Valdez  first  



asserts  that  certain  Board  members  were  too  deferential  to  the  "Doyon  Coalition's  goal  



of  keeping  Interior  Doyon  and  Ahtna  villages  together  in  one  District"  at  the  expense  of  



putting  the  Valdez  area  with  portions  of  the  Mat-Su  Borough.   Valdez  next  asserts  that  



"the  Board openly sought to maximize the percentage  of Native  voters  in  District 36,"  



constituting gerrymandering and warranting remand of the final plan.   Valdez also argues  



that   Member   Binkley   prioritized   "protecting   the   borough   boundaries   of   FNSB,"  



impermissibly  foreclosing   "consideration   of   numerous   viable   redistricting   options  



including  districting  [the  Valdez  area]  with  Richardson  Highway  communities  and  the  



FNSB."     Valdez   finally   argues   that   the   Board   improperly   relied   on   "ANCSA  

boundaries[123]  to support the creation of District 36 and justify keeping  Bering Straits  

                                                                                                              



         121      Alaska   Const.   art.   VI,   §   6;   see   Hickel,   846  P.2d   at   46-47   (describing  



comparable  scenarios  satisfying  socioeconomic  integration  requirement).  



         122      Valdez raises similar arguments when challenging  Districts 29 and 36 as  



not  complying  with  article  VI,  section  6  requirements.   Valdez  couches  these  arguments  

under  the  Hickel  requirement  that  the  Board  "is  not  permitted  to  diminish  the  degree  of  

socio-economic integration in order to achieve other policy goals,"  see  846 P.2d at 45  

n.10,  but  because  Valdez  seems  also  to  challenge  the  Board's  hard  look  requirement,  we  

discuss  it  here.  



         123      "ANCSA boundaries" refers to the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act  

                                                               

                                                                                                    (continued...)  



                                                        -47-                                                   7646
  


----------------------- Page 48-----------------------

communities  separate  from  Doyon  communities,"  warranting  remand  because  it  created  



"District  29,  which  is  not  socio-economically integrated, and District 36,  which  is  neither  



socio-economically  integrated  nor  compact."   



                   The  first three arguments  quickly can be  dispensed  with  for  similar  reasons.   



We agree with the superior court that the "practice  of  assigning each [Board]  Member  



a   region   and   ultimately   deferring   to   those   [m]embers'   judgment   on  their   assigned  



regions"  is  somewhat  troubling.   But  it  is  not  necessarily  improper  to  consider  a  Board  



member's  personal  regional  experiences  if  constitutional  requirements  are  met,  and  the  



line  between  excessive  deference  to  and  independent  agreement  with  a Board  member  



is difficult to monitor.  As  discussed earlier, we also  agree with the  superior court that  



the   Board   did   not   violate   the   Hickel   process,   and   thus   any   alleged   premature   VRA  



considerations  likely did not interfere  with  the  Board  taking  a  hard  look  at  the  issues  



Valdez  raised.  Despite Valdez seemingly indicating otherwise, the hard look analysis  



does  not  require  that  the  Board  consider  every  possible  permutation  of  statewide  House  



            124  

districts.        The   expedited   nature   of   the   redistricting   process   also   means   that   when  



changes   are   made   toward   the   end   of   the   process   -   an   appropriate   result   almost  



          123      (...continued)  



of  1971.   See  generally  43  U.S.C.  §§  1601-1629h.   "Under  that  Act,  the  state  was  divided  

into 12  regions,   and   separate   corporations  were   established   for   each  region.    By   the  

division  it  was  sought  to  establish  homogeneous  groupings  of  Native  peoples  having  a  

common heritage   and   sharing   common   interests."   Groh   v.  Egan,   526   P.2d   863,   877  

(Alaska   1974)  (footnote  omitted).  



          124      See, e.g., Motor  Vehicle Mfrs. Ass'n of U.S. v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins.  

                                                                                                                      

Co., 463 U.S. 29,  51 (1983) ("It is true that a rulemaking  'cannot be  found wanting  

                                                                                                               

simply  because  the  agency  failed  to  include  every  alternative  device  and  thought  

                                                                                                               

conceivable by the mind of man  . . . regardless  of how uncommon  or unknown that  

                                                                                                                     

alternative may have been . . . .' " (quoting Vt. Yankee Nuclear Power Corp. v. Nat. Res.  

                                                                                                                     

Def. Council, Inc.,  435 U.S. 519, 551 (1978))).  

                                                        



                                                          -48-                                                     7646
  


----------------------- Page 49-----------------------

inevitably  happening  after  public  hearings  - the  Board  cannot  be  expected to  reconsider  



every  subsequently  possible  permutation  in  light  of new  boundaries.   Finally,  we  note  



the  zero-sum  nature  of  redistricting:   accepting  Valdez's  proposed  House  district  in  turn  



would  have affected House districts throughout interior Alaska; municipalities  and voters  



in   the   affected   areas   likely  would  have   raised   the   same   arguments   Valdez   raises,  



suggesting that the   Board   was   biased   in   favor   of   the   Valdez   area   and   that   adopting  



Valdez's  proposed  House  district  "locked  in"  unfavorable  House  districts in  Alaska's  



interior  region.  



                  Valdez's   fourth   argument  -   that   the   Board   improperly   relied   upon  



ANCSA boundaries for House District 36 - challenges the  superior court's assertion  



that  "ANCSA  regions  are  indicative  of  socio-economic  integration  and  may  be  used  to  



guide   redistricting   decisions,   and   they   may   even  justify   some   degree   of   population  



deviation."     Valdez   argues   that   because   the   "purpose   of   ANCSA   was   to   form  



'homogeneous   grouping'   of   Alaska   Natives   in   1970,"   ANCSA   does   not   reflect   the  



present-day Alaskan  populations  nor  "the  article  VI,  section  6  constitutional standards  



for   contiguity,   compactness,   or   socio-economic   integration."    Valdez   then   points   to  



various  statistics  tending  to  show  that  "ANCSA  boundaries  do  not  provide  evidence  of  



socio-economic integration among non-Native populations."   Finally, Valdez argues that,  



to   the   extent   ANCSA   boundaries   are   relevant   to   drawing   districts, the   relevance   is  



limited  only  to  justifying  a  population  deviation  greater  than  ten  percent.  



                  Valdez   is   correct   that   we   previously   have   discussed   using   ANCSA  



boundaries  in  redistricting  only  as  a  justification  for  "a  population  deviation  greater  than  

10  percent."125      But in the present case evidence about ANCSA boundaries was tied to  

                                                                                                                     



socioeconomic integration. For example, there was testimony that Doyon region villages  

                                                                                                              



         125      Hickel,  846  P.2d  at  48;  see  also  Kenai  Peninsula,  743  P.2d  at   1359  n.10.  



                                                         -49-                                                      7646  


----------------------- Page 50-----------------------

likely   to   have   been   moved   from   District   36   to   accommodate   the   Valdez   area   were  



"predominantly   Alaska  Native"   and   that   the   ANCSA   boundary   would   be   helpful   to  



assess  socioeconomic  integration  among  the  villages.  Another witness explained  how  



ANCSA  boundaries   can  be   significant   for  non-Native  residents  because  they  tend  to  



delineate   service   areas   for   non-profit   healthcare   providers.     And   an   expert   witness  



analogously  testified,  when  questioned  about  the  boundary  between  Districts  36  and  39  



coinciding with school district boundaries, that  interactions between communities related  



to   school   functions   could   be   a   further   indicia   of   socioeconomic   integration   within  



District   36.     Finally,   as  discussed   in   more   detail   below,   we   agree   with   the   2001  



redistricting  superior  court's  reasoning  affording  more  flexibility  for  rural  communities  

when  discussing  socioeconomic  integration.126  



                   For the  foregoing  reasons,  we  affirm  the   superior  court's  ruling  that  the  



Board  gave  a  constitutionally  sufficient  hard  look  at  where  to  place  the  Valdez  area.  



         B.        Mat-Su's  And  Valdez's  Substantive  Constitutional  Challenges  



                   1.	      Aside  from  the  "Cantwell  Appendage,"  Mat-Su's  and  Valdez's  

                            article  IV,  section  6  arguments  fail.  



                   Mat-Su   and  Valdez   contend  the   superior   court   erred  by   concluding  that  

House  Districts  29  and  36  are  constitutional  under article VI, section 6.127  They assert  

                                                                                                                   



that the districts are not  compact and are not  socioeconomically integrated.   Mat-Su  

                                                                                                                



          126      See   In   re   2001   Redistricting Cases,   No.   3AN-01-8914   CI,   61   (Alaska  



Super.,    Feb.      1,    2002)    (explaining    that    rural    communities    are    not   necessarily  

"interconnected by road systems" or  "integrated as a  result  of  repeated  and systematic  

face  to  face  interaction"  but  may  be  "linked  by  common  culture,  values,  and  needs").   



          127      House District 29 contains portions of the Mat-Su Borough, including parts  

                                                                                                                    

of Palmer and Wasilla, as well as the Valdez area.  House District 36 is quite large; it  

                                                                                                                         

includes Holy Cross and Huslia in the western portion, stretches east to the Canadian  

                                                                                                              

border, has Fairbanks's Goldstream Valley, and has an appendage cutting into the Denali  

                                                                                                                  

Borough and the Mat-Su Borough to reach Cantwell.  See Appendix A.  

                                                                                                  



                                                          -50-	                                                    7646
  


----------------------- Page 51-----------------------

additionally  asserts  that  the  Board  did  not  create  districts  "as  near  as  practicable"  to  the  



population  quotient  because  the  Mat-Su  districts  as  a  whole  are  overpopulated  compared  



                         128  

to  other  districts.         We  address  each  argument  in  turn.  



                             a.        Compactness  



                                                                         

                                       i.        House District 29  



                                                                                                                         

                   Mat-Su takes issue with House District 29 extending to the Valdez area  



                                                                                                                     

without containing Richardson Highway communities on the road between the Valdez  



                                                                                                                      

area and the Mat-Su Borough.  Mat-Su asserts that the "cutout of the road system makes  



                                                                                                                          

the  shape  of  the  district  less  compact  and  orphans  [the  Valdez  area]  from  its  



                                                                                                                         

transportation link to the [Mat-Su Borough] and the communities in its immediate area  



                                 

that it associates with regularly."  



                                                                                                                             

                   We  have  instructed  that  "  'corridors' of  land  that  extend  to  include  a  



                                                                                                                         

populated  area,  but  not  the  less-populated  land  around  it,  may  run  afoul  of  the  



                                         129  

                                                House   District   29   does   not   contain   the   Richardson  

compactness  requirement." 



Highway   communities   along   the   road   to   the   Valdez   area,  but   it   contains   the   "less- 



populated land" around Valdez.  Mat-Su cites no relevant authority for its proposition  



that  inability  to  travel  by  road  between  communities  in  a  House  district  without  leaving  



the district renders  it  non-compact.  Indeed, it would be unworkable  in rural Alaska to  



impose  a  requirement  of  being  able  to  travel  by  road  between  any  two  points  in  a  district  

without  crossing  district  borders.130             The superior court did not err by determining that  

                                                                                                                         



          128      Alaska  Const. art.  VI,  §  6  (requiring  house districts  to  "contain  a  population  



as  near  as  practicable  to  the  quotient  obtained  by  dividing  the  population  of  the  state  by  

forty").  



          129      Hickel,  846  P.2d  at  45-46.  



          130      See,  e.g.,  In  re  2001  Redistricting  Cases  (2001  Redistricting  II), 47  P.3d  



                                                                                                           (continued...)  



                                                            -51-                                                       7646
  


----------------------- Page 52-----------------------

"[House]  District 29's shape  is  the  natural  result   of  Alaska's  landscape   and  irregular  



features"  and  that  it  is  compact.  



                                       ii.       House  District  36  



                    House District 36 is a large, horseshoe-shaped district composed  of portions  



of  three  different  boroughs  and  encompassing  35%  of  Alaska's  land.   An  "appendage"  



of  House  District  36  reaches  between  House  Districts  29  and  30  to  include  Cantwell,  but  



                                                            131  

not  the  surrounding  land  or  communities.                                                                             

                                                                 Cantwell otherwise likely would have been  



                                                                                                                    

placed with the rest of the Denali Borough in House District 30.  As a Denali Borough  



                                                                                                                          

community, Cantwell would have been sufficiently socioeconomically integrated with  



                                                                                                              132  

                                                                                                         

the rest of the Denali Borough within House District 30 as a matter of law. 



          130       (...continued)  



1089,  1092  (Alaska  2002)  ("[N]either  size  nor  lack  of  direct  road  access  makes  a  district  

unconstitutionally  non-compact  .  .  .  .").   On  the  other  hand,  in  areas  dependent  on  road  

transportation    direct    road    access    is    a    feature    of    communities    of    interest    and  

socioeconomic  integration.  



          131       Valdez  argues  that  House  District  36  also  contains  an  inappropriate  

                                                                                                            

appendage  "carv[ing]  out  Glennallen  and  neighboring  population  along  the  Glenn  

                                                                                                                       

Highway."   This argument fails; District  36 contains several communities along the  

                                                                                                                            

Richardson and Glenn Highways near Glennallen but does not appear to carve out a  

                                                                                                                               

bizarre appendage or corridor. See Hickel, 846 P.2d at 45-46 (" '[C]orridors' of land that  

                                                                                                                            

extend to include a populated area, but not the less-populated land around it, may run  

                                                                                                                            

afoul  of the  compactness requirement.   Likewise,  appendages  attached to  otherwise  

                                                                                                                  

compact areas may violate the requirement of compact districting.").  

                                                                                   



          132       2001  Redistricting  I,  44  P.3d  141,  146  (Alaska  2002)  (referring  to  

                                                                                                             

Anchorage,  a  consolidated  city  and  borough,  as  "by  definition  socio-economically  

                                                                                                   

integrated"); Hickel, 846 P.2d  at 51 ("By statute, a borough must have  a population  

                                                                                                                

which 'is interrelated and integrated as to its social, cultural, and economic activities.' "  

                                                                                                                               

(quoting AS  29.05.031));  cf. id.  at  51 n.20  (stating that  splitting  "a borough  which  

                                                                                                                       

otherwise [could] support an election district will be an indication of gerrymandering for  

                                                                                                                             

not preserving the government boundaries").  

                                               



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----------------------- Page 53-----------------------

                   The   superior   court   acknowledged   that   the   Cantwell   appendage   makes  



House  District 36 less compact; the court then examined whether House District 36 is  



socioeconomically integrated and adopted the Board's argument that  including "Cantwell  



[was]  justified  because  Cantwell  is  socio-economically  integrated  with  the  Ahtna  region  



(the  rest  of  which  was  placed  with  District  36)."   This  analysis  runs  afoul  of  our  Hickel  



guidance:   "The  requirements  of  article  VI,  section  6  shall  receive  priority  inter  se  in  the  



following   order:     (1)   contiguousness   and   compactness,   (2)   relative   socioeconomic  



integration, (3) consideration of local government boundaries, (4) use of  drainage and  



                                                                         133  

other  geographic  features  in  describing  boundaries."                     Both  the  Board  and  the  superior  



court  appear  to  have  prioritized  more  socioeconomic  integration  over  compactness.   



                   The  Board  recognized that  adding  Cantwell  to  House  District  36  created  



potential  compactness  problems.   One  Board  member  asked  the  Board's  attorney:  



                   [W]e   have   noted   the   socioeconomic   reasons   for   taking  

                   Cantwell  out.   Obviously  it  is  not  a  compact  change,  right,  so  

                   do  you  have  any  concerns  about  the  compactness,  or  do  you  

                   believe that in this instance, for socioeconomic reasons that  

                                                                                                   

                   we took Cantwell out of the [Denali] borough probably are  

                                                                                                  

                   sufficient to overcome the . . . loss of compactness with that  

                   removal?  



                                                                                                             

The  attorney agreed that  adding Cantwell rendered  House District  36 less compact,  



                                                                                                           

advising that whether it made sense was "a coin toss" and that the Board was "balancing  



                     

constitutional concerns."  



                                                                                               

                   When a more compact district would be  sufficiently socioeconomically  



                                                                                                     

integrated, the Board may not sacrifice compactness in favor of greater socioeconomic  



         133       Hickel,   846   P.2d   at   62;   cf.   id.   at   45   n.10  (providing   socioeconomic  



integration  may  be  diminished  only  to  maximize  contiguity  and  compactness).  



                                                          -53-                                                       7646  


----------------------- Page 54-----------------------

                134  

integration.         We  therefore  hold  that  the  Cantwell  appendage  to  House  District  36  was  



unconstitutionally  drawn.  



                           b.       Socioeconomic  integration  



                                    i.        House  District  29  



                  Valdez  and  Mat-Su  first  argue  that  the  superior  court  misapplied  precedent  



by  assuming   that   if   the   Valdez   area   and   the   Mat-Su   Borough   independently  were  



socioeconomically integrated with  Anchorage, then they also must be socioeconomically  



integrated with each other.  The court was "greatly influenced" by its interpretation of  



                       135  

Kenai  Peninsula,          relying  heavily  on  a  "regional  integration"  concept  to  determine  that  



the  Valdez  area and the Mat-Su Borough are  socioeconomically  integrated.   The  court  



said  its  conclusion  that  House  District  29  is  socioeconomically  integrated  may  have  been  



different  had   it  not   interpreted  Kenai  Peninsula  to  hold  that   "regional   integration"   is  



sufficient   to   achieve   socioeconomic   integration.    Valdez   further   contends   the   court  



misconstrued  precedent  by  assuming  that  the  Mat-Su  Borough  and  the  Valdez  area  each  



are  socioeconomically  integrated  with  Anchorage.   Because  the  court's  interpretation  of  



Kenai  Peninsula  was  erroneous,  we  do  not  need  to  reach  whether  the  two  areas  each  are  



socioeconomically  integrated  with  Anchorage.  



                  In  Kenai  Peninsula   we   considered   whether   a   House   district   containing  

                                                                                                    136   We  saw  

North   Kenai   and   South   Anchorage   was   socioeconomically   integrated.                                  



minimal interaction; we said:  "[T]o the extent that they interact at all, they do so as a  

                                                                                                                      



         134      Id.   at   62   (prioritizing   article   VI,   section   6   requirements   as   follows:  



"(1)  contiguousness  and  compactness,  (2)  relative  socioeconomic  integration").  



         135      743  P.2d   1352  (Alaska   1987).  



         136      Id.  at   1361-62.  



                                                        -54-                                                   7646
  


----------------------- Page 55-----------------------

                                                                                     137  

consequence  of  the  nexus between  Kenai  and Anchorage."                               We  framed  the  issue  as  



"whether  interaction  between  the  communities  comprising  [the  challenged  district]  and  



communities  outside  the  district  but  within  a  common  region  sufficiently  demonstrates  



                                                                                                                         138  

the  requisite  interconnectedness  and  interaction  mandated  by  article  VI,  section 6."                                 



We considered that North  Kenai and South Anchorage are geographically  close,  that  they  



are  connected  by  highways  and  daily  airline  flights,  and  that  both  are  "linked  to  the  hub  



of  Anchorage";  we  also  noted that the  North  Kenai  and   South  Anchorage  areas  were  



                                                139  

linked  economically  and  socially.                 Determining  that  the  challenge  "[drew]  too  fine  a  



distinction  between  the  interaction  of  North  Kenai  with  Anchorage  and  that  of  North  



Kenai  with South Anchorage," we held that "any distinctions between  Anchorage and  



South  Anchorage  [were]  too  insignificant  to  constitute  a  basis  for  invalidating  the  state's  

plan."140  



                   Analogizing North Kenai and South Anchorage to the Valdez area and the  

                                                                                                                         



Mat-Su Borough, the superior court concluded they were "relatively socio-economically  

                                                                                                 



          137      Id.  at   1362.  



          138      Id.  at   1363.  



          139      Id.  at   1362-63.  



          140      Id.  at  1363  &  n.17.   We  since  have  cited  Kenai  Peninsula  for  the  following:  



                   In   areas   where   a   common   region   is   divided   into   several  

                   districts,   significant   socio-economic   integration   between  

                   communities   within   a   district   outside   the   region   and   the  

                   region        in     general         "demonstrates             the      requisite  

                   interconnectedness  and  interaction,"  even  though  there  may  

                   be   little   actual   interaction   between   the   areas   joined   in   a  

                   district.  



Hickel  v.  Se.  Conf.,  846  P.2d  38,  46  (Alaska   1992).  



                                                           -55-                                                      7646
  


----------------------- Page 56-----------------------

integrated   .   .   .   because   both  communities   are   socio-economically   integrated   with  



Anchorage."   But  this  conclusion  takes  Kenai  Peninsula  too  far.   Even  if  both  the  Valdez  



area and the Mat-Su Borough were socioeconomically  integrated  with  Anchorage,  it  does  



not  necessarily  follow  that  they  are  socioeconomically  integrated  with  each  other.   North  



Kenai   was   socioeconomically  integrated   with   South   Anchorage   primarily   because  



evidence supported  a conclusion that  North Kenai was socioeconomically integrated with  



                                      141  

Anchorage    as    a    whole.              South    Anchorage    and    Anchorage    were    not    merely  



socioeconomically    integrated,   they   were    indistinguishable    for   the    constitutional  



             142  

analysis.         The  same  cannot  be  said  of  the  Mat-Su  Borough  or  the  Valdez area;  each  



community   is   entirely   separate   from,   rather   than   a   neighborhood   or   region   within,  



Anchorage.   



                   Mat-Su   and   Valdez   next   contend   that   the   superior   court   erred   when   it  



determined  House  District  29  was  socioeconomically integrated  partly  because  it  was  



drawn  similarly  in  the  2002  and  2013  redistricting  proclamations.   We  previously  have  



noted  that  the  requirement  for  House  districts  to  be  "relatively"  integrated  "means  that  



we  compare  proposed  districts  to  other  previously  existing  and  proposed  districts  as  well  

as principal alternative districts  to  determine  if  socio-economic  links are sufficient."143  

                                                                                                                                



With this principle in mind, the superior court compared House District 29 in the 2021  

                                                                                                                        



Proclamation with House District 9 from the 2010 redistricting cycle and House District  

                                                                                                                    



12fromthe 2000 redistricting cycle. The court noted substantial similarities between the  

                                                                                                                           



earlier House districts, including that they both paired portions of the Mat-Su Borough  

                                                                                                                  



with the Valdez area.  The court reasoned that prior redistricting pairings were evidence  

                                                                                                                  



          141      See  Kenai  Peninsula,  743  P.2d  at   1362-63.
   



          142      See  id.  at   1363  &  n.17.
  



          143      Hickel,  846  P.2d  at  47.
  



                                                            -56-                                                       7646
  


----------------------- Page 57-----------------------

                                                                                                    144  

that  the  Mat-Su  Borough  and  the  Valdez  area  are  "relatively  integrated."                       



                  Mat-Su  and  Valdez  disagree.   Valdez  contends  that  the  crucial  difference  



from  the  historic  districts  is  House  District  29  does  not  contain  the  Richardson  Highway  



communities  that  rendered  the  prior  districts  socioeconomically  integrated.   But,  as  we  



discuss   below,   in   addition   to   considering   the   historical   districts,   the   superior   court  



generally  found  evidence  of  sufficient  interactions  between  the  Valdez  area  and  the  Mat- 



Su   Borough   to   render   House   District   29   socioeconomically   integrated.    The   Valdez  



area's greater  socioeconomic integration with certain  Richardson  Highway communities  



does  not  preclude  a  finding  that  the  Valdez  area  is  also   socioeconomically  integrated  



with  the  Mat-Su  Borough.  



                   The  superior  court's  factual  inquiry  into  interactions  between  the  Valdez  



area and the Mat-Su Borough found  "evidence of at  least  minimal socio-economic links":   



                  These  include  geographic  proximity  and  connection via  the  

                  road   system,   shared   interests   in   the   outdoor   recreation  

                  industry,  and  common  hunting  and  fishing  areas  in  the  region  

                  around  Lake  Louise,  Klutina  Lake,  and  Eureka.   They  also  

                  have  at  least  some  shared  ties  to  the  oil  industry.   The  nearest  

                  hospital  to  Valdez,  at  least  by  road,  is  located  in  the  Mat-Su  

                  Borough.    Similarly,  the  nearest  car  dealerships[]  and  large  

                  box  stores  are  located  in  the  Mat-Su.   Valdez  and  Mat-Su  also  

                  share  an  interest  in  maintenance  and  development  of  the  state  

                  highway  system  .  .  .  .  



                            The  communities  in  District  29  are  served  by  school  



         144      Using  prior  redistricting  maps  to   support  or  oppose  current  redistricting  



options  has  limitations.   Redistricting  occurs  every  decade,  and  in  the  intervening  years  

community   population   and   socioeconomic   integration   may   wax   and   wane.     As   we  

discuss   below   in   connection  with  the   second   round   of   the   2021   redistricting   cycle  

litigation,  the  nature  of  legal  challenges,  if  any,  raised  and  resolved  in  prior  redistricting  

cycles  also  are  important.   For  example,  a  prior  House  or  Senate  district  that  never  was  

challenged  is  not  dispositive  evidence  of  constitutional  compliance.   



                                                         -57-                                                   7646
  


----------------------- Page 58-----------------------

                   districts    that      are    a    part   of    home    rule       or    first-class  

                   municipalities or  boroughs, meaning their  funding is obtained  

                   in    part    from    a    local    tax   base,   and    these    home    rule  

                   communities            also     have      a    shared       interest      in     debt  

                   reimbursement from the legislature.   Similarly, Valdez school  

                   sports   teams   compete   against   sports   teams   in  the   Mat-Su  

                   Borough.  (Footnotes  omitted.)  



Mat-Su   and   Valdez   do   not   challenge   these   findings,   instead   asserting   that   these  



interactions  are  insufficient  to satisfy article VI, section  6's  socioeconomic  integration  



requirement  because  the  Board  failed  to  engage  in  reasoned  decision-making  and  did  not  



maximize socioeconomic integration.  But, as the superior court  correctly  pointed out,  



we  have  not  required  that  the  Board  maximize socioeconomic  integration  in  every  House  



district   nor   have   we   held   that there   is   a   right   to   be   paired   with   other   most   closely  

                                   145  The interactions the court identified align with the types of  

integrated  communities.                                                                                                   



interactions previously identified as evidencing socioeconomic integration. In particular,  

                                                                                                                



the shared recreation and fishing sites, transportation networks, economic links, interests  

                                                                                                                  



in the state highway system's development, and competition between sports teams all are  

                                                                                                                          



considerations          similar   to      those   previously           recognized         as    supporting        finding  

                                                                                                                 

socioeconomic integration.146                Although the court placed too much emphasis on both  

                                                                                                                       



communities' connections with Anchorage, we  affirm the  court's determination that  

                                                                                                                        



House  District  29  is  sufficiently  socioeconomically  integrated  to  satisfy  article  VI,  

                                                                                                                         



section 6.  

            



          145      Mat-Su  concedes  this  point  in  its  petition:   "[T]here  is  nothing  in  case  law  



that  provides  for  a  right  to  be  placed  together  with  other  socioeconomic  areas,  even  areas  

in  which  a  location  may  be  more  socioeconomically  integrated,  so  long  as  the  other  area  

the  location  is  placed  with  is  also  socioeconomically  integrated."   (Emphasis  in  original.)   



          146      See Kenai Peninsula, 743 P.2d at 1362-63; see also Hickel, 846 P.2d at 46- 

                                                                                                                         

47.  



                                                            -58-                                                      7646
  


----------------------- Page 59-----------------------

                                      ii.      House  District  36  



                   Valdez's  sole  contention  is  that  there  is  insufficient  evidence  of  interaction  



and  interconnectedness  between  communities  within  this  extremely  large  House  district.   



This  argument  failed  before  the  superior  court  and  fails  with  us  as  well.  



                   During   the   2001   redistricting   cycle   a   superior   court   facing   a   similar  



argument  commented  on  the  practicalities  of  socioeconomic  integration  in  rural  Alaska:  



                   Often    the    communities    within    such    large    districts    are  

                   geographically isolated and small in population.   They are not  

                   interconnected by  road  systems  or  by  other  convenient means  

                   of transportation.  Such communities are  not  integrated as a  

                   result   of   repeated   and   systematic   face   to   face   interaction.   

                   Rather  they  are  linked  by  common  culture,  values,  and  needs.   

                   The constitutional  requirement of socio-economic integration  

                   does   not   depend   on   repeated   and   systematic   interaction  

                   among  each  and  every  community  within  a  district.   Rather,  

                   the   requirement   in   Article   VI,   Section   6   of   the   Alaska  

                   Constitution  may,  by  its  very  terms,  be  satisfied  if  the  "area"  

                   comprising   the    district    is   relatively    socio-economically  

                   integrated  without  regard  to  whether  each  community  within  

                   the  "area"  directly  and  repeatedly  interacts  with every other  

                   community  in  the  area.[147]  



This understanding of socioeconomic integration in rural House districts provides needed  

                                                                                                                 



flexibility      for     pairing      rural     communities           that    cannot       have      the     extensive  

                                                                                                           



interconnectedness and interaction of urban communities.  For example, isolated rural  

                                                                                           



communities  off  the  road  system  may  be  interconnected  through  their  use  of  and  

                                                                                                                     



dependence on the same rivers for travel and fishing and the same migratory animals for  

                                                                                                                       



         147       In  re  2001  Redistricting  Cases,  No.  3AN-01-8914  CI,  61  (Alaska  Super.,  



Feb.   1,  2002).  



                                                          -59-                                                        7646  


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subsistence.   Although  we  have  noted  that  mere  homogeneity  generally  is  insufficient,148  



socioeconomic  integration  in  this  rural  Alaska  context  can  be  supported  by  evidence  of  



interdependence  and  related  "common  culture,  values,  and  needs"  rather  than  requiring  

interactions  between  all  communities.149  



                  The   superior   court  noted   that   House   "District   36   generally   (though  not  



perfectly)  encompasses  the  Doyon  and Ahtna  ANCSA  regions."   The  court c   ited  trial  



evidence that the region's people share socioeconomic  similarities, as "they engage in  



subsistence,  access   similar  types  of  healthcare,  face   similar  challenges  with  regard  to  



access  to  utilities,  and  have  similar  concerns  with  regard  to  the  quality  of  rural  schools."   



There   also   was   trial   testimony  that   Doyon   and   Ahtna   have   primarily   Athabascan  



shareholders  sharing  "common  language  and  culture."   



                  We   affirm   the   superior   court's   determination   that   House   District   36   is  



sufficiently  socioeconomically  integrated  to  satisfy  article  VI,  section  6.  



                            c.       "As  near  as  practicable"  to  the  population  quotient  



                  Mat-Su  contends  that  the  Board  violated  article  VI,  section  6's  requirement  



that   each   House   district   "contain   a   population   as   near as   practicable   to   the   quotient  

obtained  by  dividing  the  population  of  the  state  by  forty."150  

                                                                                    Mat-Su  argues  that  House  



Districts  25-30,  containing  the  Mat-Su  Borough,  are  unconstitutionally  overpopulated.   



It  is  true  that  House  Districts  25-30  each  are  overpopulated  and  that  House  Districts  25- 



29  each  are  overpopulated  by  about  2.5%.  



         148      Hickel,  846  P.2d  at  46.   



         149      In  re  2001  Redistricting  Cases, No.  3AN-01-8914  CI,  at  61  (Alaska  Super.,  



Feb.   1,  2002);  see also  Kenai  Peninsula,  743  P.2d at   1363  (discussing socioeconomic  

integration  requirements  in  context  of  what  is  "reasonable  and  not  arbitrary").  



         150      Alaska Const. art. VI, § 6.  

                                                     



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                    Before  the   1999  constitutional  amendments,  maximum  deviations  below  



ten percent were insufficient, without more, to make out a prima facie case that a plan  



                                                     151  

or  part  thereof  was  unconstitutional.                  The  section  as  amended  now  requires  "equality  



                                                          152  

of  population  'as  near  as  practicable'  ";               we  have  noted  that  modern  technology  "will  



often  make  it  practicable to achieve deviations substantially below the  ten  percent  federal  



                                                        153  

threshold,  particularly  in  urban  areas."                  But  Mat-Su  seems  to  misunderstand  our  2001  



Redistricting  I  analysis.  



                    We  concluded in  that  case  that  the  Board  had  failed  to  draw  Anchorage  



House   districts   containing   as   near  as   practicable   the   population   quotient   when   the  



                                                                                     154  

districts   had   maximum   population   deviations   of   9.5%.                            The   Board   had   made   a  



mistaken assumption that deviations within 10% automatically satisfied the constitutional  



requirement  and  accordingly  had  failed  to  attempt  to  further minimize  the  population  

deviations.155  We explained that, because the Board had made no effort to further reduce  

                                                                                                                       



population  deviations, "the burden  shifted to the  [B]oard to demonstrate that further  

                                                                                                               



minimizing  the  deviations  would  have  been  impracticable  in  light  of  competing  

                                                                                                                



          151       2001   Redistricting   I,   44   P.3d   141,   145   (Alaska   2002);   see   White   v.  



Regester,  412  U.S.  755,  764  (1973)  (instructing  that  districts  differing  from  one  another  

by   more   than   9.9%   likely   "would   not   be   tolerable   without   justification   'based   on  

legitimate  considerations  incident  to  the  effectuation  of  a  rational  state  policy'  "  (quoting  

Reynolds  v.  Sims,  377  U.S.  533,  579  (1964))).  



          152       2001 Redistricting I, 44 P.3d at 145-46.  

                                                                    



          153       Id. at 146.  

                             



          154       Id. at 145-46.  

                             



          155       Id. at 146.  

                             



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requirements  imposed  under  either  federal  or  state  law."156  



                   Mat-Su interprets that decision as requiring  the  Board  to  "justify any failure  



to  reduce  population  deviance  across  districts"  and  asserts  that  the  Board  failed  to  meet  



this  burden.   But  that  is  not  what  2001  Redistricting  I  requires,  and  Mat-Su  points  to  



nothing  in  the  record  indicating  the  Board failed to  make  efforts  to  reduce  population  



deviations  in  the  Mat-Su  Borough.   We  agree  with  the  superior  court  that  the  Board  was  



not  required  to  further  justify  the  noted  de  minimis  deviations.  



                   2.       Mat-Su's  equal  protection  challenge  fails.  



                            a.       One  person,  one  vote  



                   Mat-Su  argues  that  the  House districts' over-populations  also  violate  the  



constitutional  "one  person,  one  vote"  requirement.   Equal  protection  requires  the  State  



to   "make   an  honest   and   good   faith   effort   to   construct   districts, in both  houses   of   its  



                                                                                         157  

legislature,   as   nearly   of   equal   population   as   is   practicable."                  "[T]he   overriding  



objective  must  be  substantial  equality  of  population  among  the  various  districts,  so  that  



the  vote  of  any  citizen  is  approximately  equal  in  weight  to  that  of  any  other  citizen  in  the  

state."158  

              We  have  noted  that   "minor   deviations from  mathematical   equality   .   .   .   are  

insufficient to make  out a prima  facie  case  of  invidious  discrimination."159  As Mat-Su  



correctly  recognizes,  article  VI,  section  6's  population  equality  and  one  person,  one  vote  



requirements   are   "by   and   large   synonymous."   For  the   same  reason  we   affirmed  the  



         156      Id.  



         157       Hickel  v.  Se.   Conf.,   846  P.2d  38,  47  (Alaska   1992)  (quoting  Reynolds  v.  



Sims,  377  U.S.  533,  577  (1964)).  



         158      Id. (quoting Reynolds, 377 U.S. at 579).  

                                                                    



         159      Id.  at  47-48  (quoting  Kenai  Peninsula  Borough  v.  State,  743  P.2d   1352,  



1366  (Alaska   1987)).  



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superior   court's   decision   on   Mat-Su's   challenge  to   article  VI,   section   6's  population  



quotient requirement, we  affirm  the  court's  decision  that  House  Districts 25-30 satisfy  



the  "one  person,  one  vote"  requirement  under  an  equal  protection  analysis.  



                         b.      Fair  and  effective  representation  



                Mat-Su  also  argues  that  the  Mat-Su  Borough  and  its  citizens  are  denied  fair  



and   effective  representation   in  violation   of   equal  protection.    Mat-Su   argues  that  the  



Board   prioritized   the   Fairbanks   and   Anchorage   areas   over   the   Mat-Su   Borough,  

evidencing  discriminatory  intent  against  the  Mat-Su  Borough.160  



                The   superior   court   found  that  the   small   over-populations   in  the   Mat-Su  



Borough  House  districts  resulted  from  bringing  4,000  Valdez  area  residents  into  House  



District   29.     But,   as   we   already   have   discussed,   the   evidence   indicates   the   Board  



considered  the  available  options and  ultimately determined  constitutional  considerations  



were  best   served  by  placing   the   Valdez   area   with   the   Mat-Su   Borough.   We   see   no  



evidence  that  the  Board's  decision  was  predicated  on  an  illegitimate  intent  to  favor  the  



Fairbanks  or  Anchorage  areas  or  that  there  are  partisan  overtones  to  the  decision.   As  the  



Board persuasively  points  out,  the  Mat-Su  Borough's  population  equaled  5.84  House  



districts, the Board proposed a plan with  6  House  districts  in  the area,  and the Board's  



final  plan  created  6  House  districts  over  which  Mat-Su  Borough  voters  have  control.  



                We  are  not  persuaded  that  the  Board  acted  with  discriminatory  intent  such  



that  the  Mat-Su  Borough  and  its  voters  were  denied  fair  and  effective  representation  in  



violation  of  equal  protection.  



        160     See   supra   pp.    14-17   (discussing   equal   protection   analysis   for   fair  



representation  claims).   Mat-Su  Borough  does  not  engage  in  the  traditional  three-step  

analysis,  focusing  only  on  alleged  discriminatory  intent.  



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         C.       Skagway's  Substantive  Constitutional  Challenges   



                  Skagway  contends that the  superior  court  should  have  determined  House  



Districts  3  and  4  violate  article  VI,  section  6's  socioeconomic integration  requirement  



and  that  it  should  have  considered  Skagway's  equal  protection  claim.   House  Districts  3  



and  4  include  the  Juneau,   Skagway,  and  Haines  Boroughs, as well  as  other  southeast  



                            161  

Alaska  communities.             Skagway  contended,  and  the  superior  court  agreed,  that  a  clear  



majority  of  people  testifying  about  Skagway's  placement  preferred  districting  Skagway  



with  downtown  Juneau.   The  Board  conceded  in  its  petition  to  us  that  a  "Board  member  



noted   that   the   weight of   public   testimony   tipped   in   favor   of   keeping   Skagway   and  



downtown  Juneau  districted  together,"  although  that  member  ultimately  did  not  vote  for  



that  option.   



                  At trial Skagway argued that its separation from downtown Juneau, with  



which  it has  strong  socioeconomic  ties,  violated  article  VI,  section  6's  socioeconomic  



integration  requirement;  that  the  Board  violated  Skagway's  equal  protection  rights;  and  



that  the  Board  violated article  VI,   section   10's  public  hearings  requirement   and  thus  



Skagway's  due   process   rights.     The   superior   court   rejected   Skagway's   section   6  



socioeconomic   integration   challenge,   and,   believing   that   it   encompassed   the   fair  



representation   argument   as   well,   rejected   it   without   a   separate   analysis.     The   court  



instead   invalidated   House   Districts   3   and   4   under   its   blended   "hard   look"   and   due  



process  analysis  because  the  Board  failed  "to  make  a  good-faith  attempt  to  incorporate  



the  public  testimony  of  Alaska  citizens,"  who  favored  keeping  Skagway  with  downtown  



         161      The  2010  redistricting  cycle  had  placed  Skagway  in  a  House  district  with  



downtown  Juneau.   In  this  cycle,  the  Board  unanimously  voted  to  place  Skagway,  fellow  

port   towns   Haines   and   Gustavus,   and  part   of   Juneau's   Mendenhall  neighborhood in  

House   District   3;   Mendenhall   was   split   between   House   Districts   3   and   4.     See  

Appendix  A.  



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Juneau.    Because   we   reverse   the   superior   court's   "hard   look"   invalidation   of   House  



Districts  3  and  4,  we  address  Skagway's  arguments.  



                   1.       Socioeconomic  integration  



                   Skagway   argues   that   it   is   more    socioeconomically  integrated   with  



downtown  Juneau  than  any  other  part  of  the  Juneau  Borough,  including  the  Mendenhall  



neighborhood.    Skagway   mistakenly   asserts   that   socioeconomic   integration   must   be  



maximized,   but,   as   we   have   discussed   earlier,   article   VI,   section   6   calls   for   House  



districts  "containing as  nearly  as practicable a relatively integrated  socio-economic area";  



this  flexible  language  means  that  some  degree  of  integration  can  be  sacrificed  to  achieve  

greater contiguity and compactness.162  The Board correctly notes that House  Districts  



3  and  4  are  more  compact  than  the  2010  redistricting  cycle's  districts,  and  Skagway  does  



not  meaningfully  contest  this  point.   And  in  line  with  our   Groh v. Egan  holding,  trial  



evidence  supports  a  conclusion   that  House  District  3  is  sufficiently  socioeconomically  



integrated    because    the         Skagway,    Haines,    and    Juneau    Boroughs    share    "close  



transportation  ties,"  "Juneau  serv[es]  as  an  economic  hub  for  Haines  and  Skagway,"  and  



                                                                                              163  

the  three  communities  historically  "have  always  been  closely  linked."                      Skagway  notes  



that  Groh  was  decided  before  Juneau's  Mendenhall  neighborhood  was  fully  developed.   



But  as  we   stated  in  Hickel :   "In  areas  where  a  common  region  is  divided  into   several  



districts,  significant  socio-economic  integration  between  communities  within  a  district  



         162      Hickel,  846  P.2d  at  45  n.10.   Skagway  refers  to  Hickel 's  Appendix  E,  the  



superior  court's explanation of its changes to the  special masters' interim redistricting  

plan.   Id.   at   63-96.    In  Hickel   the   superior   court said   it   made   changes   "to   establish  

contiguity,   to   maximize   socio-economic   integration,   to   avoid   pitting   incumbent  

minorities  one  against  another,  and  to  equalize  population."   Id.  at  73.   As  the  Board  

points  out,  that  superior  court  merely  was  explaining  changes,  not  announcing  a  new  rule  

of  law.  



         163      526 P.2d 863, 879 (Alaska 1974).  

                                                         



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outside      the    region      and     the    region     in    general      'demonstrates         the    requisite  



interconnectedness  and  interaction,'  even  though  there  may  be  little  actual  interaction  



                                                    164  

between  the  areas  joined  in  a  district."           Juneau  fits  within  this  description.  



                  Skagway  also  asserts  that  the  Board's  map  failed  to  keep  the  Mendenhall  



neighborhood   intact,   contending  that   the   Board   erred   by   ignoring   neighborhood  

boundaries  absent  overriding  constitutional  considerations.165  

                                                                                     But  Skagway  tethers  this  



contention  only  to the  Constitution's socioeconomic  integration  requirement.   We  fail  



to   see   how   merely dividing   the   Mendenhall   neighborhood   into   two   different   House  



district  renders  either  district  vulnerable  to  a  challenge  that  it  is  not  socioeconomically  



integrated.  



                  We  affirm  the  superior  court's  holding  that  Districts  3  and  4  did  not  violate  



article  VI,  section  6's  socioeconomic  integration  requirement.   



                  2.       Fair  representation  and  geographic  discrimination   



                  Skagway         contends      that    placing      its   voters     with     the    Mendenhall  



neighborhood   dilutes   Skagway's   votes,   implicating   equal   protection.     It   faults   the  



superior  court  for  failing  to  address  this  issue  even  though  Skagway  briefed  it  at  trial.   



But  Skagway's  trial  brief  minimally  addressed  the  fair  and  effective  representation  issue.   



After   setting   out   a   short   rule   statement,   Skagway   asserted,   without   pointing   to   any  



evidence   or   making   any   substantive   argument,   that   the   Board   "ignore[d]   political  



subdivision boundaries and  communities  of  interest" when  it "combin[ed] Skagway  with  



         164      846  P.2d  at  46  (quoting  Kenai  Peninsula,  743  P.2d  at  1363).   We  note  that  



this  statement  should  not  be  expanded  to  mean  that  outside  communities  integrated  with  

one  part  of  a  borough  are  always  integrated  with  all  parts  of  that  borough.   



         165      See   2001   Redistricting  II ,   47   P.3d   1089,   1091   (Alaska   2002)   (quoting  



approvingly  superior  court's  statement  that  maintaining  neighborhood  boundaries  is  an  

"admirable goal" but "not constitutionally  required" and concluding districts  that split  

Eagle  River  were  not  unconstitutional  merely  because  they  split  neighborhoods).  



                                                        -66-                                                   7646
  


----------------------- Page 67-----------------------

dissimilar  communities."   And  contrary  to  Skagway's  argument  to  us,  the  superior  court  



did  address  Skagway's  equal  protection  claim,  saying  that  it  was  the  same  as  Skagway's  



socioeconomic  integration  claim  and  thus  did  "not  merit  being  addressed  twice."  



                Skagway's petition for review does little to bolster its contention.   Skagway  



asserts   that   its   4,000   voters   will   be   drowned   out   by   Mendenhall's   14,000   voters.   



Skagway  also  emphasizes  advisory  votes  taken  in  2000  and  2004  when  Skagway  and  



downtown  Juneau  voters  supported  increasing  access  to  Juneau  by  expanding  the  ferry  



system,  but  Mendenhall  voters  seemed  more  supportive  of  a proposed  road.  But,  like  



Mat-Su,  Skagway  fails  to  engage  in  the  traditional  three-step  equal protection analysis  



for   fair   representation   claims.    Aside   from   noting   that   Member   Simpson   apparently  



favored   the   road,   Skagway   points   to   no   evidence   of   discriminatory  intent,   such   as  



secretive  procedures, ignoring   political   subdivisions   and   communities   of   interest,   or  



regional  partisanship  affecting  House  Districts  3  and  4.  



                Alaska's  equal   protection   clause   would   be   far   too   restrictive   if   a  



community's   fair   representation   claim   could   be   based  on  nothing   more   than   a  



disagreement with  other communities in its  House district  about a single public policy  



issue.   Nor does Skagway's relatively small population compared to Mendenhall's create  



an  equal protection claim.  The  ideal  population for  a House  district is roughly 18,000  



voters; Skagway's  4,000  voters  will  be  overwhelmed  by  non-Skagway  voters  in   any  



district,   such   as,   for   example,   inclusion   with   downtown   Juneau.     We   see   no   equal  

protection  violation  regarding  Skagway  and  House  Districts  3  and  4.166  



        166     During  the  Constitutional  Convention  the  redistricting  goal  was  expressed  



as  achieving  "adequate  and  true  representation  by  the  people  in  their  elected  legislature,  

true,  just,  and  fair  representation."   See  3  PACC  1835  (Jan.  11,  1956)  (statement  of  Del.  

John  S.  Hellenthal).   In  the  second  round  of  2021  redistricting  litigation,  discussed  later  

in  this  decision,  evidence  included  an  email  from  Member  Simpson  clearly  expressing  

                                                                                         (continued...)  



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         D.	      The  Board's  East  Anchorage  Ruling  Challenges  



                  The  superior  court  considered  East  Anchorage's  challenges t  o  the  South  



Muldoon (House   District   21)   and   Eagle   River   (House  District   22)   Senate   District   K  



pairing  based  on  article  VI,   sections   6  and   10  and  Alaska's equal  protection  and  due  



process  clauses.   The  court  held  that  the  Senate  district  did  not  violate  section  6  but  that  



it  violated  section   10,  due  process  rights, and  the  equal  protection  clause.   The  Board  



challenges  nearly  every  aspect  of  the  court's  findings  and  conclusions  on  this  matter,  



ranging from pure questions of law to fact-intensive inquiries.   The Board also raises two  



general evidentiary issues which we discuss  here because they  effectively are relevant  



only  to  our  East  Anchorage  discussion.  



                   1.	      The  Board's  evidentiary  issues  



                            a.	      The   superior   court   did   not   abuse   its discretion  when   it  

                                     denied  the  Board's  requests  to  compel  discovery.167  



                  Many  individual  plaintiffs  objected  to  the  Board's  discovery  requests.   The  



relevant requests sought production of all  communications:  (1) "[y]ou have sent to or  



         166      (...continued)  



an   approach   to   redistricting   that   involved   ensuring  more   safe   Republican   seats   and  

keeping  Democrats  at  bay.   A  portion of  the  email  -  expressing  Member   Simpson's  

approval  that  our  March  order  reversing  the  superior  court's  remand  of  House  Districts  

3  and  4  will  leave  "Skagway   .   .   .  stuck  with  that a   rrangement  for  the  next   10  years,  at  

least" - may suggest  some  kind  of geographic or  political  bias played a role.  But we  

see  nothing  in  Skagway's  petition  for  review  suggesting  that  political  advantage  played  

a  role  in  House  Districts  3  and  4,  and  this  email was not  part  of  that  record.   Without  

more  information  -  perhaps  unavailable  due  to  the  Board's  improper  use  of  executive  

sessions  -  we  do  not  further  pursue  the  issue.  



         167      "We  generally  review  a  trial  court's  discovery  rulings  for  abuse  of  

                                                                                                                    

discretion."  Marron  v. Stromstad,  123 P.3d  992,  998  (Alaska 2005).   Whether the  

                                                                                                      

superior court "weighed the appropriate factors in issuing a discovery order" is a matter  

                                                                                                                

we review de novo.  Id.  

                              



                                                         -68-	                                                  7646
  


----------------------- Page 69-----------------------

received   from   anyone   .   .   .   that   relate   in   any   way   to   the   2021   redistricting   process";  



(2)   "[y]ou  have   sent   or  received  that  relate   in   any  way  to   [y]our  participation   in  this  



lawsuit";  and (3) "between or among  the [p]laintiffs  that relate  in any way to the 2021  



redistricting  process  or  the  subject-matter  of  their  lawsuit."   Without  first  attempting  to  



confer   with   the   plaintiffs   the   Board sought   to   compel   discovery;   the   superior   court  



characterized the Board's  argument  as  "the communications [were] relevant  to  show bias  



and  motive  for  impeachment  purposes."  



                   The  superior  court  denied  the  Board's  request  to  compel  discovery,  ruling  



that  the  Board's  production  requests  would  elicit  information  only  tangentially  relevant  



to  the  proceedings  and  that  the  benefit  of  the  information  did  not  outweigh  the  burdens  

of  production.   The  court  recognized  that  "Alaska  provides  for  liberal  civil  discovery"168  



                                                                             [169]  

and  that  "   'evidence  of  bias  is  relevant  and probative'                   in  most  instances."   But  the  



                                                                                              170  

court  relied  on  limiting  factors  from  Alaska  Civil  Rule  26(b)(2)(A)                      and  an  additional  



instruction   under   Alaska   Civil   Rule   90.8(d)   that   "[t]he   record   in   the   superior   court  



proceeding   consists   of   the   record   from   the   [Board]   .   .   .   as   supplemented   by   such  



          168      State  v.  Doe,  378  P.3d  704,  706  (Alaska  2016).  



          169      Ray  v.  Draeger,  353  P.3d  806,  811  (Alaska  2015).  



          170      The  relevant   Rule   26(b)(2)(A) factors   counseling   denial   of   the   Board's  



request  were:    



                   The discovery sought  .  .  .  [was]  obtainable from some other  

                   source  that  [was]  more  convenient,  less  burdensome,  or  less  

                   expensive;  .  .  .   [and]  the  burden  or  expense  of  the  proposed  

                   discovery  outweigh[ed]  its  likely  benefit,  taking  into  account  

                   the  needs  of  the  case,  the  amount  in  controversy,  the  parties'  

                   resources,   the   importance   of   the   issues   at   stake   in   the  

                   litigation,  and  the  importance  of  the  proposed  discovery  in  

                   resolving  the  issues.   



                                                          -69-                                                     7646
  


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additional evidence as the court, in its discretion, may permit."  The court reasoned that  



                                                                                                                                 

the requests were overly broad and burdensome; that the information was obtainable (or  



                                                                                                                                

already available) through other avenues, such as deposition or cross-examination; and  



                                                                                                                              

that the requests had limited relevance due to the scope of the proceedings.  The court  



                                                                                                                                   

also noted that the Board had not filed a certification of good faith attempts to confer as  



                                                                                                                                 

required by Rule 37(a)(2)(B) and that the Board justified this omission based only on the  



                                                                               

expedited nature of the proceedings without citing authority.  



                                                                                                                          

                     The Board suggests that the superior court unfairly discussed the Board's  



                                                                                                                                 

political leanings without allowing "the Board to discover and present evidence of the  



                                                                                                                            

political  affiliation  and  biases  of  the  plaintiffs  to  the  redistricting  matters."                                 These  



                                                                                                                           

arguments notwithstanding, the Board fails to request any specific relief from us related  



                                                                                                                                 

to the  court's alleged discovery error; the  Board  certainly does not  suggest that the  



                                                                                                                                

court's decision on the merits of the Board's redistricting efforts should be reversed due  



                                                                                                                                

to the alleged error.  Although evidence of party or witness bias typically is relevant and  



                                                                                                   

probative, the Board fails to persuade us that the superior court acted unreasonably by  



                                                                                                                            

not compelling the disputed production.  We find it particularly notable that the Board  



                                                                                                                    

has not explained how further knowledge of any plan challenger's political motivations  



                                                                                                                   

would have meaningfully benefitted the Board's trial position that its final redistricting  



                                                                                                                         

plan  satisfied  the  Alaska  Constitution's  requirements  and  did  not  involve  partisan  



                                                                                                                           

gerrymandering.  The court did not abuse its discretion by denying the Board's request  



                 

to compel production.  



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----------------------- Page 71-----------------------

                             b.	       The   superior   court   did   not   abuse   its   discretion  when   it  

                                       adopted    streamlined    proceedings    regarding    witness  

                                       testimony  at  trial.171  



                                                                                                                    

                    Because this was an expedited case with a short time for trial, the superior  



                                                                                                                           

court relied on Board members' depositions submitted by the plaintiffs and allowed the  



                                                                                                                            

parties to pre-file direct testimony rather than giving live direct testimony. Although the  



                                                                                                         

court had allowed for live re-direct examination of witnesses who were cross-examined  



                                                                                                                        

by  other parties, East Anchorage  did not  cross-examine Board members.   The court  



                                                                                                                                 

denied the Board's subsequentrequest to engage in re-direct examination of its members.  



The  court  indicated  that  the  Board  could  instead  submit  supplemental  Board  member  



affidavits.   The  Board  did  not  do  so.   But  the  Board  now  complains  about  the  court  not  



allowing live re-direct examination of the Board members, contending  that the court's  



"heavy   reliance"   on   depositions   in   its  analysis   of   the   Board's   "secretive   process"  



                                                                                                               

involving the Senate district pairings prejudiced the Board by denying it "the opportunity  



                                    172  

                     

to explain its decisions."               



                    The  Board   cites   case  law   supporting  the  general  proposition that a   civil  



          171       "We  exercise  our  independent  judgment  when  interpreting  Alaska's  civil  



rules, but [we]  review a superior court's  procedural  decisions  for  abuse  of  discretion."   

Werba   v.   Ass'n   of   Vill.   Council   Presidents,   480   P.3d   1200,   1204   (Alaska   2021)   

(alteration  in  original)  (quoting  Rockstad  v.  Erikson,   113  P.3d   1215,   1219-20 (Alaska  

2005)).  



          172       We find it difficult to give serious consideration to the Board's contention  

                                                                                                                 

that it has been denied the opportunity to explain its Senate District K pairing decision.  

                                                                                                                                 

Had the Board conducted redistricting business in open sessions, the public could have  

                                                                                                                         

had a real-time understanding of the Board members' positions and reasoning.  And  

                                                                                                                         

Board  members  surely could have  explained their  decisions when  they gave  sworn  

                                                                                                                      

depositions,  pre-filed  affidavit  testimony,  or  were  given  the  chance  to  file  later  

                                                                                                                        

supplemental affidavit testimony.  

                                                   



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----------------------- Page 72-----------------------

litigant has the  right to confront adverse witnesses.173  But we struggle to comprehend  



how  the  right  to  confront  witnesses  against  the  Board  gives  rise  to  a  right  to  confront  the  



Board members' own pre-filed depositions and affidavits.   The depositions and affidavits  



gave  the  Board  members  a  full  and  unfettered  opportunity  to  justify  and  explain  their  



decision and actions  regarding  Senate  District K                     .   And  the  Board  chose  not  to  submit  



supplemental affidavits despite being given the opportunity to do so.  We  see no error  



on  this  point.  



                    The  Board  also  contends  that  Alaska  Civil  Rule  46(b)  dictates  the  order  of  



evidence  presented  at  trial  and  argues  that  the  superior  court  should  have  allowed  the  



Board  "to  put  on  its  case."   But  that  Rule  instructs  that  the  order  of  evidence  is  left  to  the  

court's   "sound   discretion."174             The  court  did  not  abuse  its  discretion  in  the  way  it  

                                                                                                                             



permitted  witness  testimony,  especially  in  light  of  the  abridged  timeline  for  the  

                                                                                                                          



proceedings, and any possible error would have been rendered harmless had the Board  

                                                                                                                       



accepted the court's invitation to file supplemental affidavits.  Indeed, we commend the  

                                                                                                                           



superior court's tremendous  efforts expediting the trial  and its  final decision in this  

                                                                                                                          



challenging litigation.  

                   



                    2.       The Board's article VI, section 10 arguments  

                                                                                    



                    We now review the superior court's application of article VI, section 10's  

                                                                                                                          

public hearings requirement.175  

                         

                                               



          173       See Thorne  v. Dep't of Pub. Safety, 774 P.2d 1326,   1332 & n.14 (Alaska  



1989)   (holding   "right  to   confront   and   cross-examine  witnesses   is   one  right,   founded  

upon  due  process  and  fundamental  fairness,  which  civil  defendants  do  enjoy").  



          174       Alaska R. Civ. P. 46(b).  

                                               



          175       We do not reach the superior court's blended "hard look" and due process  

                                                                                                                     

analysis regarding  Senate District  K because  we  affirm its remand  to  the  Board  on  

                                                                                                                            

                                                                                                           (continued...)  



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----------------------- Page 73-----------------------

                          a.       Superior  court's  article  VI,  section  10  ruling  



                  The   superior   court   concluded   that   the   Board's   Senate   district   pairings  



violated   article  VI,   section   10   in   two  ways.    The   first   violation  related   to   article   VI,  



section  10's  requirement  that  the  Board  adopt  one  or  more  "proposed  redistricting  plans"  



within  the  first  30  days  of  its  tenure;  the  court  interpreted  this  as  meaning  that  the  Board  



must  adopt  a  draft  of  both  the  House  districts  and  Senate  district  pairings  within  the  first  



30   days.    The   court   concluded   that   the   Board   violated   section   10   by   not   adopting   a  



Senate  plan within  the  first  30  days.   The  court  also  expressed  skepticism  that  "third- 



party   plans"   with  Senate   district   pairings   were   adequate   because   they   were   not  



"proposed"  by  the  Board.  



                  The    second    violation    was    based    on    section        10's    public    hearings  



requirement;  the   superior  court  considered  this  issue  intertwined  with  procedural  due  



process.  The court found:  "[T]here was no  opportunity  for the  public to comment on  



the  Senate  pairings  that  were  actually  proposed  by  the  members  of  the  Board."   The  court  



noted   that   the   Board   had   taken   third-party   maps   with   Senate   district pairings on   its  



statewide  public  hearings  road  show  but  that  the  Board  did  not  "hold  public  hearings  on  



Senate  pairings  it  actually  proposed  on  the  final  [H]ouse  map."   The  court  also  found  that  



the  Board  did  not  "make  good-faith  attempts  to  incorporate  public  testimony  into the  



Board's  final  plan,"  observing  that  "the  vast  majority  of  both  East  Anchorage  and  Eagle  



River  residents  were  strongly  against  splitting  either  region  and  combining  one  with  the  



other."   The  court  concluded  that  by  failing  "to  take  an  appropriate   'hard  look' at the  



Senate pairings," the Board had  violated  East  Anchorage Plaintiffs's  constitutional rights  



under  article  VI,  section   10.   



         175      (...continued)  



unconstitutional  political  gerrymander  grounds.  



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----------------------- Page 74-----------------------

                                                                                                                       

                               b.	       Article VI, section 10's 30-day deadline and the meaning  

                                                                                     

                                         of "proposed redistricting plan"  



                                                                                                                 

                    The Board does not meaningfully contest the superior court's interpretation  



                                                                                                                          

of "proposed redistricting plan" to include a House  district map with  Senate district  



                                                                                                                                

pairings, pointing only to evidence suggesting that past Boards waited until late in the  



                                                                                                                          

process to make  Senate pairings.  The Board asserts that adopting third-party  Senate  



                                                                                  

plans for its public road show nine days late, even if unconstitutional, was "harmless"  



                                                                                                                          

and did not prevent the public from offering meaningful feedback on the Senate district  



                                                                                                                          

plans.   East Anchorage  acknowledges that third-party maps  included  Senate district  



                                                                                                                               

pairings, arguing generally that the Board "failed to hold any hearings regarding any  



                

specified [S]enate pairings proposal, and actively shut down discussion and testimony  



                                                                                                                      

at its public meetings before November  8."  East Anchorage cites citizens' testimony  



                                                                                                                      

from October 4 and 30 requesting that the Board release Senate pairings for comment.  



                                                                                                                               

                    We agree with the superior court's thorough analysis of the question, and  



                                                                                       

we hold that article VI, section 10 calls for one or more "proposed redistricting plans"  



                                                                                                                     

- including both House and Senate districts - within the first 30 days.  It is difficult  



                                                                                                                                  

to see how section 10's drafters could have envisioned a timeline allowing the Board to  



                                                                                                                              

promulgate only a House district map within the first 30 days and then wait until the very  



                                                                                                                         

end of the 90-day redistricting period to propose Senate districts: Senate district pairings  



                                                                                                                        

then conceivably could escape scrutiny at public hearings.  But we disagree with the  



                                                                                                                            

superior court that the Senate district maps drawn by third parties, adopted by the Board  



                                                                                                                            

and taken on the road show, are categorically inadequate for section 10 purposes.  Third- 



                                                                                                                           

party participation and input should be welcome, and section 10 states that the Board  



                                                                                                                        

need only "adopt" a proposed redistricting plan, not that it need propose the adopted  



                                                                                                                                 

plan.  The Board "adopted" third-party plans with Senate district pairings to take on its  



                                                               -74-	                                                        7646
  


----------------------- Page 75-----------------------

road  show,  albeit  over  a  week  late.176  



                  We  therefore  agree  with  the  Board  that  its  failure  to  adopt  a  Senate  district  



plan  within  30  days  was  harmless  error.   Despite  the  roughly  one-week  delay  in  initially  



adopting  a  proposed  plan  that  included  Senate  districts,  the  public  had  an  opportunity  to  



comment  on  potential  Senate  district  pairings  throughout  the  Board's  public  road  show  



and  toward  the  end  of  the  90-day  period  when  the  Board  was  focused on making  the  



Senate  pairings.   Had  the  Board  actually  refused  to  adopt  and  present  any  Senate  district  



plans  until  later  in  the  process,  we  might  draw  a  different  conclusion.    



                            c.	      Article  VI,  section  10's  public  hearings  requirement  and  

                                     procedural  due  process  



                                     i.	      Hearings  



                  The  superior  court  concluded  that  article  VI,  section   10  requires  "public  



hearings   .   .   .   on   all  plans  proposed   by   the   Board."     (Alteration   in   original.)     That  



provision  states:   



                  Within  thirty  days  after  the  official  reporting  of  the  decennial  

                  census   of  the  United   States   or   thirty   days   after  being   duly  

                  appointed,  whichever  occurs  last,  the  board shall  adopt one  

                  or  more  proposed  redistricting  plans.    The  board  shall h              old  

                  public   hearings   on   the   proposed   plan,   or,   if   no   single  

                  proposed  plan   is   agreed   on,   on all plans  proposed   by   the  

                  board.[177] 



         176      Adopting proposed plans for  public  comment  is  designed to focus public  



attention  and  testimony  on  the  Board's proposals.   That purpose  is  not  well-served  by  

indiscriminately   adopting   third-party   plans   with   no   suggestion   of   tentative   Board  

approval,  and  even  less  so  by  Senate  districts  proposed  in  the  third-party  plans  based  on  

House  districts  substantially  different  from  those  the  Board  tentatively  endorsed.   In  this  

case  the  Board  may  not  have  complied  with  the  spirit  of  article  VI,  §  10,  but  the  Board's  

actions  were  minimally  compliant  with  its  literal  requirements.  



         177	     Alaska Constitution, art. VI, § 10 (emphasis added).  

                                                                                 



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----------------------- Page 76-----------------------

                    The  superior  court's  interpretation  appears  to  be  taken  out  of  context.   The  



most  natural  reading  is  that  public  hearings  are required on  one or more  plans  adopted  



within  the  30-day  window.   We  have  interpreted,  but  not  previously  held,  that  section  10  



requires  hearings  only  on  plans  proposed  or  adopted  within  the  first  30  days:  



                    Under article  VI,  section   10  of  the  Alaska  Constitution,  the  

                    Alaska   Redistricting   Board   (the   Board) must   adopt   one   or  

                    more   proposed   redistricting   plans   within   30   days   after  

                    receiving  official  census  data  from  the  federal  government.  

                    The  Board  must  then  hold  public  hearings  on  the  proposed  

                   plans   and adopt   a  final  plan   within   90   days   of   the   census  

                    reporting.[178]  



                    The emphasized text can be read to mean that, if the Board cannot agree on  

                                                                                                                             



one plan within 30 days, all plans, regardless of when they are proposed, are subject to  

                                                                                                                              



the public hearings requirement.   This highly  semantic reading seems unnatural; we  

                                                                                                                            



instead hold that section 10 requires hearings on plans adopted within the first 30 days.  

                                                                                                                         



                                       ii.       Procedural due process  

                                                                            



                    Procedural  due  process  under  article  I,  section  7  -  prohibiting  the  

                                                                                                                           



deprivation  of life,  liberty,  or property  without due process  of law - requires,  at a  

                                                                                                                               

minimum, appropriate "notice and an opportunity to be heard" given the context.179  The  

                                                                                                                            

                                                                                                           



superior court did not tether its limited procedural due process analysis to a specific right  

                                                                                                                          



to which procedural due process might apply, and the parties did not grapple with this  

                                



threshold issue in their petitions for review.  And we found no arguments in the parties'  

                                                                                                                      



petitions for review about how procedural due process requirements actually play a role  

                                                                                                                           



in this context.  Much like the superior court's substantive due process analogy in its  

                                                                                                                             



          178       2011   Redistricting   III,   294   P.3d   1032,   1033   (Alaska   2012)   (emphasis  



added).  



          179       Haggblom  v.  City  of  Dillingham,   191  P.3d  991,  995  (Alaska  2008).  



                                                             -76-                                                        7646
  


----------------------- Page 77-----------------------

"hard  look"  analysis,  there  is  less  here  than  meets  the  eye.180  



                 To   the   extent   the   superior   court   considered   that   East   Anchorage's due  



process  rights  were violated, we note the following.  At least  one  proposed  third-party  



redistricting  map  presented  on  the  road  show  districted  part  of  the  Eagle  River  area  with  



part  of  the  Muldoon  area.   Given  the  volume  of  comments  throughout  the  90-day  process  



about  the  Muldoon  and  Eagle  River  areas  and  their  possible  pairing,  it  would  be  difficult  



to   conclude  that  there  was  no  notice   or  meaningful   opportunity  to   comment.   Amici  



curiae  Alaska  Black  Caucus's  own  compilation  of  public  comments  amply  demonstrates  



this.   And  the  Board's  proposed  plan  was  not  a  surprise;  the  Board  did  exactly  what  East  



Anchorage  feared  and  testified  against.   East  Anchorage  thus  had  a  chance  to  adequately  



comment  on  the  Board's  plans.   

                 3.      The  Board's  equal  protection  arguments181  



                 The   superior   court   considered  whether  the  Board created  the  two  Eagle  



River  area  Senate  Districts,  K  and  L,  with  an  illegitimate  purpose.   The  court  analyzed  



"whether  there  were  secret  procedures  in  the  contemplation  and  adoption  of  these  senate  



districts,   whether there   is   evidence   of   partisanship,   and   whether   the   adopted   senate  

boundaries  selectively  ignore  political  subdivisions  and  communities  of  interest."182  



                 The   superior court   found   "evidence   of   secretive   procedures   .   .   .   in   the  



Board's   consideration   and   deliberation"   of   the   Senate   districts'   pairings.    The   court  



pointed to "overwhelming public testimony  against splitting and combining Eagle River"  



         180     See  supra  note   116  and  related  text.  



         181     See  supra  pp.  14-17  (discussing  analytical  framework  for  equal  protection  



claim).  



         182     See  Kenai  Peninsula  Borough  v.  State,  743  P.2d  1352,  1372  (Alaska  1987)  



(establishing  neutral  factors  test).   



                                                     -77-                                               7646
  


----------------------- Page 78-----------------------

                                                                                                                        

with the East Anchorage South Muldoon community that seemed to have been ignored  



                                                                                                                         

by the three Board members who voted in favor of the Senate district pairings.  Noting  



                                                                                                                               

that immediately following an executive session one Board member moved to accept the  



                                                                                                                      

Senate  district  pairings,  the  court  reasoned  that  this  "evidences  not  only  secretive  



                                                                                                                    

procedures, but suggests that certain Board members came to some kind of consensus  



                                                                                                                              

either during executive session, or altogether outside of the meeting processes."  The  



                                                                      

court discussed statements by the two Board members who did not support the Senate  



                                                                                          

pairings, including statements that the Board had engaged in "naked gerrymandering"  



                                                                                                                              

and that the Board members favoring the Senate district pairings "recognized that it was  



                                                                                                             

not possible to 'get to North Muldoon,' so instead South Muldoon was paired."  



                                                                                                                            

                    The superior court also found evidence of regional partisanship.  The court  



                                                                                                                          

noted the expert witness testimony about the Eagle River and South Muldoon House  



                                                                                                                          

districts' political  leanings, that  the  adopted  Senate pairings  would  minimize  South  



                                                                                                                              

Muldoon's voting strength, and that there would be no competition in its Senate seat  



                                                                                                                        

election.  The court also pointed to the statement of one Board member, who favored  



                                                                                                                           

these pairings, that splitting Eagle River gave it "more representation" and that Eagle  



                                                                            

River would control two Senate seats rather than one.  



                                                                                                                            

                    Finally, the superior court found that the Eagle River and Muldoon areas  



                                                                                                                          

are separate "communities of interest."  It based this determination on "ample public  



                                                                                                                              

comment" and trial testimony, including that of an expert witness.  The court found that  



                                                                                                                              

"evidence  in  the  record  makes  clear  that  any  interaction  [between Eagle  River  and  



                                                                                                                             

Muldoon] includes only Eagle River residents driving into or through Muldoon, with  



                                                                                                                             

Muldoon residents having no regular travel to or interaction with Eagle River."  The  



                                                                                                                              

court thus concluded "that the Board intentionally discriminated against residents of East  



                                                                                                                                

Anchorage in favor of Eagle River[] and  [that] this intentional discrimination had an  



                   

illegitimate purpose."  



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----------------------- Page 79-----------------------

                   The  superior  court  then  considered  whether  the  pairings  nonetheless  led  to  



more  proportional  representation.   It  found  that  "[p]airing  Eagle  River  Valley  with  South  



Muldoon   creates   an   average   deviation   of   -1.68%,   whereas   pairing   both   Eagle   River  



districts   creates   an   average   deviation   of   -1.18%."     The   court   concluded   that   the  

challenged  Senate  pairings  did  not  lead  to  more  proportional  representation.183  



                   Finding  an  equal  protection  violation,  the  superior  court  then  turned  to  the  



remedy.     It   found  that   the   effect   of   disproportionality   in   Senate   District   K   was   de  



minimis.     But   distinguishing   this  case   from   Kenai   Peninsula,   the   court   noted   that  



although   "ultimately   illegitimate,   [the   Kenai   Peninsula   Board]   lacked   the   secretive  



processes   and   discrimination   against   the   communities   of   interest   and   political areas  



apparent  in  this  case."   The  court  found  that  a  mere  declaration  of  unconstitutionality  



under   a   declaratory judgment   was   not   appropriate   and   remanded   the   Senate   district  

pairings  to  the  Board,  citing  Kenai  Peninsula 's  dissent.184  

                                                                                    



                             a.       "Politically salient class" versus "communities of interest"  



                   An  equal  protection  claim  requires  an  assertion  that  two  groups  are  being  



treated  differently;  the  Board  contests  the  notion  that  the  Muldoon  and  Eagle  River  areas  



are,  for  equal  protection  purposes,  different  communities.   This  is  a  somewhat  confusing  



issue  because  we  have  used  two  different terms  to  describe  groups  of  people  who  may  



be  able  to  bring  fair  representation  claims:   "politically  salient  class"  and  "communities  



          183      As  the  Board  points  out,  the  superior  court's c   haracterization  of  "under"  



and  "over"  representation  was  incorrect.   We  also  note  that  the  court's  approach  to  the  

"proportionality  of  representation"  defense  reflects  a  misunderstanding  of  the  defense.   

We  address  these  issues  below.  



          184      See  Kenai  Peninsula,  743  P.2d  at  1374-75  (Compton,  J.,  dissenting)  

                                                                                                            

(explaining that merely offering declaratory relief in face of unconstitutional district does  

                                                                                                                       

not suffice nor does it deter future boards).  

                                                   



                                                           -79-                                                      7646
  


----------------------- Page 80-----------------------

of  interest."185  



                    The   Board   advocates   using   "politically  salient   class,"   stating   that   we  



                                                                                                                186  

"clarified"  it  as  the  proper  term  after  the   1999  constitutional  amendments.                               We  first  



used  that  term  in  the  redistricting  context  in  2001  Redistricting  I  when  characterizing  



                                                                                    187  

Kenai  Peninsula  as  discussing  politically  salient  classes.                         In  Braun  v.  Denali  Borough  

we  repeated  the characterization,188 and in  2011  Redistricting  I  we  cited  the  term's  use  



                                  189  

in  2001  Redistricting  I .           But  the  Kenai  Peninsula  reference  in  2001  Redistricting  I  does  



not  contain  the  phrase  "politically   salient  class"  -  the  phrase  does  not   appear  in  the  



             190  

opinion.           We   appear   to   have  borrowed   the   term   from   a   concurring   opinion   in   the  



                                                                                          191  

United  States  Supreme  Court's  Karcher  v.  Daggett  decision.                              Contrary  to  the  Board's  



          185       Compare Kenai  Peninsula, 743  P.2d  at  1365  n.21,  1372  ("[S]enate  districts  



which  meander  and  ignore  political  subdivision  boundaries  and  communities  of  interest  

will   be   suspect   under   the   Alaska   equal   protection   clause."),   with   Braun  v.   Denali  

Borough,   193  P.3d  719,  730  (Alaska 2008) (describing  Kenai  Peninsula  holding  "that  

the  [B]oard  cannot  intentionally  discriminate  against  a  borough  or  any  other  politically  

salient  class  of  voters  by  invidiously  minimizing  that  class's  right  to  an  equally  effective  

vote"  (quoting  2001  Redistricting  I,  44  P.3d   141,   144  (Alaska  2002))).  



          186       The Board presumably  focuses on "politically salient class" because  in  

                                                                                                                                

2001  Redistricting  I  we  used  the  term  in  a  footnote  discussing  "racial  or  political  

                                                                                                                      

groups."  44 P.3d at 144 n.8.  

                                       



          187       Id. at 144 (citing Kenai Peninsula, 743 P.2d at 1370-73).  

                                                                                            



          188        193 P.3d at 730 (quoting discussion from 2001 Redistricting I, 44 P.3d at  

                                                                                                                                

 144).  



          189       2011 Redistricting I, 274 P.3d 466, 469 (Alaska 2012).  

                                                                                                         



          190       See generally Kenai Peninsula, 743 P.2d at 1352.  

                                                                                       



          191       See   462   U.S.          725,   754   (1983)             (Stevens,   J.,   concurring);   2001  

                                                                                                                         

Redistricting I, 44 P.3d at 144 n.8.  

                                                      



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assertion,  we  see  nothing  about  our  use  of  the  term  "politically  salient  class"  suggesting  



we   intended   to "clarify,"   or   even   discuss,   that   the   term  was   a   change   from  the   term  



"communities  of  interest."  



                   The Board calls Kenai Peninsula 's mention of  "communities of  interest"  



"vague  dicta."   We  disagree  that  the  phrase  qualifies  as  dicta;  we  used  it  when  explaining  



                                                                                                                         192  

the  various  factors  we  would  consider  to  evaluate  the  equal  protection  claim before  us.                           



And   the   Board   engages   with   the   same   factors   throughout   its   briefing.     More   aptly  



qualifying  as  "vague  dicta"  was  our  cursory  use  of  the  phrase  "politically  salient  class"  



-   which   seems   not  to  be   a   widely   used   redistricting   term   of   art   -   when   briefly  



describing  Kenai  Peninsula 's  equal  protection  test  in  an  inapposite  context.   



                   At  trial  the  Board  argued  that  East  Anchorage  "do[es]  not  state  what  race  



or  ethnic  group  is being disenfranchised  by the pairings" and  that  East  Anchorage  had  



not  shown  its  voters  to  be  "politically  cohesive"  or  likely  to  vote  in  the  same  way.   But  



the  contexts  in  which  we  have  used  the  term  "politically  salient  class"  do  not  support  the  



Board's  implication  that  the  term  relates  only  to  race  or  political  affiliation.   We  used  the  



term   in   2001   Redistricting   I   to   correct  the   Board's   misunderstanding   that   Kenai  



Peninsula  "entitle[s]  political  subdivisions  to  control  a  particular  number  of  seats  based  

                                   193  That was not our holding in Kenai Peninsula; we "simply  

upon  their  populations."                                                                                       



held that the board  cannot intentionally discriminate against a borough  or any other  

                                                                                                                     



'politically salient class' of voters by  invidiously minimizing that  class's right to an  

                                                                                                             

equally effective vote."194             Nor  did the Kenai Peninsula holding referred to by 2001  

                          

                                                                                                                     



          192      Kenai  Peninsula,  743  P.2d  at   1372.
  



          193      2001  Redistricting  I,  44  P.3d  at   144.
   



          194      Id.     We   drew   the   phrase   from   Justice   Stevens's   Karcher   concurrence,
  



                                                                                                         (continued...)  



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----------------------- Page 82-----------------------

Redistricting  I  turn  on  racial  discrimination  or  political  party  discrimination;  the  House  



                                                                                                                          195  

district  in  dispute  was  deemed  unconstitutional  because  of  geographic  discrimination.                                 



                                                                                                           196  

2001 Redistricting I used the term in the context of a voter dilution  claim.                                   Braun v.  



Denali  Borough,   a   case   about   a   borough   reapportionment   plan,   referenced   2001  



Redistricting  I  for  a  similar  proposition:   equal  protection  did  not  guarantee  Healy  voters  



majority  control  of  the  Denali  Borough  Assembly  merely  because  Healy  had  a  majority  

of  the  population.197  

                               No  redistricting  decision  has  discussed  "politically  salient  class"  in  



the   context   of   a   challenge  based   on  race   or  political   affiliation.    As East   Anchorage  



points   out,  "community   of  interest"   and  "politically   salient   class"   are   simply  phrases  



courts  use   "to  name   and  refer   to identifiable   groups  which   are   alleged   to  have  been  



treated   differently   from   other   groups   for  purposes   of   conducting   an   equal  protection  



analysis."   



                   To  allow  for  meaningful  judicial  review  in  redistricting  cases,  we  formally  



adopt Professor  Nicholas O. Stephanopoulos's "community of interest" definition,  which  



in   large   part   is   consistent   with   our   case   law:     A   community  of   interest   "is   (1)   a  



geographically   defined   group   of   people   who   (2)   share   similar   social,   cultural,   and  



economic  interests and  (3)  believe  they  are  part  of the  same  coherent entity.   The  first  



          194      (...continued)  



defining   a   "politically   salient   class"   as   "one   whose   geographical   distribution   is  

sufficiently  ascertainable  that  it  could  have  been  taken into account in drawing district  

boundaries."    462  U.S.   at   754   (Stevens,   J.,   concurring).    Justice   Stevens's   definition  

contains  no  mention  of  race  or  political  party.   Id.  



          195      Kenai Peninsula, 743 P.2d  at  1370-73.  Indeed, we dismissed an equal  

                                                                                                                      

protection claim in Kenai Peninsula based on political party discrimination. Id. at 1369- 

                                                                                                                      

70.  

       



          196      44 P.3d at 144.  

                                    



          197       193 P.3d 719, 729-30 (Alaska 2008).  

                                                                 



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element,  geographic  demarcation,  is  necessary  because  of  the  American  commitment  to  

geographic  districting."198  



                            b.	      Whether  socioeconomic  integration  and  "communities  of  

                                     interest"  are  synonymous  



                   The Board argues that taking "communities of interest" into  account  already  



is  required  by  article  VI,  section  6's  mandate  that  House  districts  be  socioeconomically  



integrated.   The  Board   cites two examples   of   "[l]egal   commenta[ry]"   supporting  this  



view.     The   first   is   a   chart   from   the   Brennan  Center  for   Justice,   simply   compiling  



definitions  of  "community  of  interest"  from  numerous  states  using  the  term,  and  listing  



                                                                                                            199  

article  VI,  section  6  as  the  source  of  Alaska's  "community  of  interest"  inquiry.                     This  



informative  resource  is  hardly  "legal  commentary";  it  is  a  two-page  chart  expressing  no  



          198      Nicholas  O. Stephanopoulos,  Redistricting and the Territorial Community,   



              A.   L.   REV.   1379,   1430   (2012).     Professor   Stephanopolous   used   the   term  

 160   U.  P 

"territorial  community"  rather  than  "community  of  interest"  because  the  latter  "does  not  

have  to  be  spatially  bounded"  and  "can  be  deemed  to  arise  on  the  basis  of  any  common  

concern,  making  the  term  notably  imprecise  and  malleable."   Id.  at  1431-32.   We  address  

this concern by simply defining community of  interest using his territorial community  

definition.  Professor Stephanopolous suggests  that  election  district  boundaries  should  

correspond  with  territorial   communities  to  the   extent possible   and  that   courts   should  

intervene  when  such  communities  unnecessarily  are  fused  or  split  and  the  redistricting  

authority offers no  reasonable  explanation for  the  community  disruption.   Id.  at   1385.   

Our  case  law  similarly  imposes  a  justification  duty  when  a  plausible  equal  protection  

violation  claim  is  made.   See  Kenai  Peninsula,  743  P.2d  at  1371  ("Depending  upon  the  

primacy  of   the   interest   involved,   the   State   will   have   a   greater   or   lesser   burden  in  

justifying  its"  questioned  action).   See  generally  Pub.  Emps.  Ret.  Sys.  v.   Gallant,   153  

P.3d   346,   349   (Alaska   2007)   ("We   most  often   review   [an   act   treating   two   groups  

differently]   'by  asking  whether  a  legitimate  reason  for disparate  treatment exists,  and,  

given   a   legitimate   reason,   whether  the   enactment   .   .   .   bears   a   fair   and   substantial  

relationship  to  that  reason.'  ").    



          199      Communities of Interest, BRENNAN   CENTER   FOR   JUSTICE   (Nov.   2010),  

                                                       

https://bit.ly/BrennanCOI  (last  visited  Feb.   18,  2023).  



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                                                 200  

view  and  engaging  in  no  analysis.                The  Board's  second  source  is  a  1997  Virginia  Law  



Review   article   citing   article  VI,   section   6   as   support,  within   a  broader   discussion   of  



communities of interest, that "[t]he [C]onstitution[] of Alaska . . . require[s] consideration  



                                                                    201  

of  communities  of  interest  in  apportionment."                       The  Board  contends  that  article  VI,  



section   6's   socioeconomic   integration   requirement   is   the   only   place   in   Alaska  



redistricting law accounting for communities of interest.   But neither the Board's sources  



nor  our  decisions  support  its  conclusion.  



                    A  court  asking  whether  a  House  district  is  socioeconomically  integrated  



may   look   to   its   communities   of   interest   because   the   analyses  might   overlap   to   a  



significant    degree.       But    that   does   not    mean    Senate    district    pairings    of    two  



socioeconomically  integrated  House  districts   can  never  implicate   concerns   about   fair  



representation  for  communities  of  interest.   In  Kenai  Peninsula  we   stated  that  district  



boundaries         "which    meander            and     ignore    political       subdivision    boundaries              and  

                                                                                                                      202   A  

communities  of  interest  will  be  suspect  under  the  Alaska  equal  protection  clause."                                



community of interest, for example, could stretch across two boroughs or be contained  

                                                                                                                 



entirely within a borough.  This reasoning finds support in a special master's report we  

                                                                                                                           



                                                      203  

commissioned in Egan v. Hammond :                          The special master suggested that "Anchorage  

                                       

                                                                                                             



subdivisions [could] coincide with rough communities of interest" despite Anchorage's  

                                                                                                            



          200       See  id.  



          201       Stephen J. Malone,  Recognizing Communities of Interest in a Legislative  



Apportionment  Plan,  83  VA.  L.  REV.  461,  466  (1997).  



          202       743  P.2d  at  1365  n.21;  see  also  Hickel  v.  Se.  Conf.,  846  P.2d  38,  48  (Alaska  



 1992)   (stating   that   "a   state's   desire   to   maintain   political   boundaries   is   sufficient  

justification  for  population  deviation  if  consistently  applied"  (citing  Kenai Peninsula,  

743  P.2d  at   1360)).  



          203       502 P.2d 856 (Alaska 1972).  

                                                     



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                                                           204  

lack  of  "clearly  delineated  ethnic  ghettoes."              



                  The Board misframes  the issue, setting out the seemingly  absurd conclusion  



that,  under  the  superior  court's  findings  of  fact  and  conclusions  of  law,  "in  2002,  it  was  



constitutional  to  place  portions  of  Eagle  River  and  Muldoon  in  a  single  [H]ouse  district  



because  they  are socioeconomically  integrated,  but in  2021,  those  areas  of  Anchorage  



cannot   be   in   the   same   [S]enate   district   because   they   are   different   'communities   of  



interest.'  "   (Emphasis  in  original.)   But  in  this  case  the  challenge  is  about  splitting  up  a  



community  of  interest  to  increase  those  residents'  voting  power  over  two  Senate  districts  



rather  than  one,  not  about  putting  separate  communities  of  interest  from  one  borough  -  



which   by   law   are   socioeconomically   integrated   -   together   in   the   same   legislative  



districts.   It  would  not  be  contradictory  to  find  that  the  Muldoon  and  Eagle  River  areas  



are,   as   a   matter   of   law,    socioeconomically   integrated   but   nonetheless  separate  



communities  of  interest.   



                  The  Board  advances  no  argument whether  the Muldoon and  Eagle  River  



areas    are    separate    communities    of    interest   beyond   pointing    out    that    they    are  



socioeconomically   integrated   because   they   are   in   the   same   borough.     The   superior  



court's  finding  that  the  Muldoon  and  Eagle  River  areas  constitute  separate  communities  



of   interest   was   well-supported   by   the   affidavit   of   East   Anchorage's   expert   witness,  



Dr.  Chase  Hensel,  a  local  anthropologist.   Dr.  Hensel  noted  the  "one-way  flow"  of  Eagle  



         204      Id.   at   894.    We   recognize   that   "ghetto"   has   more   recently   developed   a  



colloquially  pejorative  connotation.   See,  e.g.,  Camila  Domonoske,  Segregated  From  Its  

History,  How   'Ghetto'  Lost  Its  Meaning, NPR  (Apr.  27,  2014),  https://www.npr.org/  

sections/codeswitch/2014/04/27/306829915/segregated-from-its-history- 

                                                                                   HE  MICH. DAILY (Oct.  14,  

how-ghetto-lost-its-meaning; Hugo Quintana, "The Ghetto", T 

2021), https://www.michigandaily.com/michigan-in-color/the-ghetto/ (discussing historic  

and  slang  usage  of  "ghetto").   For  historical  accuracy  and  in  light  of  the  term's  ongoing  

legal  significance,  see,  e.g.,  Tommie  Shelby,  Justice,  Work  and  the  Ghetto  Poor,  6  L. &  

  THICS  HUM. RTS.  70  (2012),  we  quote  the  term  as  used  in   1972.  

E                   



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River commuter traffic to East Anchorage; amici curiae Alaska Black Caucus noted that  



                                                                                                                         

Member Marcum's assertion about the two communities sharing close ties was limited  



                                                                                                                      

to her observation that some Eagle River residents commute to Anchorage via Muldoon  



                                                                                                                          

Road.  Dr. Hensel pointed out that the two communities' events and professional groups  



                                                                                                                            

do not include one another.  He noted different transportation service providers, local  



                                                                                                                           

newspapers, histories and socioeconomic statuses, voting patterns, and racial and ethnic  



                                                                                                            

makeups.          He  also  noted  that  Eagle  River  people  described  their  community  as  



                                                                           

"separate," "independent," "unique," and "stand alone."  



                                                                                                              

                    Dr. Hensel's data also persuasively demonstrated racial and socioeconomic  



                                                                                                                      

disparity between the two areas.  In the Bartlett High School catchment area, primarily  



                                                                                                               

covering North  and South Muldoon, students are  18% White and 70% economically  



                                                                                                                               

disadvantaged. By contrast, in the Eagle River High School catchment area students are  



                                                                                                                     

68% White  and 24%  economically  disadvantaged.   Muldoon  has  9% and northeast  



                                                                                                                                 

Anchorage has  14% of residents living below the poverty line, compared to just  3% in  



                                                                                                                              

Eagle River and 2% in Chugiak. And 75% of North Muldoon students qualified for free  



                                                                                                      

and reduced lunch, compared to just  16% of Eagle River Valley's students.  



                                                                                                                 

                    North and South Muldoon are roughly 38% and 52% White respectively,  



                                                                                                                                     

while Eagle River Valley and North Eagle River are 76% and 75% White, respectively.  



                                                                                                                             

Amici  curiae  Alaska  Black  Caucus  provides  similar  statistics,  pointing  out  that  



                                                                                            

combining the two Muldoon House districts would create a majority-minority district,  



                                                                                                                        

as  would  combining  the  Mountain  View/Joint  Base  Elmendorf-Richardson  (JBER)  



districts.  



                                                                                                                            

                    Given the definition of "community of interest" we have adopted, these  



                                                                                                                           

observations support the superior court's findings that the Muldoon and Eagle River  



                                                                                                                         

areas constitute separate communities of interest and that the Board's  Senate district  



                                                                                                                     

pairings split up the Eagle River community of interest to give it more political influence,  



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----------------------- Page 87-----------------------

                                               205  

evidencing  discriminatory  intent.                 And  even  if  we  disagreed  with  the  strong  evidence  



that  the  Muldoon  and  Eagle River  areas  constitute  separate  communities  of interest, it  



would be unwise to hold,  categorically, that  separate communities of interest cannot exist  



within   a   single   borough.     As   Alaska's   largest   city,   Anchorage   likely   will   continue  



growing more populous and diverse.   The historical, economic, or traditional significance  



of   neighborhoods   may   change   with   time,   and   courts   should   remain   open   to   hearing  



evidence   that   certain   Anchorage   neighborhoods   are   sufficiently   different   from   one  



another  that  they  constitute  separate  communities  of  interest.   Categorically  holding  that  



no subregion  of  Anchorage  can  be a  community  of  interest would expose  Alaskans  to  



gerrymandering.  



                            c.        Discriminatory  intent  



                                      i.       Secretive  procedures  



                   The  Board  challenges  the  superior  court's  "speculative"  finding  that  the  



Board   engaged   in   "secretive   procedures,"   a  Kenai  Peninsula   fair   representation   test  

                                            206  But the superior court did not err by finding that the  

factor  for  discriminatory  intent.                                                                                   



Board engaged in secretive procedures.  

                                                          



                   The Board began its Anchorage Senate district pairings on November 8.  

                                                                                                                            



Member  Bahnke  first  discussed  her  recommended  Anchorage  pairings,  strongly  

                                                                                                              



expressing her feeling that the Eagle River and Muldoon areas each should be kept intact  

                                                                                                                   



based on her review of public comments supporting the idea. Member Borromeo agreed,  

                                                                                                                 



stating:  "I don't know why you would ever consider splitting Eagle River unless you  

                                                                                                                      



were trying to expand Eagle River's reach in the Senate."  

                                                                                   



         205       See   Kenai   Peninsula,   743   P.2d   at   1372   ("District   boundaries   which  



meander  and  selectively  ignore  political  subdivisions  and  communities  of  interest,  and  

evidence  of  regional  partisanship  are  also  suggestive  [of  discriminatory  intent].").   



         206       Id. (setting out multifactor totality of circumstances test).  

                                                                                             



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                    Member Marcum then presented four versions of Anchorage-area pairings,  



                                                                                                                               

noting that her four maps paired JBER with one of the Eagle River districts based on her  



                                                                                                                     

personal experience that Eagle River is a "bedroom community" for JBER.  Extensive  



                                                                                                                                

discussions took place  about why Member Marcum believed JBER and a portion  of  



                                                                                                                                     

Eagle River should be paired and about pairing South Muldoon with part of Eagle River.  



                                                                                                                             

When asked why putting the two Eagle River House districts together was not the most  



                                                                                    

logical choice, Member Marcum stated:  "Eagle River has its own two separate House  



                                                                                                              

districts.  This actually gives Eagle River the opportunity to have more representation  



                                                                                                                              

. . . ." Member Marcum obviously meant that if the Eagle River area were placed in two  



                                                                                                                       

distinct Senate districts, Eagle River voters could control the election of two senators  



                  

rather than one.  



                                                                                                                               

                    The Board did not appear to come to an agreement on the record about any  



                                                             

map before voting.  The superior court noted:  



                                                                                                   

                    In the midst of discussion, where several [S]enate pairings  

                                                                                                     

                    that split Eagle River and split the Muldoon area were offered  

                                                                                                              

                    by Member Marcum, Chairman Binkley states[:]  "So I get a  

                                                                                                         

                    sense that there's a majority of, not consensus for the plan  

                                                                                                           

                    that  [Member Marcum] has brought  forward.  If that's the  

                                                                                              

                    case, I think we should move on to the last one that we got,  

                                                      

                    which is Fairbanks."  



                                                                                                                            

Member  Borromeo  responded:                       "Mr.  Chairman,  before  we  do  that,  .  .  .  is  it  your  



                                                                                                                            

understanding that [Member Marcum is] only presenting one?  Because there's so many  



                                                                                                              

. . . .  I don't know what all of the different combinations were."  The superior court  



                                                                                                                          

noted that - and after review, we agree - it is unclear, and it was unclear to fellow  



                                                                                                                             

Board members, which map a majority of the Board had agreed upon.  The court thus  



inferred:  



                                                                                                        

                    [There  was]  some  sort  of  coalition  or  at  least  a  tacit  

                                                                                                         

                    understanding  between  Members  Marcum,  Simpson,  and  



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----------------------- Page 89-----------------------

                    Binkley.   All  three  appeared to agree  on  all  four  of  Member  

                    Marcum's maps with little public discussion.   Most surprising  

                    was  that  at  that  time,  it  is  unclear  in  the  transcript,  and  was  

                    apparently   also   unclear   to   Member   Borromeo,   which   of  

                    Member Marcum's maps the Board had apparently reached  

                                                                                                              

                    a majority on when the deliberative discussion was ended.  It  

                                                                                                              

                    seems  that what  the  three  Board  Members  had  reached  a  

                                                                                                         

                    majority  [on] was  the  only  element  of  the  map  that  was  

                                                                                                          

                    consistent between  them:   that  Eagle  River  was  split  and  

                                                                                                             

                    North Eagle River was paired with JBER.  That confusion is  

                                                                                                       

                    highlighted  in  the  Chairman's  choice  to  move  on  from  

                                                                                                            

                    Anchorage  Senate pairings in the midst of deliberations to  

                                                                                                

                    talk about Fairbanks to the surprise of Members Borromeo  

                                                                                             

                    and  Bahnke.            There  was  no  further  public  deliberation  

                                                                                                          

                    regarding  Anchorage  Senate pairings  after  this  point,  yet  

                                                                                                         

                    three Board members, the only three Board Members who  

                                                                                    

                    signed the final proclamation in support, seemed to at some  

                                                                                                        

                    point understand which set map of [S]enate pairings to offer  

                                                                [207]  

                                                          

                    for adoption among the four. 



                    After discussing Fairbanks-area Senate district pairings, the Board entered  

                                                                                                                         



into executive session to receive "legal advice with regard to the . . . proposed Senate  

                                                                                                                         

pairings   in  Anchorage."208                   Upon   exiting  executive  session,  Member  Marcum  

                    

                                                                                                      



immediately moved  to accept  the  Anchorage  Senate pairings  without  further public  

                                                                                                                          



discussion.  The superior court observed:  

                                                 



                    This evidences not only secretive procedures, but  suggests  

                                                                                                   

                    that certain Board members came to some kind of consensus  

                                                                                                

                    either during executive session, or altogether outside of the  

                                                                                                           

                    meeting processes.  While the Court stops short of a finding  

                                                                                                     

                    that  this  happened,  the  Court  does  see  ample  evidence  of  

                                                                                                            

                    secretive process[es] at play.  

                                                                  



          207       The  superior  court's  internal  citations  to  the  record  have  been  omitted.  



          208       We  are  unable  to  discern  the  specific  OMA  allowance  relied  upon  for  the  



executive  session.  



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----------------------- Page 90-----------------------

                                                                                                                    

                    The  Board  emphasizes  that  on  November  8  it  extensively  discussed  



                                                                                                                   

possible Senate district pairings on record, including the multiple potential Anchorage  



                                                                                                                          

Senate district pairings presented by Members Bahnke and Marcum mentioned above.  



                                                                                                                           

The Board also points to trial testimony from Members Binkley and Simpson that Board  



                                                                                                                      

members did not agree on the maps during executive session or between public meetings  



                                                                                                                          

and that the Board entered into executive session on November 8 to receive legal advice  



                                                                                                                             

about  some  potential  Senate  pairings.                      The  Board  asserts  that  this  testimony  was  



                                

uncontested at trial.  



                                                                                                                           

                    Yet,  as  amici  curiae  Alaska  Black  Caucus  notes:                            "The  Board  never  



                                                                                                                            

discussed the relative merits of Bahnke's plan  as compared to Marcum's.  No  other  



                                                                                                                       

Board  member  spoke  on  record  in  favor  of  Marcum's  proposal,  .  .  .  yet  Binkley  



                                                                                                                   

somehow knew that a majority favored Marcum's plan over Bahnke's."  East Anchorage  



                                                                                                                 

points  to  other  evidence  of  secretive  procedures.                             It  notes  Member  Borromeo's  



                                                                                                                        

statements on the record that in executive session the Board likely had been  advised  



                                                                                                                               

against  the  Senate District  K  pairing  and  that  Member  Binkley,  despite  voting  for  



                                                                                                                    

splitting Muldoon, made no statement on the record supporting the pairings or explaining  



                                                                                                                       

why he thought they  "were more  lawful or correct than those proposed by  Member  



                                                                                                                              

Bahnke."   East Anchorage  also notes that  Members Marcum and  Simpson, the two  



                                                                                                                                

members  most  vocally  supporting the  Eagle  River-Muldoon pairing,  "had  access to  



                                                                                                                         

incumbent information" provided by a Republican strategist, Randy Ruedrich.  



                                                                                                                          

                    Bearing in mind that the results of secretive procedures are, by their nature,  



                                                                                                                        

difficult to prove, and, paradoxically, that habitually using executive session to conduct  



                                                                                                                       

the Board's business is indicative of secretive procedures, we agree with the superior  



                                                                                                           

court that this factor tends to weigh in favor of finding discriminatory intent.  



                                        ii.       Partisanship  



                                                                                                                           

                    The superior court found evidence of regional partisanship, another Kenai  



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----------------------- Page 91-----------------------

                                                                               209  

Peninsula  equal  protection  discriminatory  intent  factor.                       The  court  framed  the  issue  as  



favoring   Eagle   River   and   disfavoring   Muldoon   as   geographic  regions  rather   than   as  



discriminating  against  a  particular  political  party.   The  court  stated  that  although  South  



Muldoon  historically  was  a Republican-leaning  swing  district,  the Senate pairings  would  



"usurp[]  [its]  voting  strength  in  the  event  it  chooses  to  elect  a  Democratic  senator."   As  



amici  curiae  Alaska  Black  Caucus  put  it:   



                   An   East   Anchorage   [S]enate   district   formed   from   the   two  

                   Muldoon  [H]ouse  districts  would  be  a  swing  district,  with  no  

                    guarantee  that  the  next s   enator  would  be  a  Democrat r  ather  

                   than  a  Republican.   But  this  pairing  would  guarantee  that  the  

                   votes  of  East  Anchorage  would  matter:  voters  could  elect  a  

                    senator who  resides  in  the  community,  who  understands  its  

                    concerns,   and   who   does   not  need   to   compromise   those  

                    concerns  .  .  .  to  protect  the  interest  of  voters  in  the  other  half  

                    of  a  district  with  very  different  needs.   



                    The   Senate   District   K   pairing's   political   undertones   are   impossible   to  



ignore.   We  first  must  address  the  Board's  contention  that  we  have  "never  recognized  the  



viability   of   a   partisan   gerrymandering   claim"   and   its   reliance   on  Rucho   v.   Common  



 Cause  -   holding   that  political   gerrymandering   claims   are   non-justiciable   in   federal  

                                                                                    210   Contrary to the Board's  

courts -  to  urge  us  to   follow  the   Supreme   Court's   lead.                                              



contention,  we  have  recognized  partisan  gerrymandering  claims.   Kenai  Peninsula  

                                                                                                               



adjudicated a partisan gerrymandering claim that ultimately was dismissed, but not on  

                                                                                         

justiciability grounds.211           Considering the Constitutional Convention minutes, the 1999  

                    

                                                                                                                       



amendments' legislative history, and our case law, we expressly recognize that partisan  

                                                                                                                   



          209       743  P.2d  at   1372  (setting  out  multifactor  totality  of  circumstances  test).
  



          210       139  S.  Ct.  2484,  2506-07  (2019).
  



          211      See  743  P.2d  at   1369-70.
   



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----------------------- Page 92-----------------------

gerrymandering  is  unconstitutional  under  the  Alaska  Constitution.    



                   There  is  ample  evidence  of  regional  and  political  partisanship  in  this  case.   



East  Anchorage points  out  that  the  Board's  3-2  majority  in  favor  of  splitting  the  Muldoon  



and  Eagle  River  areas  was  comprised  only  of  the  Republican-appointed  Board  members.   



Member  Simpson  said  at  trial  that,  despite  article  VI,  section  8's  instruction  that  Board  



members  be  chosen  "without  regard  to  political  affiliation,"  he  was  chosen  because he  



                                                  212  

was  "a  Republican  from  Southeast."                  As  the  superior  court  acknowledged,  Muldoon  



leans  Republican  but  is  a  "highly  competitive"  district,  whereas  Eagle  River  is  "firmly  



Republican."   East  Anchorage  notes  that Randy  Ruedrich,  a  Republican  strategist  and  



         212       As noted earlier, Member Simpson's post-remand email, not available in  



the  record for  this  part   of   our  review,   shows  that  he  viewed  the  redistricting  process  

through  a  partisan  lens.   See  supra  note   166.   The  email  stated:    



                   The   Supremes  also  upheld  the   Superior  Court's  ruling  that  

                  we   had   politically   gerrymandered   one   Senate   district   in  

                  Anchorage   .   .   .   .   To   me   this   implies  that  what   the   court  

                  perceived  as  a  political  gerrymander  must  be  replaced  with  a  

                   different   political   gerrymander   more   to   their   liking.     The  

                   district  in  question  paired  two  [H]ouse  districts that were both  

                  majority       non-minority,          one     of    which       was      reliably  

                   [R]epublican  and  the  other  was  [R]epublican  2/3  of  the  time.   

                  Not  clear  to  me  why  this  is  bad  but  the  D[emocrat]s  will  push  

                   to   dilute   both   of   them   to   make   it   easier   to   elect   their  

                   candidates.   



These   comments  reveal  more   about  the  member's  views   of  the  propriety of  political  

gerrymandering   than   about   our   role   in   resolving   constitutional   challenges   to   a  

redistricting   plan.     We   decide   the   redistricting   cases   brought   to   us,   including   the  

challenges  to  the  current  Board's  redistricting  plans;  we  do  not  seek  out  the  redistricting  

cases  we  hear.   Our  past  redistricting  decisions  reflect  that  the  political  affiliations  of  

those   creating   a  redistricting  plan  had  no  bearing   on our decisions.    See,   e.g.,  supra  

note 17  (discussing redistricting challenges  and our decisions when governors controlled  

redistricting).  



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former chair of the Alaska  Republican  Party,  emailed  Members Marcum and Simpson  



"political   incumbent   information   for   each   of   the   Board's   adopted   [H]ouse   districts."   



Ruedrich  also  appears  to be  the only  person  to  have  testified  in  favor of  pairing  Eagle  



River  and Muldoon during  the  November   8  public  comments  meeting.   There  also  is  



Member  Marcum's  statement  that  Eagle River  would  get  "more  representation"  if  it  were  



split  into  two  Senate  districts,  meaning  increased  Senate  representation  for  Eagle  River  



by  controlling  two  firmly  Republican  Senate  districts  rather  than  one.  



                   Finally,  notwithstanding  our  deferential hard  look   standard,  the  Board's  



justification  for  pairing  a Muldoon House district and an Eagle  River  House  district  in  



the   face   of   overwhelming   public   opposition   from   both   communities   is  difficult   to  



understand  unless  some form of regional or political partisanship were involved.   And  



amici curiae Alaska Black  Caucus  persuasively  illustrates  how  past  pairings  involving  



East  Anchorage  and  Eagle  River  areas  resulted  in  Alaska's  first  Black  female  senator  -  



a  Democrat  -  losing  her  seat,  despite  having  been  re-elected  multiple  times  before  the  



pairing.   Considering  the  rushed  manner  in  which  the  Board  adopted  the  Senate  District  



K  pairing,  the  nearly  unanimous  public  opposition,  and  the  contrasting  political  effects  



of  the  pairing  on  Muldoon's  and  Eagle  River's  voting  power,  we  agree  with  the  superior  



court  that  the  record  supports  the  inference  that  partisanship  was  at  play.    



                            d.       Proportionality  of  representation  



                   Kenai  Peninsula  instructs  that  a Senate district  drawn  with  a  discriminatory  



purpose  might  be  justifiable  if  the  Board  can  show  that  it  led  to  greater  "proportionality  

of   representation."213         Equating  the  concept  of  proportionality  with  the  degree  of  

                                                                                                                     



deviation from the  ideal district population,  the  superior court invalidated the  South  

                                                                                                                



Muldoon and Eagle River Senate pairings because it concluded that the Board's plan led  

                                                                                                                     



          213      743  P.2d  at   1372.  



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----------------------- Page 94-----------------------

to  more  population  deviation  than  the  challengers'  plan.  



                    The    Board        correctly    points         out    that,    when        a    House      district     is  



underpopulated  relative  to  the  "ideal"  House  district  population,  residents  of  that  district  



are  overrepresented  because  their  voting  power  is  higher  relative  to  residents  of  districts  



with  higher  populations.   The  Board  points  out  that  the  superior  court  got  this  backward;  



the     court     repeatedly        referred       to    House       districts      with     lower      populations          as  



underrepresented  when  it  should  have  called  them  overrepresented.   But  this  misses  the  



point.  



                    We  agree  with  the  superior  court  that  the  closer  to  zero  a  district's  deviation  



from  the  ideal  population  is,  the  greater  the  "proportionality  of  representation"  is  in  that  



context.   But  in  the  fair  representation  context  proportional  representation  is  the  extent  

                                                                                                        214   For example,  

to  which  members  of  a  particular  group  are  represented  in  public  office.                                 



in a hypothetical pairing created specifically to discriminate against Black citizens, the  

                                                                                                                            



fact that the House districts exactly equaled the ideal district population, rather than  

                                                                                                                          



deviating from the ideal by a percent or two, would neither be a defense nor serve the  

                                                                                                                            



interests of justice.  Kenai Peninsula 's discussion of  "proportionality of representation"  

                                                                                                          



makes more sense in this context; that proportional representation inquiry concerned  

                                                                                                                 



over- or under-representation  in the  State legislature based  on Anchorage's  share of  

                                                                                                                              

Alaska's population, not its degree of deviation from the ideal district population.215  We  

                                                                                                       

                                                                                                                            



already have unequivocally stated in Braun and 2011 Redistricting I that Alaskans do not  

                                                                                                                            



          214       See    Thornburg   v.    Gingles,   478   U.S.   30,   74-77   (1986)   (discussing  



proportional   representation   of   Black   population   in   state   legislature);   Proportional  

representation, BLACK'S  LAW  DICTIONARY  (11th  ed.  2019) ("An electoral system that  

allocates   legislative   seats   to   each   political  group   in   proportion   to   its   actual   voting  

strength  in  the  electorate.").  



          215       743 P.2d at 1372-73.  

                                      



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----------------------- Page 95-----------------------

                                                                                                              216  

have  an  absolute  right  to  proportional  representation  based  on  population.                                 And  such  



an  inquiry  would  not  make  sense  in  this  case.   Muldoon  and  Eagle  River  area  citizens  are  



not   scattered   across   the   state,   comparable   to   the   Black   population  in  Thornburg   v.  



             217  

Gingles,         but  are  by  definition  located  in  fixed  places.  



                              e.        Conclusion  



                    Under  the  totality  of  the  circumstances,  the  superior  court  correctly  

                                                                                                                    



concluded that  Senate District  K  is unconstitutional  due to  geographic  and partisan  

                                                                                                                      



gerrymandering.  And the appropriate remedy was to remand to the Board to correct the  

                                                                                                                              



constitutional deficiency.  

                      



V.        CONCLUSION OF CHALLENGES TO 2021 PROCLAMATION  

                                                                                      



                    We AFFIRM the  superior court's  determination that  House Districts  3  

                                                                                                                                



and  4  comply  with  article  VI,  section  6  of  the  Alaska  Constitution  and  should not  

                                                                                                                             



otherwise be vacated due to procedural aspects of the Board's work.  We REVERSE the  

                                                                                                                              



superior court's remand to the Board for further proceedings on those districts under the  

                                                                                                                              



superior court's hard look analysis relating to public comments on these House districts.  

                                                                                                                      



                    We AFFIRM the superior court's determination that House Districts 29, 30,  

                                                                                                                               



and 36 do not violate article VI, section 6 of the Alaska Constitution and should not  

                                                                                                                  



otherwise be vacated due to procedural aspects of the Board's work, with one exception:  

                                                                                                                                    



We  conclude that the  so-called "Cantwell Appendage" violates article VI,  section 6  

                                                                                                                                 



because it renders House District 36 non-compact without adequate justification.  We  

                                                                                                                             



therefore REVERSE the superior court's determination to this limited extent.  

                                                                                                           



          216       Braun   v.   Denali   Borough,   193   P.3d   719,   730   (Alaska   2008);   2001  



Redistricting  I,  44  P.3d   141,   144 (Alaska  2002);  accord  Voting  Rights  Act  52  U.S.C.  

§  10301(b)  ("[N]othing  in  this  section  establishes  a  right  to  have  members  of  a  protected  

class  elected  in  numbers  equal  to  their  proportion  in  the  population.").   



          217       See generally 478 U.S. at 74-77.  

                                                            



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----------------------- Page 96-----------------------

                We  AFFIRM  the  superior  court's  determination  that  the  Board's   Senate  



District  K  pairing  of  House  Districts  21  and  22  constituted  an  unconstitutional  political  



gerrymander  violating  equal  protection  under  the  Alaska  Constitution.  



VI.	    2021 REDISTRICTING PROCESS AFTER REMAND, ROUND 2:   BOARD  

        PROCEDURES AND AMENDED PLAN;  CHALLENGE AND SUPERIOR  

        COURT'S  DECISION;  BOARD'S  PETITION  FOR  REVIEW  



                The  superior  court  remanded  the  redistricting  plan  back  to  the  Board  with  



instructions   consistent  with our summary   order.    The   superior   court   ordered,   among  



other  things,  that  the  Board  correct  the  constitutional  error  that  both  we  and  the  superior  



court  identified  with  respect  to  Senate  District  K.   



        A.	     Board  Proceedings  On  Remand  



                The  Board  met  and  heard  public  testimony  almost  every  day  April  2-9.   The  



Board  did  not  enter  into  any  executive  sessions,  though  the  superior  court  later  noted  that  



there  were   indications   Board   Members   Binkley,   Marcum,   and   Simpson  -   the   three  



members   in   favor   of   the   initial   Senate   District   K   -   may   have   been   privately  



communicating  and  formed  a  coalition  with  the  goal  of  preserving  a  JBER/North  Eagle  



River  Senate  district.   



                By  April  6  the  Board  was  deciding  between  Options  2 and 3B for Senate  



district  pairings.   Option  2  and  Option  3B  both  resulted  in  four  Senate  districts  different  



from  the  original  November  2021  plan.   Both  options  paired  North  and  South  Muldoon  



into  Senate  District  K.   But  where  Option  2  would  have  combined  North  and  South  Eagle  



River  into  an  Eklutna/Eagle  River/Chugiak  Senate  district,  Option  3B  kept  North  Eagle  



River   with  JBER   (Senate   District   L)   and   placed   South   Eagle   River   with   South  



Anchorage/Girdwood/Whittier  (Senate  District  E).   The  final  amended  plan  was  adopted  



on  April  13  with  Members  Binkley,  Marcum,  and  Simpson  voting  in  favor  of  Option  3B  



and  Members  Bahnke  and  Borromeo  opposed.  



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----------------------- Page 97-----------------------

         B.       Superior  Court  Proceedings  



                  Louis  Theiss,  Ken  Waugh,  and  Jennifer  Wingard  (collectively  Girdwood)  



appeared in the superior court  later in April to challenge Senate District E as violating  



their  equal  protection  rights  and  article  VI, section  6 because  it was  non-compact,  was  



"falsely contiguous," and ignored geographic features.  Girdwood also contended that  



again  creating  two  separate  Eagle  River  Senate  districts,  Districts  K  and  L,  constituted  

unlawful  political  gerrymandering.218  



                  Due to the proceeding's  expedited  nature  - potential legislative candidates  



                                                       219  

had  an  impending  June   1  filing  deadline             -  there  was  no  formal  discovery  and  the  



superior  court  held   only  one  day   of   oral   argument,  largely  working   from  the  parties'  



briefing.   The court "accepted all materials submitted by the parties, regardless of timing"  



and   reviewed   them   under   a   more   relaxed   standard   of   evidence,   considering   "their  



relevance  to  the  issues  presented"  and  affording them weight "under the totality of  the  



circumstances."   The  superior  court  issued  its  decision  on  May  16.   We  again  commend  



the  superior  court  on  its  expedited  work  resolving  the  challenges  to  the  Board's  plan.  



                  1.       Girdwood's  article  VI,  section  6  challenge  



                  Girdwood        argued      that    pairing      South      Eagle     River     with     South  



Anchorage/Girdwood/Whittier   in   Senate   District   E   violated   article   VI,   section   6's  



"contiguity   requirement   and   disregard[ed]   local  government   boundaries   without  



explanation."   Girdwood acknowledged that Senate District E was technically contiguous  



         218      Attached as  Appendix  C  are  copies  of  relevant e   lection  district  maps  the  



Board   published   with   its   April   2022   amended   proclamation.    These   maps   show   the  

contested  Senate  districts.  



         219      AS  15.25.040(a).  

                        



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----------------------- Page 98-----------------------

                                                                220  

-  the  districts  physically  touched  at  the  border             -  but  that  this  was  "false  contiguity"  



because   "several   hundred   miles   of   uninhabited   state   park,   including   the   Chugach  



Mountains,   divide   the   actual   population   centers"   of   the   Senate   district.     An   expert  



witness  for  Girdwood,  Dr.  Chase  Hensel,  testified  about  this  contiguity  requirement,  but  



the   superior   court   discounted  the   testimony   as   amounting   to   an   improper   legal  



conclusion.   The  superior  court  held  that  "Senate  District  E  does  not  violate  [a]rticle  VI,  



[section]  6"  because  the  two  House  districts  composing  the  Senate  district  share  a  border,  



fulfilling  the  contiguity  requirement.  



                  2.        Girdwood's  equal  protection  challenge  



                  Girdwood next  argued that the "Board acted with illegitimate purpose when  



it   adopted   Option   3B,"  violating   equal  protection.    Girdwood  pointed  to  the   superior  



court's  prior  findings  that  the  Board  had  engaged  in  "secret  procedures"  and  contended  



that  the  Board's  splitting  Eagle  River  voters  into  two  Senate  districts w                as  evidence  of  



partisanship   gerrymandering;   Girdwood   argued   that   the   Board continued  to  have   an  



illegitimate  purpose  when  it  again  split  Eagle  River  voters  into  two  Senate  districts  for  



the amended plan.  Girdwood  argued that the Board's majority coalition chose to split  



up  communities  of  interest  in  contravention  of  what  the  majority  of  public  commenters  



requested  and  without  justification  for  more  proportional  representation.  



                  The   bulk   of   the   superior   court's   decision   considered   whether   the   new  



Senate  district  pairings  violated  equal  protection  by  intentionally  discriminating  in  favor  



of  or  against  a  community of  interest.   The  court  again  relied  on  the  Kenai  Peninsula  



"neutral  factors  test"  to  find  that,  under  the  totality  of  the  circumstances,  the  Board  was  



         220      See  Alaska Const.  art. VI, § 6 ("Each  [S]enate district shall  be composed  



as  near  as  practicable  of  two  contiguous   [H]ouse  districts.");  Hickel  v. Se. Conf.,   846  

P.2d   38,   45   (Alaska   1992)   (explaining   territories   are   contiguous   when   they   are  

"bordering  or  touching"  each  other).   



                                                         -98-                                                   7646
  


----------------------- Page 99-----------------------

intentionally discriminating  when it engaged in unconstitutional partisan gerrymandering  



to  ensure  "two  solidly  Republican  senate  seats"  in  Senate  Districts  L  and  E.   The  court  



found  that  the   Board   ignored  the   Eagle   River   and South Anchorage   communities   of  



interest when constructing  Senate  District  E  because  a  majority  of  the  Board  "insisted  



continuously"   that   Senate   District L  -   combining  North   Eagle   River   and   JBER  -  



"remain  intact."  



                   The   superior  court  initially  was  unsure  "how  much  weight"  to  afford  its  



March  2021  finding, that  the  Board  had  engaged  in  intentional  discrimination  when it  



split    Eagle    River    voters    into    separate    Senate    districts,   when    considering    the  



constitutionality   of   the   Board's   amended   plan.     After   reviewing   federal   case   law  



addressing  how to  apply  prior discriminatory intent  in  equal  protection  cases  the  court  



concluded  that  it  would  look  at  "the  Board's  prior  discriminatory  intent  as  part  of  the  



'totality  of  the  circumstances'  in  addressing  the  Girdwood  challenge"  but  that  it  would  



not   be   dispositive;   the   burden   would   remain   on   Girdwood   to   prove   discriminatory  

intent.221  



                   The superior court then discussed circumstances it found relevant for the  

                                                                                                                     



Girdwood  challenge.             Given  that  the  South Anchorage/Girdwood  House  district  is  

                                                                                                                      



         221       The  superior  court  commented  that  in  light  of  the  Board's prior  partisan  



gerrymandering,  the   court  would be   in   favor   of   shifting   "the  burden  to  the   Board  to  

demonstrate  that its  Amended Proclamation  .  . .  w[as]  made  in  good  faith and  without  

partisan   considerations."     But  the   court   recognized   that   there   is   a   presumption   of  

constitutionality  and  that  the  Board's  actions  generally  are  reviewed  under  a  deferential  

arbitrary  and  capricious  standard.   See  Treacy  v.  Mun.  of  Anchorage ,  91  P.3d  252,  260  

(Alaska   2004)   ("A   duly   enacted   law   or  rule   .   .   .   is  presumed   to   be   constitutional.");  

Kodiak Island Borough v.  Mahoney,  71  P.3d  896,  899-900  (Alaska  2003)  (reasoning that  

rules  or  laws  created  by  bodies  with  rulemaking  or  lawmaking  powers  conferred  directly  

by  Constitution  are  entitled  to  presumption  of  constitutionality);  Kenai  Peninsula,  743  

P.2d  at   1357-58.   The  court  utilized  the  deferential  arbitrary  and  capricious  standard  of  

review  for  the  Board's  amended  plan.  



                                                         -99-                                                    7646
  


----------------------- Page 100-----------------------

                                                                                                                                   

Republican-leaning already, the court first noted that South Anchorage's pairing with a  



                                                                                                               

strong Republican district would not "necessarily result in any significant discriminatory  



                                                                                                                            

effect."  Second, the court found that the Board's prior act of pairing South Eagle River  



                                                                                                                    

with South Muldoon to "give[] Eagle River more [Senate] representation" "weigh[ed]  



                                                                                                                        

heavily in Girdwood's favor." Third, the court concluded that the Board's main rationale  



                                                                                                                                  

for ignoring "public testimony, geography, and even the boundaries of Eagle River to  



                                                                                                                       

justify adopting Option 3B" - " 'to preserve the military community's voting strength'  



                                                                                                                               

as a 'community of interest' " - was not supported by the record (when the court had  



                                                                                                                 

never  found  that  JBER  was  a  community  of  interest)  and  constituted  "substantive  



                                                                                                                               

departures  . . . weighing heavily in Girdwood's favor."  Fourth, the court found that  



                                                                                                                     

"contemporaneous  statements  of  the  decision-makers"  were  inconclusive  regarding  



                                                                                                                  

discriminatory intent.  "Ultimately, the factor that tip[ped] the balance in Girdwood's  



                                                                           

favor [was the superior court's] prior finding on intent."  



                                                                                                                        

                     The superior court discussed the Board's primary justification for selecting  



                                                                                                                        

Option  3B:           "[P]airing  JBER  with  downtown  Anchorage  would  result  in  JBER's  



                                                                                                                                

preference  for  candidates  being  usurped  by  downtown  Anchorage's  preference  for  



                                                                                                                               

opposing candidates."  But because the court was not given evidence supporting that  



                                                                                                                     

JBER  was  a  community  of  interest  and the  Board  failed to  engage with  comments  



                                                                                                                              

pointing out that the large, demographically diverse "portion of Downtown" paired with  



                                                                                                                                

JBER in House District 23 would not be served by the  Senate District L pairing, the  



                                                                                                                         

court found that the Board had "not put forth any legitimate, nondiscriminatory purpose  



                                                                                                   

for its actions" and thus "violated equal protection rights of the residents of Girdwood  



                                                                                                                                  

and House District 9."  The court also found that "the majority of the Board acted in  



                                                                                                                              

concert with at least a tacit understanding that Eagle River would again be  [split and]  



                                                                                                                                 

paired in such a way as to provide it with two  solidly Republican senate seats - an  



                                                                                                              

unconstitutional partisan gerrymander."  Thus, under the totality of the circumstances,  



                                                              -100-                                                         7646
  


----------------------- Page 101-----------------------

the   court   concluded   "that   the   Board   intentionally discriminated   against   residents   of  



District   10,  including  Girdwood[,]  in   order  to favor  Eagle  River,   and  this  intentional  



discrimination  had  an  illegitimate  purpose"  violating  equal  protection.  



                 The   superior   court   remanded   the   proceedings   to   the   Board   to   draft   a  



constitutional  plan  and  also  ordered  "the  Board  to  adopt  Option  2  on  an  interim  basis  for  



the  2022  general  election."   



         C.	     The  Board's  Petition  For  Review  



                 The   Board   petitioned   for   our   review   of   the   superior court's   May   2022  



order,  challenging  both  the  basis  for  remand  and  the  court's  imposed  interim  plan.   We  



granted  review,  later  issuing  a  summary  order resolving the petitions and noting that a  

full  explanation  would  follow.222  



VII.	  RESOLUTION  OF  ROUND  2  PETITION  FOR  REVIEW  



         A.	     The  Superior  Court  Did  Not  Improperly  Consider  The  Weight  Of  The  

                 Public's  Testimony.  



                 The  Board  argues  that  the  superior  court  "recycled  [its]  weight-of-public- 



testimony   standard"  which  had  been   effectively   struck   down  by   our  March  25,  2022  



order.  The  Board  is  correct  that  we  struck down  the  court's  earlier  hard  look  analysis  



and  that  the  court  continued  to  express  concern  about  the  weight  of  the  public  testimony  



regarding  the  amended  plan.   But  the  Board  fails  to  recognize  that  the court expressly  



acknowledged  our  earlier  order  and  noted  the  weight  of  the  public  testimony  only  in  light  



of  our  pending  full  opinion.  The court appears to have landed on  the  appropriate  hard  



look  analysis  we  discussed  above:   Public  comment  should  be  considered  when  it  raises  



a   salient   issue   that   the   Board   should   address   if   it   is   engaging   in   reasoned   decision- 



         222     Our  summary   order   resolving   the   petition   for   review   is   attached   as  



Appendix  D.  



                                                     -101-	                                                  7646  


----------------------- Page 102-----------------------

making.223  



                   The  Board   does  not   argue  that  the   superior   court's   discussion   of  public  



testimony  impacted  any  particular  step  in  its  decision  to  remand  the  amended  plan  -  the  



Board   appears  to  understand  the   immense  value   of  public  testimony   in  the   decision- 



making  process,  extensively  quoting  public  comments  in  its  petition  for  review  -  and  



asks   us   only  to   "remind   lower   courts   that   public   testimony   cannot   change   the   .   .   .  



requirements  of  the  Alaska  Constitution."   We  do  not  further  address  this  issue.  



          B.	      The   Superior   Court   Correctly   Concluded   That   The   Senate  District  

                   Pairings  Continued  To  Violate  Equal  Protection.  



                   1.	       The  superior  court  did  not adopt a  new  burden  of  proof  from  

                             federal  case  law.  



                   The  Board  contends  that  the  superior  court  adopted  a  new  burden  of  proof.   



The  Board  seems  to  suggest  that  the  court  adopted  a  federal  standard  placing  the  burden  



on   the   Board   to   prove   it   did  not  violate   equal   protection,   despite   federal   case   law  



instructing   courts   to   impose   a   "presumption   of   legislative   good   faith"   in   these  



                     224  

circumstances.               But   the   court   affirmatively   asserted   that   it   did   "not   chang[e]   the  



standard   or   the   burden   of   proof."    Rather,   the   court highlighted   that   perhaps   a   new  



          223      See  2001  Redistricting  I,  44  P.3d  141,  144  n.5  (Alaska  2002)  (determining  



whether  regulation  is  reasonable  primarily  concerns w                     hether  "the   [Board]  has  taken  a  

hard   look   at   the   salient   problems   and   has   genuinely   engaged   in   reasoned   decision  

making"  (quoting  Interior  Alaska  Airboat  Ass'n  v.  State,  Bd.  of  Game,  18  P.3d  686,  690  

(Alaska  2001))).  



          224      See Abbott v. Perez, 138 S. Ct. 2305, 2311 (2018) ("The allocation of the  

                                                                                                                         

burden  of proof  and the presumption  of legislative good  faith are not  changed by  a  

                                                                                                                            

finding of past  discrimination, which is but  'one evidentiary  source' relevant  to the  

                                                                                                                         

question of intent." (quoting Arlington Heights v. Metro. Hous. Dev. Corp., 429 U.S.  

                                                                                                                       

252, 267 (1977))).  We note that the Board quotes a different portion of Abbott in which  

                                                                                                                     

it is less obvious that past discrimination is one factor relevant to the analysis of present  

                                                                                                                    

discriminatory intent.  

                                 



                                                           -102-	                                                     7646
  


----------------------- Page 103-----------------------

approach   was   warranted   given   our   previous   rejection   of   gerrymandering   in   this  



redistricting  cycle,  and  the  court  left  the  matter  for us  to decide  whether  the  burden  of  



proof  should  be  adjusted  in  comparable  future  scenarios.   The  Board's  argument,  as  we  

said  in  our  earlier  order,  is  specious.225  



                   The Board also challenges the superior  court's subsequent  review of federal  



case   law   when   determining   that   it   should   include   its   earlier   finding that   the   Board  



engaged  in  unconstitutional  political  gerrymandering  in  conducting  its  Kenai  Peninsula  

neutral  factors  test.226  

                                We  see  no  error  in  the  court's  analysis  and  agree  that  prior  acts  of  



discrimination  by  the  same  Board  in  the  same  redistricting  cycle  are  relevant  under  the  

Kenai  Peninsula  neutral  factors  test.227  



                   2.	      The  superior  court  did  not  improperly  distinguish  our  holding  

                            in  2001  Redistricting  I.  



                   The  Board  argues  that,  because  two  decades  ago  we  upheld  a  House  district  



combining  the  Eagle  River  Valley  with  South  Anchorage,  the  superior  court  erred  when  

it  allegedly  "ignored  this  dispositive  holding  and  never  distinguished  it."228  

                                                                                                           The  Board  



does   not   suggest   that   it   made   this argument   to   the   superior   court,   does   not   point   to  



          225	     See  infra  Appendix  2.   



          226	     See  743  P.2d  at   1372.    



          227      See  id.; Alaska R. Civ. P. 90.8(d) (explaining that record before superior  



court  in  redistricting  challenges  "consists  of  the  record  from  the  Redistricting  Board");  

cf.  Abbott ,   138   S.  Ct.  at  2313,  2317,  2324-25  (holding  2013  election  map  that  looked  

similar  to  unconstitutional  2011  map  necessitated  new  finding  of  discriminatory  intent  

because  different  legislature  created  new  map).  



          228      See 2001 Redistricting II, 47 P.3d 1089, 1091(Alaska2002) (holding House  

                                                                                                                  

district  that  did  not  follow  "natural  and  local  government  boundaries"  was  not  

                                                                                                                     

automatically  unconstitutional  on  grounds  of  socioeconomic  integration  or  other  

                                                                                                                   

article VI, section 6 concerns).  

                              



                                                         -103-	                                                    7646
  


----------------------- Page 104-----------------------

anywhere  in  the  order  following  remand  where  the  court  wrestled  with  this  concern,  and  



does  not  point  to  any  case  law  suggesting  that  approvals  of  prior  redistricting  plans  have  



a  preclusive  effect  on  subsequent  plans.  



                    The  Board  appears  to  be  making  a  stare  decisis  argument,  which  intuitively  



would   be   irrelevant   in   the   redistricting   context  because   each   new   redistricting   cycle  



                                                                                           229  

naturally  entails  new  circumstances  in  light  of  new  census  data.                       Otherwise,  every  ten  



years  the  Board presumptively  would  be  able  to  adopt  the  proclamation  from  the  last  



redistricting  cycle  and  the  burden  would  be  on  voters  to  argue  why  any  deviations  would  



                  230  

be   justified.          It   also   is   important   to   consider   whether   a   particular   constitutional  



requirement  was  at  issue  and  litigated  in  the  previous  redistricting  cycle;  the  Board  does  



not  assert  that  partisan  gerrymandering  was  a  disputed  issue  we  resolved.   We  reject  the  



Board's  argument.  



                   3.	       The  superior  court  did  not  err  in  its  discussion  of  communities  

                             of  interest.   



                    The  superior  court  critically  reviewed  the  Board's a   ssertion  that  military  



residents  of  JBER  necessarily  constitute  a  community  of  interest.   The  Board  argues  that  



the court's critique was erroneous  because the court never  defined  community of interest;  



          229       Cf.  Thomas  v.  Anchorage  Equal  Rts.  Comm'n,  102  P.3d  937,  943  (Alaska  



2004)  ("The  stare  decisis  doctrine  rests  on  a  solid  bedrock  of  practicality:   '  "no  judicial  

system   could   do   society's  work if   it   eyed   each   issue   afresh   in   every   case  that  raised  

it."   '  "  (quoting  Pratt &       Whitney  Canada,  Inc.  v.   United Techs.,  852  P.2d   1173,   1175  

(Alaska   1993))).  



          230      See  id.  ("In  recognizing  the  importance  of  this  doctrine,  we  have  

                                                                                                                       

consistently held that a party raising a claim controlled by an existing decision bears a  

                                                                                                                             

heavy  threshold  burden  of  showing  compelling  reasons  for  reconsidering  the  prior  

                                                                                                                       

ruling:  'We will overrule a prior decision only when clearly convinced that the rule was  

                                                                                                                         

originally erroneous or is no longer sound because of changed conditions, and that more  

                                                                                                                        

good than harm would result from a departure from precedent.' " (quoting State, Com.  

                                                                                                                       

Fisheries Entry Comm'n v. Carlson, 65 P.3d 851, 859 (Alaska 2003))).  

                                                                                             



                                                           -104-	                                                      7646
  


----------------------- Page 105-----------------------

"obvious[ly] . .  . military personnel share the same employer, the same noble mission,  



the  same  workplace,  and  the  same  shopping  and  medical  facilities";  and  "  'communities  



of   interest'   is   a   synonym   for   areas  that   are   socio-economically   integrated,"   such  that  



"Eagle  River  and  South  Anchorage  are  not  separate  communities  of  interest  that  cannot  



be  combined  with  other  areas  of  Anchorage  and  cannot  be  split."   The  Board's  argument  



somewhat misrepresents the court's discussion.  The court did not find that JBER was  



not  a  community  of  interest;  rather  the  court  pointed  out  that  JBER previously had  not  



been  identified  as  a  community  of  interest  and  found  that  the  Board  failed  to  present  any  



evidence  supporting  its  assertion.   And  the  crux  of  the  issue  before  us is not  whether  



separate  communities  of  interest  can  be  combined,  but  whether  a  community  of  interest  



can  be  split  to  its o  wn  advantage  (and  to  the  disadvantage  of  separate  communities  of  



interest)  by  allowing  it  to  control  multiple  Senate  districts.  



                   We  note  again,  as  we  did  when resolving  the  Board's  earlier  petition  for  



review,   that  the   Board's   assertion   that   communities   of   interest   are   equivalent   to  



socioeconomically  integrated  communities  is  incorrect.   A  community  of  interest  almost  



always   will   be   socioeconomically   integrated   within   itself   and   externally   with   other  



nearby  communities  of  interest,  but  a  larger  socioeconomically  integrated  community  is  

not   automatically   an   all-encompassing   community   of   interest.231                   The Board cited no  

                                                                                                                       



evidence, aside from its own speculation, that JBER is a community of interest; in any  

                                                                                                                      



case, there was no showing that the House district encompassing the populated portion  

                                                                                                                 



of the military base as a whole would tend to share political preferences more closely  

                                                                                                                 



with an Eagle River House district than with the downtown Anchorage House district.  

                                                                                                                            



We thus reject the Board's argument that concerns about JBER justify splitting  Eagle  

                                                                                                                   



River.  



         231       See  Stephanopoulos,  supra  note   198,  at   1430.  



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----------------------- Page 106-----------------------

                   4.	      The  superior  court's  discussion  of  local  government  boundaries  

                            was  not  erroneous.  



                   The   superior  court  acknowledged  that  the  disputed  House  districts  were  



within  the  Municipality  of  Anchorage  and  therefore  were  socioeconomically  integrated  



as   a   matter   of   law,   but criticized   the   Board   for   not   considering   "local   [government]  



boundaries,   including   school   zones,   community   councils   and   even   the   Downtown  



Improvement  District"  when  drawing  the  new  senate  map.   The  Board  asserts  that  "high  



school   attendance   boundaries   within   the   Anchorage   School   District   are   not   'local  



government  boundaries'  because  all  students  within  the  Anchorage  School  District  are  



                                                                                                                     232  

governed  by  the  same  political  entity:   the  Anchorage  School  District  School  Board."                           



The  Board  also  asserts  that  "community  council  boundaries  within  the  Municipality  of  



Anchorage   are   of   no   constitutional   import."     (Emphasis   in   original.)     In   2001  



Redistricting  II  we recognized that  "respect for  neighborhood  boundaries  is  an  admirable  



goal"; we then  held  that  "it is not constitutionally required and must give way to other  

legal requirements."233  

                                  Although  districting   along  "neighborhood  boundaries"  is  not  



                                      234  

"constitutionally required,"              it is  an  unconvincing stretch for  the  Board  to  argue  that  



         232       The   Board   makes   a   frivolous   argument   that   "[n]othing   in   the   state  



[C]onstitution  or case law suggests  that  the  Board  must  consider  where non-voting minor  

children  go  to  school  when  the  Board  adopts  legislative  districts  for  adult  voters."   The  

court was, of course, not considering  school  zones  because  children  going to the same  

school  might  have  similar  voting  interests,  but  rather  because  those  students  tend  to  have  

concerned  parents  and  guardians who could  be  unified  by  issues  surrounding  the  fact  that  

their  children   attend   the   same   schools.     It   does   not   seem   unreasonable   that   "local  

government  boundaries"  might  include  school  zones.   Alaska  Const.  art.  VI,  §  6.  



         233	      47 P.3d at 1091.  

                                   



         234	     Id.  



                                                        -106-	                                                   7646
  


----------------------- Page 107-----------------------

                                                   235  

they  are  of  "no  constitutional  import."            (Emphasis  omitted.)   And  the  Board  identifies  



no  "legal  requirements"  that  convinced  it  to  forgo  considering  community  boundaries.  



                  Girdwood   responds   that   public   comments   demonstrate   the   Board's  



justification  for  pairing  JBER  with  North  Eagle  River  -  recognizing  JBER  as  a  military  



community   of   interest   better   paired   with   Eagle   River's military   community   -   was  



pretextual.     Girdwood   also   points   to   numerous   local   governing   entities'  comments  



tending to oppose the Eagle River area split.  For example, the Anchorage Downtown  



Community   Council   (DCC)   adopted   a   resolution   requesting   that   House   District   23  



(containing JBER)  be paired  with  now-House District 19 (part of downtown Anchorage).   



DCC  suggested  that splitting  up the  "downtown core"  by  pairing  JBER's  district  with  



Eagle   River   continued   to  promulgate   the   "unconstitutional   problem"   from   the   plan  



previously  struck  down.   Girdwood  argues  that  the  Board  disregarded,  and  perhaps  did  



not  even  read,  these  comments  given  members'  statements  indicating  they  did  not  grasp  



that  JBER  was  placed  in  a  House  district  with  portions  of  downtown  Anchorage.   These  



public  comments  and  local  government  resolutions rise  to  the  level  of  "salient  issues"  



that   the   Board   should   have   addressed   if   it   were   taking   a   hard   look   at   Senate  

redistricting.236  



         235      See Alaska Const.  art. VI, § 6  ("Each [S]enate  district shall be composed  



as  near  as  practicable  of  two  contiguous  [H]ouse  districts.   Consideration  may  be  given  

to  local  government  boundaries.").  



         236      See supra note 223 and accompanying text.  

                                                                        



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----------------------- Page 108-----------------------

                                                                                                                          

                    5.	       The  superior  court  did  not  err  when  it  applied  the  Kenai  

                                                                                                                        

                              Peninsula   neutral  factors  test  and  concluded  that  Senate  

                                                                                                                      

                              Districts  E  and  L  constituted  an  unconstitutional  political  

                              gerrymander.  



                                                                                                                                

                    The  superior  court  relied  on Kenai  Peninsula 's neutral  factors  test  to  



                                                                                                               

conclude  that,  under  the  totality  of  the  circumstances,  the  Board  intentionally  



                                                                                                                          

discriminated when it unconstitutionally engaged in partisan gerrymandering to ensure  



                                                                                                                       

"two solidly Republican [S]enate seats" in Senate Districts E and L. The Board contends  



                                                                                                                              

that the court "disregarded the neutral factors test because [the test] did not allow [the  



                                         

court] to reach the desired result."  



                                                                                                                              

                    Rather than engaging with the entire Kenai Peninsula neutral factors test,  



                                                                                                                           

the  Board primarily emphasizes  its more  open procedures  on remand  and  its  stated  



                                                                                                                        

rationale for pairing JBER with Eagle River. The Board points out that the court credited  



                                                                                                                       

the Board for holding transparent meetings with ample public testimony. And, although  



                                                                                                                               

continuing to oppose the court's emphasis on the weight of the public testimony, the  



                                                                                                                           

Board  nevertheless  emphasizes public  testimony  favoring pairing  JBER  with  Eagle  



                                                                                                                                 

River.  The Board says it was concerned, at least in part, about minimizing the voices of  



                                                                                                                                     

the JBER area military members and veterans by pairing it with downtown Anchorage.  



                                                                                                                           

The  Board  also  notes  that  Members  Bahnke  and  Borromeo  acknowledged  some  



                                                                                                                        

similarities between Eagle River and JBER, despite voting against the pairing.  



                                                                                                                        

                    Girdwood responds that the superior court properly considered "the Board's  



                                                                                                                      

disregard for the public testimony in context, and concluded that it was further  evidence  



                                                                                                                          

of illegitimate intent." (Emphasis in original.)  Girdwood points to examples of Board  



                                                                                                                      

members seeming not to have taken public comments seriously and even being confused  



                                                                                                                    

after several days of public testimony about where "Chugiak and the Chugach mountains  



                                                                                                                              

. . . were geographically located relative to Eagle River."  Girdwood asserts that this  



                                                                                                                               

evidence supports the court's findings that "the majority board members approached the  



                                                             -108-	                                                        7646
  


----------------------- Page 109-----------------------

process  with  a  predetermined  outcome  in  mind,"  that  the  "totality  of  the  circumstances  



indicate[d]  a  goal-oriented  approach[,]  [and  that]  they  paid  attention  to  the  details  only  



as  much  as  they  needed  to  say  the  right  words  on  the  public  record  when  explaining  their  



choice."   We  agree.  



                   After  the  superior  court f  ound  that t  he  Board  intentionally  discriminated  



against   certain  voters,  the  burden   switched  to   "the  Board  to   demonstrate  that   its   acts  



                                                                       237  

aimed to effectuate proportional  representation."                          The Board appears to suggest that  



its  actions  were  justified  because  Girdwood's  voting  power  increased  by  0.17%  when  



paired  with  District  10  as  opposed  to  being  paired  with  District  13  (if  Option  2  had  been  



adopted).   Aside  from  this  being a  de  minimis  increase  in voting  power  for  Girdwood  



and   not   being   directly   relevant  to the   proportionality   of   representation   issue   as   we  



discussed earlier, the Board omits any discussion  of discriminating  in Eagle River's favor  

                                                                                                               238  Absent  

with the aim of "effectuat[ing] proportional representation" in  some other  way.                                    



such justification, we agree with the superior court that continuing to divide the Eagle  

                                                                                   



River area solely "to provide it with two solidly Republican [S]enate seats" constituted  

                                                                                                               



"an unconstitutional partisan gerrymander" violating our equal protection doctrine.  

                                                                                                                           



          C.	       The Superior Court Did Not Err When It Ordered As An Interim Plan  

                                                                                                                        

                    The Only Other Alternative Considered By The Board.  

                                                                                                



                    The  Board  had  adopted  two  potential  redistricting  plans  for  public  

                                                                                                                     



presentation and comment and for adoption as the final amended plan, Options 2 and 3B.  

                                                                                                                                



The Board adopted Option 3B as its final amended plan.  After deciding Option 3B was  

                                                                                                                         



unconstitutional, the superior court ordered that the Board implement Option 2 as the  

                                                                                                                          



upcoming 2022 elections interim plan, enabling legislative candidates to file for office  

                                                                                                                      



          237      Kenai  Peninsula  Borough  v.  State,  743  P.2d   1352,   1372  (Alaska   1987).  



          238      See  id.   



                                                           -109-	                                                         7646  


----------------------- Page 110-----------------------

by  the  June  1  deadline.   Because  we  agree  with  the  superior  court  that  the  Board's  final  



amended  plan  -  Option  3B  -  is  unconstitutional,  the  issue  of  an  interim  plan  remains.  



                  The  Board   seemingly   argues  that  the   superior   court  had  no   authority  to  



order  the  Board  to  adopt  Option  2  as  the  interim  proclamation  plan.   But  the  Board  must  



have   believed   Option   2   fulfilled   constitutional   requirements,  or   it   would   not   have  



adopted  the  plan  for  public  presentation  and  consideration.   At  no  point  during  its  public  



discussion   of   the   two   options   did   a   Board   member   assert   that   Option   2   was  



unconstitutional.   We  issued  our  May  order  about  a  week  before  June   1,  and  the  Board  



                                                                                                            239  

had   made   no   known   effort   to   prepare   or   present   to   us   another   interim   plan.              We  



therefore   affirm   the   superior  court's   order   that   the   Board   adopt   the   Option   2  



proclamation  plan  as  the  interim  plan  for  the  2022  elections.  



VIII.	 CONCLUSION                   OF      ROUND           2    CHALLENGES                 TO      AMENDED  

         PROCLAMATION  



                  We   AFFIRM   the   superior   court's   determination   that   the   Board   again  



engaged   in   unconstitutional  partisan   gerrymandering   to   increase   one   group's   Senate  



district  voting  power  at  the  expense  of  others.   Under  the  specific  circumstances  of  these  



proceedings,  we  AFFIRM  the  superior  court's  order  that  the  Board  adopt  the  Option  2  



proclamation  plan  as  an  interim  plan  for  the  2022  elections.  



IX.	     FINAL  REMEDY  



                  After  the second remand,  the Board adopted the Option 2 proclamation plan  

as  the  2022  elections i  nterim  plan.240  

                                                    The  question  of  a  final  redistricting  plan  for  the  



         239      Cf.   2011  Redistricting  I,   274   P.3d   466, 468-69   (Alaska   2012)   (inviting  



Board  to  submit p      roposed  interim  plan  for  our approval  in  light o            f  upcoming  election  

deadlines  when  remanding  final  plan  to  Board  for  further  proceedings).  



         240      Attached as Appendix E are copies of relevant election district maps the  

                                                                                                                   

Board published with its May 2022 interim redistricting plan proclamation.  

                                                                                     



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decade   remains.    Having   concluded   that   the   Board   engaged   in   unconstitutional  



gerrymandering  in  its  initial  final  redistricting  plan  and  that  the  Board  then  did  so  again  



in  its  amended  final  redistricting  plan,  our  remanding  for  yet  another  redistricting  plan  



may  be  questioned.   Indeed,  by  clear  implication  article  VI,  section  11  authorizes  courts  



to  mandate  a  redistricting  plan  when,  after  a  remand,  the  Board  develops  a  new  plan  that  



                           241  

is  declared  invalid.          But  we  will  remand  out  of  respect  for  the  Board's  constitutional  



role  in  redistricting.  



                   Given  that the Board adopted the  current  interim  redistricting  plan for its  



final   plan   deliberations   -   confirming   the   Board's   belief   that   the   interim   plan   is  



constitutional  - and  given  that  Alaska's  voters  have  not  had  a  chance  to  raise  challenges  



to  that  plan  in  the  superior  court:  



                   We  REMAND  for  the  superior  court  to  order  that  the  Board  shall  have  90  



days  to  show  cause  why  the  interim  redistricting plan  should  not  be  the  Board's  final  



redistricting  plan  for  the  2020  redistricting  cycle:  



                   A.       Upon  a  showing  by  the  Board  of  good  cause  for  a  remand,  the  



          superior   court   shall   REMAND   to  the   Board   for   another   round   of  



         redistricting  efforts;  or  



                   B.       Absent  a  showing  by  the  Board  of  good  cause  for  a  remand,  



         the  superior  court  shall  direct  the  Board  to  approve  the  interim  redistricting  



         plan  as  its  final  redistricting  plan,  allowing  any  legal  challenges  to  that  plan  



         to  be  filed  in  superior  court  in  the  normal  course.  



         241       See  Alaska  Const.  art.  VI,  §  11  ("Upon  a  final  judicial  decision  that  a  plan  



is  invalid,  the  matter  shall  be  returned  to  the  [B]oard  for  correction  and  development  of  

a  new  plan.   If  that  new  plan  is  declared  invalid,  the  matter  may  be  referred  again  to  the  

[B]oard."  (Emphasis  added.)).  



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EASTAUGH,  Senior  Justice,  concurring.  



                   I   agree   in   full  with  the   court's  resolution   of  these   disputes.   But   I  write  

separately   because   I   have   doubts   about   whether   Hickel   v.   Southeast   Conference1  



correctly  described  the priorities  and  order  for  applying  the  contiguity,  compactness,  and  



                                                    2  

socio-economic  integration  criteria.   If  I  were  reading  the  constitution  in  a  vacuum,  I  



would    not    necessarily    conclude    that    the    delegates    agreed    or    that    the    Alaska  



Constitution's  text  requires  that  the  first  two  criteria  should  have  priority  over  the  third.   



But  there  was  no  challenge  to  Hickel 's  description  of  those  priorities  in  this  case,  nor  any  



contention  its  description  should  not  be  given  stare  decisis  effect.   Moreover,  my  doubts  



do   not   affect   the   outcome   of   any   of   the   issues   before   us,   even   as   to  the   "Cantwell  



Appendage,"   because   the   asserted   increase   in   socio-economic   integration   in   House  



District  36  does  not  outweigh  the  diminution  in  that  district's  compactness.  



          1        846  P.2d  38,  62  (Alaska   1992).  



          2        See  id.  at  44-47,  62  (describing  priorities  and  order  for  applying  contiguity,  



compactness,   and   socio-economic   integration   criteria).    The   court's   opinion today at  

page  53  quotes  the  Hickel  passage  that  I  find  problematic.  



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