Third District Judge Dianna Gibson recently ordered new maps after she ruled that the Utah legislature violated a citizen ballot initiative setting up anti-gerrymandering criteria.
The maps must be drawn by September 25, a day later than previously ordered, after the two parties met and agreed to jointly come up with a new timeline during a status hearing on August 29.
In a new filing posted by the plaintiffs and agreed upon by both parties, pushes back the date of an evidentiary hearing to October 23 and 24 to determine whether those maps comply with Proposition 4 — the citizen-led ballot initiative that created anti-gerrymandering standards now governs Utah’s redistricting process, as ordered by Gibson.
The new timeline gives the legislature a full 30 days post the maps, 10 days to make them public as required by law, convene to vote on them, get them signed by the governor, and then be ready for that late October evidentiary hearing.
The parties also stipulated that “only existing parties to this case may file proposed maps with the Court as part of these remedial proceedings.”
The deadlines are as follows;
Of course, all this could be nullified if the Utah Supreme Court grants the legislature a stay on the ruling. As of this report, lawyers for the legislature have not yet filed that request, but it is expected that they will.
The proposed timeline still needs to be approved by Judge Gibson but it’s expected that she will since both sides have agreed to it.
As the Trump administration deploys thousands of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents to cities…
BOSTON — Public higher education campuses around Massachusetts are on the verge of what boosters…
Leon Kennedy, one of the game’s protagonists. Resident Evil turns 30 this year. The series…
Leon Kennedy, one of the game’s protagonists. Resident Evil turns 30 this year. The series…
This is The Stepback, a weekly newsletter breaking down one essential story from the tech…
This is The Stepback, a weekly newsletter breaking down one essential story from the tech…
This website uses cookies.