(Commonwealth of Pennsylvania)HARRISBURG - The five-member commission redrawing the boundaries of Pennsylvania's state legislative districts voted to approve new maps for the next decade, with a focus on the state's fast-growing Latino population that could change the face of the predominantly white House and Senate.The Legislative Reapportionment Commission voted 4-1 during their meeting in the state Capitol, with chairman Mark Nordenberg, the Senate's Republican leader and the House and Senate's Democratic leaders voting for it.The vote came after nearly a year of meetings, hearings and closed-door discussions to carry out the constitutionally required, once-a-decade map-drawing to account for demographic shifts identified by the U.S.
Census.In comments before the vote, Senate Minority Leader Jay Costa, D-Allegheny, called it "truly a product for the public and by the public." House Minority Leader Joanna McClinton, D-Philadelphia, called it a "fair, constitutionally sound map."Senate Majority Leader Kim Ward, R-Westmoreland, called the map "imperfect," but said she was confident that it is constitutional.Nordenberg, a Democrat and a former University of Pittsburgh chancellor appointed by the state Supreme Court, quoted testimony from an academic analyst who called a fair, if slightly Republican-leaning map.He also quoted from a letter by Latino members of the Legislature that applauded the map and said it has nine districts "in which Latinos should be able to elect a candidate of their choice."In addition to a growing Latino population, driving significant change is growth in Pennsylvania's southern and eastern areas that are increasingly liberal, and stagnant population in predominantly white northern and western.
Read more on fox29.com