Draw a district challenge: Whites in 4th place (user search)
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  Draw a district challenge: Whites in 4th place (search mode)
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Author Topic: Draw a district challenge: Whites in 4th place  (Read 1510 times)
President Punxsutawney Phil
TimTurner
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« on: May 18, 2021, 08:39:16 PM »

A district like this would be hard in DFW, given Asians reside overwhelmingly in White-majority precincts (similar to NoVa).
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President Punxsutawney Phil
TimTurner
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« Reply #1 on: May 19, 2021, 11:44:23 PM »
« Edited: May 20, 2021, 12:01:16 AM by Southern Deputy Speaker Punxsutawney Phil »

New York should be doable by 1) connecting Flushing to the Bronx or 2) connecting Asian/Hispanic neighborhood in Brooklyn with African-American neighborhoods using parks to do most of the bridging across white neighborhoods or 3) south Queens.

It could also be possible in NJ by connecting Asian populations in Edison and Woodbridge with New Brunswick, Perth Amboy, Carteret, and Newark.

Bronx, Schmonx. Queens is where it's at. Here's a map located exclusively in Queens, and pretty compact, too. The hardest part was balancing the different minority groups, although Queens does have a fair number of diverse neighborhoods with multiple minority groups present and few white people, which is really essential to getting this done. Neighborhoods like Flushing and SE Queens that are heavily one minority group and then have a residual 5-10% white population were more of a hindrance.

https://davesredistricting.org/join/46832906-934b-48c3-98fe-07d392479f6b

5.0% white, 31.5% Hispanic, 30.4% black, 30.9% Asian. Didn't try to min-max more than needed, but for what it's worth I first drew a qualifying district that was more than 250,000 overpopulated and then shrunk it down. You should even be able to draw two such districts in NYC without going too crazy.
I drew a fairly similar district that was 9% white the other day, but it had all of Corona and was farther west and north.
In any case in your map it should be easy enough to make a second such district in Brooklyn, perhaps even a third such district in the Bronx?
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President Punxsutawney Phil
TimTurner
Atlas Politician
Atlas Legend
*****
Posts: 41,386
United States


« Reply #2 on: May 20, 2021, 12:51:15 PM »

New York should be doable by 1) connecting Flushing to the Bronx or 2) connecting Asian/Hispanic neighborhood in Brooklyn with African-American neighborhoods using parks to do most of the bridging across white neighborhoods or 3) south Queens.

It could also be possible in NJ by connecting Asian populations in Edison and Woodbridge with New Brunswick, Perth Amboy, Carteret, and Newark.

Bronx, Schmonx. Queens is where it's at. Here's a map located exclusively in Queens, and pretty compact, too. The hardest part was balancing the different minority groups, although Queens does have a fair number of diverse neighborhoods with multiple minority groups present and few white people, which is really essential to getting this done. Neighborhoods like Flushing and SE Queens that are heavily one minority group and then have a residual 5-10% white population were more of a hindrance.

https://davesredistricting.org/join/46832906-934b-48c3-98fe-07d392479f6b

5.0% white, 31.5% Hispanic, 30.4% black, 30.9% Asian. Didn't try to min-max more than needed, but for what it's worth I first drew a qualifying district that was more than 250,000 overpopulated and then shrunk it down. You should even be able to draw two such districts in NYC without going too crazy.
I drew a fairly similar district that was 9% white the other day, but it had all of Corona and was farther west and north.
In any case in your map it should be easy enough to make a second such district in Brooklyn, perhaps even a third such district in the Bronx?

The challenge is that there may not be enough Asians elsewhere. The Bronx doesn't anywhere close to enough Asians and would at least need to dip into Queens. Brooklyn does have a larger Asian population, but still in neighborhoods that have large white residual populations, as in NE Queens (and not as in neighborhoods with large black/Hispanic populations, like Elmhurst or Queens Village or Richmond Hill), and still less than Queens.
Ah, true. While I still think 3 districts with whites in fourth place should be possible, it is definitely not easy by any means.
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