Meet Nuevo Viejo! A Case Study in the Benefits of Voting by District.

Let’s say that we were constructing a new large city in Orange County from scratch.  How would we want it to be governed?  Don’t answer in the abstract; let’s take a real world example.

Remember this?  It’s a South County section from the map of OC political geography I produced just before the last election.  (I know that a bunch of you were reading this on Saturday morning, by the way.)  Red shows the highest percentage of Republican share of two party registration, then orange, then yellow, and so on.  You’ll notice that east of Mission Viejo, it’s very read.  (This becomes important later on.)

Nuevo Viejo area of South County - political geography

Nuevo Viejo area of South County – political geography. (This will make more sense in a minute.)

South County, defined for these purposes as including everything southeast of Newport and Irvine, had about 575,000 residents as of the 2010 census.  I don’t want to cause too much trouble here, so while my mythical South County city, which I’ll call Nuevo Viejowould sweep in unincorporated areas Las Flores, Coto de Caza, and Ladera Ranch, it would “grandfather out” long-established (that is, pre-incorporation of Irvine in 1971) San Clemente, San Juan Capistrano, Laguna Beach, and Dana Point, as well as old-in-a-different-sense Laguna Woods (which has a special status, sort of the “Vatican City” of South County.)

(Note that the populations and other vital information for each of Orange County’s 34 cities, plus the three unincorporated areas named above, as well as Nuevo Viejo, may be found in a big old chart at the end of this piece.)

Cities and unincorporated areas chosen to be part of Nuevo Viejo.

Cities and unincorporated areas chosen to become part of Nuevo Viejo are in orange. The others are spared.

This new city — which would include current cities Laguna Hills, Aliso Viejo, Rancho Santa Margarita, Laguna Niguel, Lake Forest, and Mission Viejo — would have a population of  403,385, making it the largest city in Orange County and the 8th largest city in California (slightly bigger than Oakland), knocking Anaheim out of the top 10.  To give a better sense of its size, it would be about the size of Anaheim plus Yorba Linda — or nationally, somewhere between Atlanta and Cleveland, specifically fitting in between Raleigh and Miami.  That’s a pretty significant city — one of the 45 largest in the U.S.

Let’s watch the transformation take place.  First we take away the city and place names …

Nuevo Viejo - component areas unlabeled

Don’t worry, people still know where they live.

And then we dissolve the internal borders.  Meet the (imaginary) new 8th largest city in California!

Meet Nuevo Viejo!

The biggest city in Orange County! Future home of the NFL’s Nuevo Viejo Tanners!

Now I’m not arguing that this is worth doing in real life (although it might well be!) given the low likelihood that its residents would want it; this is just a mental exercise in governance.  But let’s say that they did want to do this — say, because they wanted an NFL team.  Nuevo Viejo, composed of (let’s go biggest to smallest this time) Mission Viejo, Lake Forest, Laguna Niguel, Rancho Santa Margarita, Aliso Viejo, Ladera Heights, Laguna Hills, Coto de Caza, Las Flores, and maybe a few other small innocent victims nearby, would be a big and wealthy city, almost twice as populous (and, though a shade larger, twice as dense) as Irvine.  In fact, it’s about 20,000 residents larger than Irvine plus the South County cities that I left out of the city.  (If they want in, they can get in.  Maybe.)

Now, the question regarding city governance becomes: should this newly created city have districts?  If so, how many?

First, let’s ask how many people currently govern the areas that Nuevo Viejo would comprise.  Mission Viejo has five city council members, not in districts, roughly one per 19,500 residents.  Lake Forest also has five, roughly one per 15,500.  Laguna Niguel — five, one per 12,500.   RSM — five, one per 9,500.  Aliso Viejo — five, one per 9,500.   Laguna Hills — five, one per 6,000.  The three unincorporated areas combined add just under 44,000 residents.  Among these, the Ladera Ranch Civic Council has seven members — let’s generously call it one per 3,300 — Las Flores is, from what I can tell, essentially a part of Rancho Santa Margarita, so let’s give them one representative — and the Coto de Caza “CZ Master Association” website is closed to those without a password, making research difficult — so let’s presume that its 15,000 residents are governed by a single monarch.  Toss in on more for County Supervisor Pat Bates and the territory of Nuevo Viejo currently has 40 representatives, or about one per each 10,000 representatives — roughly the same as do Aliso Viejo, RSM, and other OC cities such as Placentia and Cypress.  That’s livable.

Now, put them all together in one city and what do we have?  Let’s first consider a system where we have the same sort of “general law” style government that each of the six component cities have.  That would be five people to govern that whole area.  Theoretically, that’s one person for each 80,000 residents — an area about the size of Buena Park (or, South County-wise, a smidgen larger than Lake Forest.)  If they’re elected at-large, though, that becomes pretty theoretical.  (It takes a lot of money to win an at-large Council seat in Nuevo Viejo — and you don’t win one just by knocking on doors!  Are you a big donor?)

So let’s say that this city, which would no doubt become a charter city, takes the path of having a Mayor elected at-large and four at-large Council members, as in Irvine.  Well, actually, that doesn’t do much.  These are still very expensive races.

Let’s say that, instead, Nuevo Viejo implements “Plan A”: an at-large Mayor plus four City Council districts.  Now, it would have a Mayor answering to 404,000 voters and four Council members each answering to 101,000.  So that might be: Council District 1A represents Rancho Santa Margarita, Ladera Ranch, Coto de Caza, and Las Flores (plus a little more from eastern Mission Viejo); Council District 2A represents almost all of Mission Viejo (plus a little more from northeast Laguna Niguel); Council District 3A represents Lake Forest and Laguna Hills (plus northeastern Alisa Viejo); and Council District 4A represents almost all of Aliso Viejo and Laguna Niguel.  (Hey, look — Council District 1A is almost entirely that very red area we saw in the first map!)

Nuevo Viejo - 4 districts

Nuevo Viejo with 4 districts (white lines). (I’m totally eyeballing this one without reference to population charts. Yes, it would look different if I used the right software.)

Are we happy with that?  Let’s compare it to “Plan B”: a system with a Mayor plus six City Council districts, each now representing about 67,000 voters.  How might those districts look?  Let’s try this: Council District 1B includes just Rancho Santa Margarita, Coto de Caza, and Los Flores; Council District 2B includes the northern 67,000 voters of Mission Viejo; Council District 3B includes the southern 25,000 of Mission Viejo, Ladera Ranch, and 20,000 from eastern Laguna Niguel; Council District 4B includes all but the southern 10,000 voters from Lake Forest; Council District 5B includes those southern Foresters, all of Laguna Hills, and the northern 22,000 of Aliso Viejo; and Council District 6B incluses the western 42,000 of Laguna Niguel and the southern 25,000 of Aliso Viejo.  That’s a little closer to the communities, though it does tend to split and combine them a bit.

Nuevo Viejo - 6 districts

Nuevo Viejo with 6 districts (white lines). Again, splits within cities are totally eyeballed, presuming uniform distribution of population, which there surely isn’t.

Can we do better?  Now let’s try “Plan C”: a system with a Mayor plus eight City Council districts, each now representing slightly more than 50,000 voters.  Now where do we stand?  Council District 1C includes all of Rancho Santa Margarita and the closest half of Los Flores.  Council District 2C includes Coto de Caza, the rest of Los Flores, Ladera Ranch, and about 10,000 out of eastern Mission Viejo.  (More likely, southern RSM goes into District 2C and the District 1C takes the 10K from Mission Viejo — as I’ve depicted below.  We’re just trying to get a sense of the size of communities represented in each district here.)  Council District 3C is composed of the northernmost 50,ooo in remaining Mission Viejo, meaning that 33,000 remain.  Council District 4C is the northern 50,000 of Lake Forest, with 27,000 remaining.  Council District 5C combines the remainder of Lake Forest with 23,000 from western Laguna Hills.  Council District 6C combines southern Mission Viejo, eastern Laguna Hills, and 10,000 from northeastern Laguna Niguel.  Council District 7C is all of Aliso Viejo and a few thousand from an adjacent part of Laguna Niguel.  Council District 8C is the rest — about 80% — of Laguna Niguel.

Nuevo Viejo - 8 districts

With eight districts, most of them come to resemble something that looks more like “communities of interest.” Again: the location of lines within cities has just been eyeballed and is not to be taken literally.

Let’s take stock here for a moment.  Now, all of RSM could be in one district.  The three unincorporated communities compose one district plus some close sections of Mission Viejo (or, again, these two districts likely trade territory — as I’ve depicted.)  Most of Mission Viejo and most of Lake Forest are their own districts.  A third of Lake Forest and most of Laguna Hills form a district.  Aliso Viejo is basically its own district.  All but 20% of Laguna Niguel is one district.  And then we’re left with one district that contains minorities of three cities — all but the bottom quadrant of a circle centered on where the 73 meets the 5.  That seems very respectful of existing community borders.

But what if we want to go crazy?  TEN districts plus an at large Mayor, meaning  just over 40,000 apiece?  (1) Coto de Caza and Ladera Ranch — almost one district.  (2) All but 8,000 in southern Rancho Santa Margarita — one district.  (3) That 8,000 RSM, plus all of Las Flores, plus 26,000 out of Mission Viejo (leaving 67,000) — one district.  (4) One district entirely composed of Mission Viejo, leaving 27,000.  (5) One district out of northern Lake Forest.  (6) Another district out of southern Lake Forest, plus a handful from the northwestern bulb of Laguna Hills.  (7) The western 40,000 of Aliso Viejo, leaving 8,000.  (8) The southern 40,000 of Laguna Niguel.  What’s left?  We have 27,000 left from Mission Viejo, 27,000 from Laguna Hills, 23,000 from Laguna Niguel and 8,000 from Aliso Viejo.  Divide those that remainder up into a pair of districts however you want.

Nuevo Viejo - 10 districts

Ladera Ranch becomes Coto de Caza’s Kaliningrad. OK, no one out there got that reference, right? (I’m not doing 12 districts.)

Are we done?  No, but it is time to shift gears.

If it’s not clear to everyone, thinking about districting in Nuevo Viejo is a way to sharpen our thinking about districting in Anaheim.  Anaheim is a 15% smaller version of Nuevo Viejo, with a couple of major differences.  First, rather than being divided up by bright city boundaries, it’s divided more informally into communities.  But, a pre-existing community of 63,000 such as Laguna Niguel won’t be so different, in terms of how many people need how much representation, than some community of that size that we might find within Anaheim.  It’s just that the different city names in South County seem to demand more respect than diffuse regional boundaries within a given city.

Of course, Anaheim has one other big difference from Nuevo Viejo as well.  To understand this, let’s imagine a world in which a plague swept through Nuevo Viejo, sparing only Council District 1A from the four district example: RSM, Coto de Caza, Los Flores, Ladera Heights, and some adjacent slices of Mission Viejo.

Those eastern areas — which come to be referred to by the locals as “Nuevo Viejo Bueno” — are just fine after the plague.  The rest of the city — dubbed “Nuevo Viejo Malo” —  is relatively devastated.  (By “devastated,” I mean that the median household income drops roughly in half, so that it resembles that of Costa Mesa.  I don’t mean devastated devastated.  The point is: not a lot of people in Nuevo Viejo Malo have a lot of money to run for office or to contribute to others’ campaigns.)  Those outside of Nuevo Viejo Bueno also tend to vote less — partially, because the many of the remaining wealthy people who had been living there left and were replaced by a disaffected middle-class, working class, and poorer population that doesn’t monitor one another’s voting habits quite so aggressively.

Nuevo Viejo divided into "bueno" y "malo" regions.

OJB objects to referring to the western majority of the city — now depicted in a lighter orange — as “malo” just because of a devastating plague, but in this fantasy that’s what the Register calls it, so we’re stuck with that label.

Let’s say that, in Nuevo Viejo’s at-large elections, a very large proportion of the city’s Council members come out of Rancho Santa Margarita and especially Coto de Caza.  They have a lot more money to run campaigns (with lurid mailers warning the populace of the creeping influence of Irvine and Laguna Beach on city affairs.)  And, on top of that, it turns out that a disproportionate amount of city services go to those regions within the big city.  Is that a problem?  How about if other parts of Nuevo Viejo become restless and even violent in response to police activities targeted at them — but not at the eastern end of the city?

You could imagine different solutions to this.  In addition to electing its at-large Mayor, Nuevo Viejo could require one Council member apiece to come out of the four districts described above in “Plan A.”  What they would likely find, though, is that with the whole city voting for each Council member, the winning candidates from outside of the eastern part of the city would be those who could best appeal to those voters from RSM and Coto de Caza — the ones who can pay for slick mailers.

What if we create four Council seats elected by district?  That’s no problem for the wealthy areas in the east.  They just divide up what used to be District 1A in half, combining the north half with areas of Mission Viejo and Lake Forest and the bottom half with parts of Laguna Niguel.  With this new District 1A and 2A drawn advantageously, the greater propensity to vote among RSM and its unincorporated neighbors still allows control of these two Council districts — and thus, along with the at-large Mayor — the entire city.

Nuevo Viejo - bueno y malo gerrymandered

Because the quarter of Nuejo Viejo in bright orange “Bueno” votes at a greater rate than light orange “Malo,” it can easily win two of the four Council districts. Because the Mayor’s race in a city this size is so expensive, it can also win that seat — and a majority on the council — through the use of slick microtargeted mailers accusing the opposition of being in league with socialists in Irvine and Laguna Beach. (Nuevo Viejo politics is rough!) The residents of Buena don’t even have to compete in the two districts that are “del todo malo”; their representatives will consistently be outvoted 3-2 by the Council. (Make it eight districts instead of four, though, and this gets a whole lot harder for them.)

With more districts, though, this becomes harder to do.  If the wealthy are located within RSM and Coto de Caza, you would probably hesitate to divide that area up four ways to provide for control of four out of eight districts.  That becomes politically dangerous — an unexpected result becomes too easy.  So, at that point, the previously powerful areas have to cut a good deal with the rest of the Nuevo Viejo for distribution of the burdens (such as police control) and benefits (such as city services) of government.

More districts means better representation — representation at a level where more individual citizens can dream of participating.  This isn’t so much of a problem now, in the territory that could become Nuevo Viejo — with its 40 current representatives covering six cities and three unincorporated communities, allowing citizens to be closer to its government.  After all, Nuevo Viejo is imaginary.

Anaheim, though, is real.  Because it’s internally amorphous, though — composed just of “West,” “North,” “Central,” and maybe “South” along with the wealthier named communuties of Anaheim Hills to the East and the Colony carved out of the north (as well as industrial/commercial Anaheim Canyon-that-isn’t-a-canyon), it’s harder to see the inequities.

The example of Nuevo Viejo — where the three-quarters of the population in Lake Forest, most of Mission Viejo, Aliso Viejo, and Laguna Niguel can end up completely dominated by Rancho Santa Margarita and its small neighbors if the laws allow at-large voting, at-large voting in districted seats, or so few a number of districts as to make gerrymandering not only possible but almost inevitable — will, I hope, shed light on why Anaheim so badly needs reform.

Here’s the chart (mostly from Wikipedia) showing the relative populations of the existing cities of OC — plus that of Nuevo Viejo.  The cities noted in black are outside of South County; those in green are South County cities that would remain intact, those cities crossed out in red and the unincorporated areas in pink would comprise Nuevo Viejo.

Villa Park City Orange 5,812 2.08 sq mi (5.4 km2) January 11, 1962
Las Flores Uninc. Orange 5,971 2.28 sq mi (5.95 km2) not applicable
Los Alamitos City Orange 11,449 4.05 sq mi (10.5 km2) March 1, 1960
Coto de Caza Uninc. Orange 14,866 7.97 sq mi (20.7 km2) not applicable
La Palma City Orange 15,568 1.81 sq mi (4.7 km2) October 26, 1955
Laguna Woods City Orange 16,192 3.12 sq mi (8.1 km2) March 24, 1999
Ladera Ranch Uninc. Orange 22,980 4.91 sq mi (12.7 km2) not applicable
Laguna Beach City Orange 22,723 8.85 sq mi (22.9 km2) June 29, 1927
Seal Beach City Orange 24,168 11.29 sq mi (29.2 km2) October 27, 1915
Laguna Hills City Orange 30,344 6.67 sq mi (17.3 km2) December 20, 1991
Dana Point City Orange 33,351 6.50 sq mi (16.8 km2) March 22, 1911
San Juan Capistrano City Orange 34,593 14.12 sq mi (36.6 km2) April 19, 1961
Stanton City Orange 38,186 3.15 sq mi (8.2 km2) June 4, 1956
Brea City Orange 39,282 12.08 sq mi (31.3 km2) February 23, 1917
Cypress City Orange 47,802 6.58 sq mi (17.0 km2) July 24, 1956
Aliso Viejo City Orange 47,823 7.47 sq mi (19.3 km2) July 1, 2001
Rancho Santa Margarita City Orange 47,853 12.96 sq mi (33.6 km2) January 1, 2000
Placentia City Orange 50,533 6.57 sq mi (17.0 km2) December 2, 1926
Fountain Valley City Orange 55,313 9.02 sq mi (23.4 km2) June 13, 1957
La Habra City Orange 60,239 7.37 sq mi (19.1 km2) January 20, 1925
Laguna Niguel City Orange 62,979 14.83 sq mi (38.4 km2) December 1, 1989
San Clemente City Orange 63,522 18.71 sq mi (48.5 km2) February 28, 1928
Yorba Linda City Orange 64,234 19.48 sq mi (50.5 km2) November 2, 1967
Tustin City Orange 75,540 11.08 sq mi (28.7 km2) September 21, 1927
Lake Forest City Orange 77,264 17.82 sq mi (46.2 km2) December 20, 1991
Buena Park City Orange 80,530 10.52 sq mi (27.2 km2) January 27, 1953
Newport Beach City Orange 85,186 23.80 sq mi (61.6 km2) September 1, 1906
Westminster City Orange 89,701 10.05 sq mi (26.0 km2) March 27, 1957
Mission Viejo City Orange 93,305 17.74 sq mi (45.9 km2) March 31, 1988
Costa Mesa City Orange 109,960 15.65 sq mi (40.5 km2) June 29, 1953
Orange City Orange 134,616 24.80 sq mi (64.2 km2) April 6, 1888
Fullerton City Orange 135,161 22.35 sq mi (57.9 km2) February 15, 1904
Garden Grove City Orange 170,883 17.94 sq mi (46.5 km2) June 18, 1956
Huntington Beach City Orange 189,992 26.75 sq mi (69.3 km2) February 17, 1909
Irvine City Orange 212,375 66.11 sq mi (171.2 km2) December 28, 1971
Santa Ana City Orange 324,528 27.27 sq mi (70.6 km2) June 1, 1886
Anaheim City Orange 336,265 49.84 sq mi (129.1 km2) March 18, 1876
Nuevo Viejo City Orange 403,385 67.44 sq mi (187.2 km2) ? ?, 20??


About Greg Diamond

Somewhat verbose attorney, semi-disabled and semi-retired, residing in northwest Brea. Occasionally ran for office against jerks who otherwise would have gonr unopposed. Got 45% of the vote against Bob Huff for State Senate in 2012; Josh Newman then won the seat in 2016. In 2014 became the first attorney to challenge OCDA Tony Rackauckas since 2002; Todd Spitzer then won that seat in 2018. Every time he's run against some rotten incumbent, the *next* person to challenge them wins! He's OK with that. Corrupt party hacks hate him. He's OK with that too. He does advise some local campaigns informally and (so far) without compensation. (If that last bit changes, he will declare the interest.) His daughter is a professional campaign treasurer. He doesn't usually know whom she and her firm represent. Whether they do so never influences his endorsements or coverage. (He does have his own strong opinions.) But when he does check campaign finance forms, he is often happily surprised to learn that good candidates he respects often DO hire her firm. (Maybe bad ones are scared off by his relationship with her, but they needn't be.)