SECOND REGULAR SESSION

SENATE JOINT RESOLUTION NO. 53

90TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY


INTRODUCED BY SENATOR QUICK.

Read 1st time January 27, 2000, and 1,000 copies ordered printed.



TERRY L. SPIELER, Secretary.

4267S.01I


JOINT RESOLUTION

Submitting to the qualified voters of Missouri, an amendment repealing sections 2, 5, 7 and 9 of article III of the Constitution of Missouri relating to changing the number of members of the general assembly, and adopting four new sections in lieu thereof relating to the same subject.


Be it resolved by the Senate, the House of Representatives concurring therein:

That at the next general election to be held in the state of Missouri, on Tuesday next following the first Monday in November, 2000, or at a special election to be called by the governor for that purpose, there is hereby submitted to the qualified voters of this state, for adoption or rejection, the following amendment to article III of the Constitution of the state of Missouri:

Section A.  Sections 2, 5, 7 and 9, article III, Constitution of Missouri, are repealed and four new sections adopted in lieu thereof, to be known as sections 2, 5, 7 and 9, to read as follows:

Section 2.  Beginning with the ninety-second general assembly, the house of representatives shall consist of one hundred [sixty-three] five members elected at each general election [and apportioned in the following manner: Within sixty days after the population of this state is reported to the President for each decennial census of the United States and, in the event that a reapportionment has been invalidated by a court of competent jurisdiction, within sixty days after notification by the governor that such a ruling has been made, the congressional district committee of each of the two parties casting the highest vote for governor at the last preceding election shall meet and the members of the committee shall nominate, by a majority vote of the members of the committee present, provided that a majority of the elected members is present, two members of their party, residents in that district, as nominees for reapportionment commissioners.  Neither party shall select more than one nominee from any one state legislative district.  The congressional committees shall each submit to the governor their list of elected nominees.  Within thirty days the governor shall appoint a commission consisting of one name from each list to reapportion the state into one hundred and sixty-three representative districts and to establish the numbers and boundaries of said districts.

If any of the congressional committees fails to submit a list within such time the governor shall appoint a member of his own choice from that district and from the political party of the committee failing to make the appointment.

Members of the commission shall be disqualified from holding office as members of the general assembly for four years following the date of the filing by the commission of its final statement of apportionment.

For the purposes of this article, the term congressional district committee or congressional district refers to the congressional district committee or the congressional district from which a congressman was last elected, or, in the event members of congress from this state have been elected at large, the term congressional district committee refers to those persons who last served as the congressional district committee for those districts from which congressmen were last elected, and the term congressional district refers to those districts from which congressmen were last elected.  Any action pursuant to this section by the congressional district committee shall take place only at duly called meetings, shall be recorded in their official minutes and only members present in person shall be permitted to vote.

The commissioners so selected shall on the fifteenth day, excluding Sundays and holidays, after all members have been selected, meet in the capitol building and proceed to organize by electing from their number a chairman, vice chairman and secretary and shall adopt an agenda establishing at least three hearing dates on which hearings open to the public shall be held.  A copy of the agenda shall be filed with the clerk of the house of representatives within twenty-four hours after its adoption.  Executive meetings may be scheduled and held as often as the commission deems advisable.

The commission shall reapportion the representatives by dividing the population of the state by the number one hundred sixty-three and shall establish each district so that the population of that district shall, as nearly as possible, equal that figure.

Each district shall be composed of contiguous territory as compact as may be.

Not later than five months after the appointment of the commission, the commission shall file with the secretary of state a tentative plan of apportionment and map of the proposed districts and during the ensuing fifteen days shall hold such public hearings as may be necessary to hear objections or testimony of interested persons.

Not later than six months after the appointment of the commission, the commission shall file with the secretary of state a final statement of the numbers and the boundaries of the districts together with a map of the districts, and no statement shall be valid unless approved by at least seven-tenths of the members.

After the statement is filed members of the house of representatives shall be elected according to such districts until a reapportionment is made as herein provided, except that if the statement is not filed within six months of the time fixed for the appointment of the commission, it shall stand discharged and the house of representatives shall be apportioned by a commission of six members appointed from among the judges of the appellate courts of the state of Missouri by the state supreme court, a majority of whom shall sign and file its apportionment plan and map with the secretary of state within ninety days of the date of the discharge of the apportionment commission.  Thereafter members of the house of representatives shall be elected according to such districts until a reapportionment is made as herein provided.

Each member of the commission shall receive as compensation fifteen dollars a day for each day the commission is in session but not more than one thousand dollars, and, in addition, shall be reimbursed for his actual and necessary expenses incurred while serving as a member of the commission.

No reapportionment shall be subject to the referendum].  Each of the thirty-five state senatorial districts shall have three state representative districts contained wholly within such state senatorial district.  Each state representative district shall be as close to one-third of the population of such senatorial district as possible and each state representative district shall be composed of contiguous territory as compact as may be.  The divisions of such state representative districts shall be made pursuant to the same process as the division of state senatorial districts pursuant to section 7 of this article.

Section 5.  Beginning with the ninety-second general assembly, the senate shall consist of [thirty-four] thirty-five members elected by the qualified voters of the respective districts for four years.  For the election of senators, the state shall be divided into convenient districts of contiguous territory, as compact and nearly equal in population as may be.

Section 7.  Beginning with the ninety-second general assembly, within sixty days after the population of this state is reported to the President for each decennial census of the United States, [and] or within sixty days after notification by the governor that a reapportionment has been invalidated by a court of competent jurisdiction, the state committee of each of the two political parties casting the highest vote for governor at the last preceding election shall, at a committee meeting duly called, select by a vote of the individual committee members, and thereafter submit to the governor a list of ten persons, and within thirty days thereafter the governor shall appoint a commission of ten members, five from each list, to reapportion the [thirty-four] thirty-five senatorial districts and the one hundred five state representative districts, with three state representative districts wholly contained within each senatorial district, and to establish the numbers and boundaries of [said] such districts.

If either of the party committees fails to submit a list within such time the governor shall appoint five members of his or her own choice from the party of the committee so failing to act.

Members of the commission shall be disqualified from holding office as members of the general assembly for four years following the date of the filing by the commission of its final statement of apportionment.

The commissioners so selected shall on the fifteenth day, excluding Sundays and holidays, after all members have been selected, meet in the capitol building and proceed to organize by electing from their number a chairman, vice chairman and secretary and shall adopt an agenda establishing at least three hearing dates on which hearings open to the public shall be held.  A copy of the agenda shall be filed with the secretary of the senate and the chief clerk of the house within twenty-four hours after its adoption.  Executive meetings may be scheduled and held as often as the commission deems advisable.

The commission shall reapportion the senatorial districts by dividing the population of the state by the number [thirty-four] thirty-five and shall establish each district so that the population of that district shall, as nearly as possible, equal that figure; no county lines shall be crossed except when necessary to add sufficient population to a multi-district county or city to complete only one district which lies partly within such multi-district county or city so as to be as nearly equal as practicable in population.  Any county with a population in excess of the quotient obtained by dividing the population of the state by the number [thirty-four] thirty-five is hereby declared to be a multi-district county.  After reapportioning the senatorial districts, the commission shall reapportion the representative districts by dividing the population within each senatorial district by the number three and shall establish each district so that the population of that district shall, as nearly as possible, equal that figure, and so that such districts are of contiguous territory, as compact as may be, provided that three representative districts shall be located wholly within each senatorial district.

Not later than five months after the appointment of the commission, the commission shall file with the secretary of state a tentative plan of apportionment and map of the proposed districts and during the ensuing fifteen days shall hold such public hearings as may be necessary to hear objections or testimony of interested persons.

Not later than six months after the appointment of the commission, the commission shall file with the secretary of state a final statement of the numbers and the boundaries of the districts together with a map of the districts, and no statement shall be valid unless approved by at least seven members.

After the statement is filed senators and representatives shall be elected according to such districts until a reapportionment is made as herein provided, except that if the statement is not filed within six months of the time fixed for the appointment of the commission, it shall stand discharged and the senate and the house of representatives shall be apportioned by a commission of six members appointed from among the judges of the appellate courts of the state of Missouri by the state supreme court, a majority of whom shall sign and file its apportionment plan and map with the secretary of state within ninety days of the date of the discharge of the apportionment commission.  Thereafter senators and representatives shall be elected according to such districts until a reapportionment is made as herein provided.

Each member of the commission shall receive as compensation fifteen dollars a day for each day the commission is in session, but not more than one thousand dollars, and, in addition, shall be reimbursed for his or her actual and necessary expenses incurred while serving as a member of the commission.

No reapportionment shall be subject to the referendum.

Section 9.  Until the convening of the [Seventy-fourth] ninety-second general assembly the house of representatives shall consist of one hundred sixty-three members elected from the one hundred sixty-three representative districts, and the senate shall consist of thirty-four members elected from the thirty-four senatorial districts, as they existed [January 1, 1965] during the ninety-first general assembly.  Beginning with the ninety-second general assembly, the house of representatives shall consist of one hundred five members pursuant to section 2 of this article and the senate shall consist of thirty-five members pursuant to section 5 of this article.


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