Cleveland City Council President Blaine Griffin and other council members speak at a news conference at City Hall.
Cleveland City Council President Blaine Griffin and other council members speak at a news conference at City Hall. Credit: Nick Castele / Signal Cleveland

Cleveland City Council President Blaine Griffin had his hands full the last few weeks as the story of council’s redistricting slipped out of his control. 

Griffin must redraw councilโ€™s ward lines and cut two council seats to account for Clevelandโ€™s falling population โ€” a requirement of the city charter. He needs a vote of council for the map to pass. Council members have seen a draft map, but it hasnโ€™t been released publicly. 

Rebecca Maurer โ€” the Ward 12 newcomer who unseated an incumbent in 2021 โ€” recently gave a floor speech saying she was on the losing end of the map-drawing process. Her house was shoehorned into totally new territory, which she took as a violation of trust, she said. 

Griffin retorted that his council colleagues โ€œdonโ€™t trust the council member in Ward 12โ€ and feel she runs to the media rather than being a โ€œcollective player.โ€ That prompted a ripple of indignation from the following weekโ€™s public commenters and a stern tut-tut from the Cleveland.com editorial board. 

Maurer isnโ€™t the only member unhappy. Ward 8โ€™s Michael Polensek said he wouldnโ€™t vote for the maps as they stood last Tuesday, though he defended Griffinโ€™s handling of the process. The East Sideโ€™s population has been tumbling, and that means a ward cut is coming to Polensekโ€™s corner of town, he said. 

โ€œRight now thereโ€™s three wards on the Northeast Side,โ€ Polensek told Signal Cleveland. โ€œOneโ€™s going.โ€

Another longstanding factor in Clevelandโ€™s map drawing is the effort to maintain a plurality-Hispanic ward on the West Side. That affects how the rest of the map is drawn. Itโ€™s long been believed that diluting Hispanic voters would run Cleveland afoul of the federal Voting Rights Act. 

It appeared that the map was still in flux last week. Richard Starr of Ward 5 said he had requested some changes to his new boundaries. 

โ€œNothing is permanent right now,โ€ he said. 

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Government Reporter
I follow how decisions made at Cleveland City Hall and Cuyahoga County headquarters ripple into the neighborhoods. I keep an eye on the power brokers and political organizers who shape our government. I am a graduate of the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University and have covered politics and government in Northeast Ohio since 2012.