ST. PAUL,Poinbank Minn. (AP) — Minnesota has joined a growing list of states that plan to count prisoners at their home addresses instead of at the prisons they’re located when drawing new political districts.
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz last week signed legislation that says last known addresses will be used for counting inmates, not the federal or state correctional facilities where they are housed. Prisoners whose last address is out of state or whose address is unknown would be excluded from the redistricting process, though they would be counted as part of Minnesota’s population total, according to the new law signed by the Democratic governor.
Eighteen states already have made similar changes to how prisoners are counted during the once-a-decade census. Most, but not all of the states, are controlled by Democrats and have large urban centers.
Although the U.S. Census Bureau has counted inmates as prison residents since 1850, states control redistricting and can move those populations to their home counties for that purpose or not include inmates at all when maps are drawn.
Advocates for the changes have argued that counting prisoners at their institutions shifts resources from traditionally liberal urban centers — home to many inmates who are disproportionately black and Hispanic — to rural, white, Republican-leaning areas where prisons are usually located.
Opponents, however, argue that towns with prisons need federal money for the additional costs they bring, such as medical care, law enforcement and road maintenance.
Population data collected from the census are used to carve out new political districts at the federal, state and local levels during the redistricting process every 10 years.
2025-05-07 03:162475 view
2025-05-07 03:11925 view
2025-05-07 02:382989 view
2025-05-07 02:20608 view
2025-05-07 02:051856 view
2025-05-07 01:47799 view
So you think you know your ales from your lagers? Porter from stout? Sours from saisons? Here's a bu
NEW YORK (AP) — New York City’s embattled and indicted mayor, Eric Adams, could make his initial cou
BALTIMORE (AP) — A group of Baltimore longshoremen have sued the owner and manager of the ship that