Los Angeles City Council District 9

Los Angeles City Council District 9 is one of the 15 districts of the Los Angeles City Council. The Ninth District encompasses the western section of Downtown Los Angeles and much of South Los Angeles. The current council member is Jan Perry.

Contents

Geography

Modern

The 9th formerly covered the entire core of Downtown Los Angeles, before redistricting divided it between the 9th and the 14th District. The 9th district still represents most of Downtown residents and includes the Downtown communities of South Park, Bunker Hill, Little Tokyo, the Old Bank District, the Arts District as well as the Financial District and the Civic Center. Most of Downtown's industrial areas are found in the nearby 14th City Council district, represented by Jose Huizar. The 9th district's boundary continues several miles to the south and ends just north of Watts.

See official city map outlining District 9.

Historic

A new city charter effective in 1925 replaced the former "at large" voting system for a nine-member council with a district system with a 15-member council. Each district was to be approximately equal in population, based upon the voting in the previous gubernatorial election; thus redistricting was done every four years. (At present, redistricting is done every ten years, based upon the preceding U.S. census results.)[1] The numbering system established in 1925 for City Council districts began with No. 1 in the north of the city, the San Fernando Valley, and ended with No. 15 in the south, the Harbor area.

The district has occupied the same general area since it was formed in 1925. With the city's changes in population, though, its western boundary has moved farther west to include much of Downtown.

The rough boundaries or descriptions have been as follows:

1925: North, Alhambra Avenue; south, Vernon city line; east, Indiana Street; west, Alameda Avenue; with the Los Angeles River bisecting it.[2] [3]

1926: Hollenbeck or Boyle Heights.[4]

'1928: Same as 1925, but the western boundary is moved west to Hill Street.[5]

1932–33: North, Alhambra Avenue; south, 25th Street; east, Indiana Avenue; west, Figueroa Street.[6][7]

1964: All of the downtown area.[8]

1990: Downtown, Little Tokyo, Chinatown and "about 70 blocks south of downtown."[9]

1991: From Chinatown on the north to 84th Street on the south.[10]

Officeholders

  1. Winfred J. Sanborn, 1925–31, 1937–39
  2. George W.C. Baker, 1931–35
  3. Parley Parker Christensen, 1935–37, 1939–49
  4. Howard E. Dorsey, 1937-39
  5. Edward R. Roybal, 1947–62
  6. Gilbert W. Lindsay, 1962–90
  7. Rita Walters, 1991–2001
  8. Jan Perry, 2001–

See also

References

Access to most Los Angeles Times links requires the use of a library card.

External links