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“We’re anxious to get started, but our first task as a commission is to incorporate this population data into our redistricting database and our plan-drawing tools. We want interested groups and individuals to be able to access this wealth of information. Commissioners are looking forward to listening to the public and we plan to having a series of public hearings around the state during the upcoming year. This is important work and we intend to do the public’s business openly and fairly.”The commission has scheduled a meeting on March 29 at a location to be announced later. Beginning in May, a regular monthly meeting will be held on the second Tuesday of each month, beginning at 10 a.m. TVW television plans to broadcast the proceedings and the commission will have a web presence. Special meetings and public hearings will be announced later, and public input will always be welcome, since the desire is to be as transparent and accessible as possible, commissioners said. The commission must wrap up its work by the end of the year and the report will go to the Legislature by next January 9. The plan, including any legislative fine-tuning, will become effective Feb. 8. The first major usage of the new districts will be the August, 2012, state primary and the November General Election of 2012. Voting members are former U.S. Sen. Slade Gorton, a former attorney general and House majority leader, and former House budget Chairman Tom Huff, representing the Republicans; and representing the Democrats, Dean Foster, the former Chief Clerk of the House and chief of staff to Gov. Booth Gardner; and Tim Ceis, former Deputy Mayor of Seattle and chief of staff to King County Executive Ron Sims and policy coordinator for Gov. Gary Locke. The four commissioners chose Lura Powell of Richland as their chair. She is chair of the Board of Trustees of the Washington State Life Sciences Discovery Fund and a former business leader and director of the DOE Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. Secretary of State Sam Reed said he looks forward to seeing the work of the commission and maps that arise from "one of the very best and fairest redistricting systems in the country." For More Information: For more information on the Census Bureau's Redistricting Data Program, visit http://www.census.gov/rdo> and http://2010.census.gov/news/press-kits/redistricting.html>. Please visit http://2010.census.gov/2010census/data/> for an interactive map showcasing county-level population change from 1960 to 2010, as well as state-level data on race and Hispanic or Latino origin for 2010.