The idea of forming the state of Jefferson may never go anywhere, but it also refuses to die. Even towns are getting into the act. On Wednesday, the city council of Williams, population 5,300 in Colusa County, plans to “discuss and authorize the signature of the declaration and petition to the California State Legislature for the withdrawal of the city of Williams from the state of California and to form the state of Jefferson.”
The Williams council held a special meeting on Feb. 18 to hear a presentation on the Jefferson project, and according to its agenda it may be about to follow through. (You learn this kind of stuff when, while stopping in a town, you look up its website and check what the city government is up to.)
Williams’ quixotic declaration tilts at the windmills of the political establishment in Sacramento, in the same way that Oregon’s rural counties’ lodge hopeless complaints against the policies imposed by the Portland-Corvallis-Eugene axis. Lately, though, at least five northern California counties have filed petitions in Sacramento stating their desire to leave the state and form a new one. Siskiyou and Modoc were the first, last year, and in January Tulare, Glenn and Yuba joined them. Others that have been mentioned as possible candidates are Del Norte, Humboldt, Trinity and Shasta in California, along with Lake, Klamath, Jackson, Josephine, Douglas, Coos and Curry counties in Oregon.
In January, the Sacramento Bee said a freshman assemblyman, Republican James Gallagher of Yuba City, talked with the Jefferson proponents. He said one way to give rural counties more clout in state capitals is to elect one senator per county, a system that California had until the Supreme Court ended it with its one-man, one-vote decision in the 1960s.
That arrangement, one senator per county while the lower house is apportioned by population, would be very helpful today, in California as well as in Oregon. The liberal slant of the heavily Democratic urban centers would be balanced by the conservative leanings of the rest of these two states, where agriculture and resource industries play such a vital role. If rural areas still had a way to make their voices count, and to protect their interests, people in places like northern California and southern Oregon could quit thinking about forming a new state of their own. (hh)
I agree the state of Jefferson makes sense, but I don’t think it will be allowed to happen as it would dilute the power of the east coast states a bit.
I believe some proposals include sourthern Oregon counties in this state as well.
I have talked to some California friends who have also said there is a desire in some groups to divide that state in three (northern, middle, southern) — which also makes sense to me, as the economies of the three areas are quite different.
If that should happen in southern Oregon, I’d consider moving back!