BILL NUMBER: SB 804 AMENDED

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        BILL TEXT 
        AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  AUGUST 30, 2002
        AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  JUNE 13, 2001
INTRODUCED BY    Committee on Elections and Reapportionment
  Senator Polanco 
    (Principal coauthor:  Assembly Member Cedillo) 
    (Coauthors:  Senators Alarcon, Escutia, Kuehl, Ortiz, and
Soto) 
                        FEBRUARY 23, 2001
    An act to add Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 21300)
to Division 21 of the Elections Code, relating to redistricting.
  An act to amend Sections 12800, 12815, and 13000 of,
and to add Sections 12801.1, 12801.2, 12801.25, 12801.3, 12801.4, and
12801.9 to, the Vehicle Code, relating to driver's licenses. Vehicle
Code, relating to driver's licenses. 

        LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST

   SB 804, as amended,  Committee on Elections and
Reapportionment   Polanco  .  
Redistricting:  congressional districts   Drivers'
licenses  . 
   Existing law regulates the licensure of the state's drivers and
requires the Department of Motor Vehicles to require every
application for a driver's license to contain the applicant's social
security number.
   AB 60 would revise the requirement that every application include
the applicant's social security number to specify that if an
applicant submits an affidavit, signed under penalty of perjury, that
he or she does not possess a social security number, and submits a
federal taxpayer identification number, or other identifier that is
determined appropriate by the department, the submission of those
documents shall be acceptable to the department until the applicant
obtains a social security number.  AB 60 would require the department
to require every applicant for an original driver's license or
identification card, at the time of submission of the application, to
establish his or her lawful immigration status or that the applicant'
s presence in the United States is authorized under federal law, as
specified, or show, by documentation, as specified, that an
application or petition for lawful immigration status or extension of
legal presence, as specified, has been initiated on the applicant's
behalf, or for another person whereby the applicant would be a
derivative beneficiary.  AB 60 would require the department to issue
a driver's license or identification card having a duration of 3
years to an applicant who complies with these requirements and who
does not have a social security number or is in the process of
obtaining lawful immigration status from the United States
Immigration and Naturalization Service.
   This bill would make findings and declarations regarding the
importance of immigrants to the state and the inability of many of
them to obtain California driver's licenses.
   This bill would also require the department or other specified
agency to submit the fingerprints of an applicant who has shown by
documentation acceptable to the department that an application or
petition for lawful immigration status or extension of legal presence
has been initiated to the Department of Justice, for purposes of
determining whether the applicant has specified arrests, warrants, or
convictions.  This bill would require the Department of Justice to
accept and process the fingerprints, as specified.  The bill would
require the Department of Justice to transmit the results, as
specified, to the department, which would be required to notify the
applicant of the results and their ramifications.  This bill would
also permit the Department of Justice to notify the local law
enforcement agency regarding individuals with specified convictions
or arrests pending adjudication.  The bill would require the
Department of Motor Vehicles to develop specified regulations
regarding specified denials of driver's licenses.  The bill would
provide an appeal process, as specified, for appeal of specified
adverse determinations.
   This bill would require each applicant who is in the process of
obtaining his or her lawful immigration status to provide the
department with two forms of identification, as specified.  The bill
would also require specified applicants to affirm that they have been
living and working in California for at least 15 months within the
prior 3 years and to submit a specified supporting document.  This
bill would require the department to accept and process applications
of nonworking spouses, dependent children, and students, as
specified.
   This bill would require specified applicants to affirm, under
penalty of perjury, that the applicant and specified individuals have
not been notified by the Immigration and Naturalization Service of a
final denial of the applicant's application or petition for legal
immigration status which is not subject to any further administrative
or judicial review.  Because the bill would expand the scope of the
crime of perjury, it would impose a state-mandated local program.
The bill would permit the department, at any time during the term of
the driver's license, to verify with the Immigration and
Naturalization Service, as specified, the status of any application
or petition for lawful immigration status or application for
extension of an applicant's legal presence.  The bill would also
provide that the department shall immediately revoke a driver's
license only when the Immigration and Naturalization Service reports
to the department that an applicant's application or petition has
been subject to a judicially final order of deportation or removal.
   This bill would allow individuals who have received 3-year driver'
s licenses to apply to renew these licenses, as specified.
   This bill would require individuals seeking duplicate licenses, as
specified, to verify their identify, as specified.
   This bill would also require applicants for an original
identification card to provide evidence of lawful presence in the
United States, as specified.
   This bill would require the Legislative Analyst's Office to report
to the Legislature every year regarding the effectiveness of this
bill and AB 60, as specified.
   This bill would require specified information obtained by the
department to remain private and confidential, as specified, and
would subject any agency or individual who violates this provision to
a fine not to exceed $10,000 for each violation.  Because a
violation of these provisions would be an infraction, the bill would
impose a state-mandated local program.
   This bill would give the department authority to adopt emergency
regulations to implement this bill and AB 60.
   This bill would provide that it shall become operative only if
both it and AB 60 are enacted and become effective on or before
January 1, 2003.
  The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local
agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the
state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that
reimbursement.
   This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this
act for a specified reason.   
   The California Constitution requires the Legislature to adjust the
boundary lines of congressional districts in the year following the
year in which the national decennial census is taken and requires the
districts be redrawn in accordance with specified standards.
   This bill would provide that congressional districts shall consist
of unspecified elements. 
   Vote:  majority.  Appropriation:  no.  Fiscal committee:  
no   yes  . State-mandated local program:
 no   yes  .  

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:
  
  SECTION 1.  Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 21300) is 

  SECTION 1.  The Legislature finds and declares as follows:
   (a) Immigrants are a vital component of the California economy,
social landscape, and culture.  Immigrants comprise 91 percent of
farm workers, 76 percent of maids and housemaids, 69 percent of
restaurant cooks, 66 percent of gardeners, 64 percent of construction
employees, 60 percent of electronics assemblers, 58 percent of
household and childcare workers, 49 percent of janitors, and 48
percent of drywall installers.  California has 8.6 million
first-generation immigrants, representing one in four Californians.
Immigrant workers make up approximately one-third of the state's
labor force.  One in 10 schoolchildren are foreign born.  Over time,
the vast majority of these immigrants and their families become fully
integrated into California's economic, civic, political, and social
affairs.
   (b) Numerous studies from leading organizations indicate the
importance and significance of immigrant workers to various sectors
of the California economy.  In addition, immigrant entrepreneurship
is credited with helping revitalize urban cities.  California's
business sectors benefit from immigrants who are willing to work for
wages that are not attractive to other Californians.  Immigrants also
buy consumer products and help stimulate the economy.
   (c) By restricting the ability of immigrants in the process of
applying for lawful immigration status to obtain a license, current
California driver's license requirements impede public safety for all
Californians. Unlicensed, untrained, and uninsured driver's endanger
all Californians and provide new hazards for law enforcement and
public safety.  Since unlicensed driver's also cannot purchase auto
insurance, this also creates a financial burden for California auto
insurance owners.
   (d) For nearly a decade, current driver's license requirements
have penalized tens of thousands of hardworking men and women from
obtaining a driver's license, auto insurance, and participating in
the California economy. This measure will also return the Department
of Motor Vehicles to its original mission of enhancing traffic safety
through driver licensing and performance monitoring programs and
protecting the public through the titling of vehicles.
   (e) This measure will ensure California's future prosperity by
enhancing public safety, giving all Californians the opportunity to
become self-reliant, while maintaining the dignity and respect for
the hardworking men and women of California.
  SEC. 2.  Section 12800 of the Vehicle Code is amended to read:

   12800.  Every application for an original or a renewal of, a
driver's license shall contain all of the following information:
   (a) The applicant's true full name, age, sex, mailing address,
residence address, and  , except as provided in Section 12801,
 social security number.
   (b) A brief description of the applicant for the purpose of
identification.
   (c) A legible print  or prints  of the thumb  or
  ,  finger  , or if authorized by paragraph
(1) of subdivision (b) of Section 12801.1, any combination thereof
requested by the department,  of the applicant.
   (d) The type of motor vehicle or combination of vehicles the
applicant desires to operate.
   (e) Whether the applicant has ever previously been licensed as a
driver and, if so, when and in what state or country and whether or
not the license has been suspended or revoked and, if so, the date of
and reason for the suspension or revocation.
   (f) Whether the applicant has ever previously been refused a
driver's license in this state and, if so, the date of and the reason
for the refusal.
   (g) Whether the applicant, within the last three years, has
experienced, on one or more occasions, either a lapse of
consciousness or an episode of marked confusion caused by any
condition which may bring about recurrent lapses, or whether the
applicant has any disease, disorder, or disability which affects
ability to exercise reasonable and ordinary control in operating a
motor vehicle upon a highway.
   (h) Whether the applicant understands traffic signs and signals.
   (i) Whether the applicant has ever previously been issued an
identification card by the department.
   (j) Any other information necessary to enable the department to
determine whether the applicant is entitled to a license under this
code.   
  SEC. 3.  Section 12801.1 is added to the Vehicle Code, to read:
   12801.1.  (a) Every applicant, who has shown by documentation
acceptable to the department that an application or petition for
lawful immigration status or extension of legal presence has been
initiated, but who has a felony conviction, or an arrest pending
adjudication, for one of the following offenses shall be disqualified
from receiving a license under Section 12801:
   (1) Section 11356.5, 11370.4, or 11379.8 of the Health and Safety
Code.
   (2) Offenses listed in subdivision (c) of Section 667.5 of the
Penal Code.
   (3) Offenses listed in subdivision (c) of Section 1192.7 of the
Penal Code.
   (4) Section 11411, 11413, 11418, or 11419 of the Penal Code.
   (5) Subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3) of subsection (a) of Section
1182 of Title 8 of the United States Code.
   (6) Subparagraphs (A) or (E) of paragraph (3) of subsection (a) of
Section 1182 of Title 8 United States Code.
   (b) (1) Every applicant who has shown by documentation acceptable
to the department that an application or petition for lawful
immigration status or extension of legal presence has been initiated
shall, prior to completing the application, submit a full set of
fingerprints images and related information.  The fingerprints shall
be submitted electronically at any office of the department or at any
other agency authorized by the Department of Justice.  The office or
agency sending the fingerprints shall verify the identity of the
applicant using the photo receipt issued to the person by the
department and one other form of photo identification determined to
be acceptable by the office or agency capturing the fingerprints.
Immediately upon completing the identity verification and collecting
the appropriate fee, not to exceed sixty dollars ($60), the
fingerprints shall be transmitted to the Department of Justice.
   (2) An applicant shall electronically submit fingerprints and
related information to the Department of Justice for the purpose of
determining whether the Department of Justice or the Federal Bureau
of Investigation maintains criminal offender record information on
the applicant.  A request for federal level criminal offender
information received by the Department of Justice pursuant to this
section shall be forwarded to the FBI by the Department of Justice.
   (3) The Department of Justice shall conduct a search using
information obtained from the department against the Wanted Person
System for any offenses listed in subdivision (a) of this section.
   (c) The Department of Justice shall accept and process the
fingerprints submitted through the procedure specified in subdivision
(b).  Upon completing a review of the records, the Department of
Justice shall transmit copies of any conviction for an offense listed
in subdivision (a) and any arrest pending adjudication for an
offense listed in (a) that the Department Justice has validated as
active.
   (d) The Department of Justice shall conduct a search of the Wanted
Persons System to determine whether there are any outstanding
warrants associated with the applicant.  The Department of Justice
shall advise the Department of Motor Vehicles if the applicant has an
outstanding warrant for any felony in one of the following
categories within the Wanted Persons System:  treason, espionage,
sabotage, sedition, homicide, kidnapping, sexual assault, dangerous
drug, sex offense, flight-escape, smuggling, and crimes against the
person.  The Department of Justice may notify a law enforcement
agency that issued any warrant that the person named in the warrant
has been located.
   (e) After reviewing the criminal history information provided by
the department, the department shall send a notice to the applicant
by first-class mail stating either of the following:
   (1) The criminal history search revealed no disqualifying factors
and the person may present the notice to the department to complete
the application for a driver's license.
   (2) The criminal history contained information that disqualifies
the person for a California Driver's license.  The notice shall list
the specific crime or crimes upon which the disqualification is
based, notify the applicant of his or her right to obtain copies of
the information relied upon by the department in making its decision,
and notify the applicant of his or her right to a hearing to
challenge the factual basis of the disqualification. Upon receipt of
an applicant's written demand for a hearing within 30 days of
issuance of the notice, the department shall schedule a hearing
within 15 days unless the parties agree upon a later hearing date.
The notice shall also notify applicants of the procedures for
correcting inaccurate information in the records of California
Department of Justice or United States Department of Justice.
   (f) The information obtained pursuant to this section by the
Department of Motor Vehicles or any other agency or individual is
private and confidential, shall not be stored by the department or
any other agency or individual transferred to any public or private
entity or used for any purpose other than to determine the applicants
eligibility for a driver's license, except as provided in Section
12801.  Any agency or individual who violates this subdivision shall
be subject to a fine not to exceed ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for
each violation.
  SEC. 4.  Section 12801.2 is added to the Vehicle Code, to read:
   12801.2.  (a) (1) The department shall require every applicant for
an original driver's license pursuant to Section 12801 to present an
identification document pursuant to this section, as specified in
paragraph (2) of subdivision (c) of Section 12801, or other
documentation acceptable to the department, for purposes of
establishing identity prior to completing an application.
   (2) Any applicant who has shown by documentation that an
application or petition for lawful immigration status or extension of
legal presence has been initiated, shall present to the department
two forms of identification acceptable to the department.  This may
include, but shall not be limited to, a birth certificate or birth
record issued by a foreign jurisdiction, Matricula Consular issued by
the government of the United States of Mexico, or other document
issued by a foreign government that the department determines is
satisfactory evidence of identity such as a passport issued by a
foreign jurisdiction, voter registration card from country of origin,
military card or draft record from country of origin, driver's
license with a photograph issued by a foreign jurisdiction,
international driver's license, or driver's license or identification
card issued by a state or outlying possession of the United States.
   (b) (1) Whenever a person who has shown by documentation that an
application or petition for lawful immigration status or extension of
legal presence has been initiated applies for a license pursuant to
Section 12801, the department shall require that individual to affirm
that he or she has been living and working in California for a total
of at least 15 months within the three-year period immediately
preceding the application.  The applicant shall submit evidence of at
least one of the following:
   (A) A current California rent receipt showing the applicant's name
and address.
   (B) A current California mortgage receipt showing the applicant's
name and address.
   (C) A current California utility receipt showing the applicant's
name and address.
   (D) A document showing that the applicant is or has been employed
in the state.
   (E) A document showing that the applicant has registered with a
public or private employment service in California.
   (F) A copy of the applicant's payroll checks, warrants, tax forms,
and other work or tax-related financial documents.
   (G) A letter from an employer or employers.
   (H) Evidence that the applicant has enrolled his or her child in a
school in the state.
   (I) Evidence of a vehicle registered to the applicant in the
state.
   (J) Any other document determined by the department to be
appropriate for the purposes of the subdivision.  The department may
establish other forms of evidence to establish that the applicant has
been living and working in California for the required period.
   (2) Whenever a person who has shown by documentation acceptable to
the department that an application or petition for lawful
immigration status or extension of legal presence has been initiated
applies for a driver's license pursuant to Section 12801, the
department shall accept and process applications for nonworking
spouses, dependent children, and nondependent children who are
students without requiring the evidence of employment specified in
paragraph (1).  In addition to complying with other requirements
specified in Section 12801, when a driver's license application is
submitted by the spouse of a person who meets the employment
requirements specified in paragraph (1), but the spouse does not meet
the employment requirements, the spouse shall provide a certified
copy of a marriage certificate confirming that he or she is lawfully
married.  The spouse or dependent children requesting a driver's
license under these conditions shall meet all of the other applicable
requirements necessary for the issuance of a license under this
code.
   (c) The information obtained pursuant to this section by the
Department of Motor Vehicles or any other agency or individual is
private and confidential, shall not be stored by the department or
any other agency or individual transferred to any public or private
entity or used for any purpose other than to determine the applicants
eligibility for a driver's license, except as provided in
subdivision (b).  Any agency or individual who violates this
subdivision shall be subject to a fine not to exceed ten thousand
dollars ($10,000) for each violation.
  SEC. 5.  Section 12801.25 is added to the Vehicle Code, to read:
   12801.25.  (a) Within 10 days of receipt of written notice of the
department's decision to deny an application on the basis of the
applicant's failure to satisfy the requirements of Section 12801.2,
Section 15.05, the applicant may request an administrative hearing to
appeal that denial.  The notice of denial shall notify the applicant
of his or her hearing right, of the applicant's right to review
prior to the hearing the department's records that were the basis for
the denial, and of the applicant's rights of subpoena pursuant to
Section 14104.5 of the Vehicle Code.  Upon receipt of a demand for
hearing, the department shall schedule a hearing within 15 days
unless the party requests a later hearing date.
   (b) The hearing shall be conducted pursuant to the provisions of
Sections 14104.2 and 145105 of the Vehicle Code.
   (c) The applicant subject to a hearing may request a review of the
decision issued pursuant to subdivision (b) within 15 days of the
effective date of the decision.  The review shall include an
examination of the hearing report, documentary evidence, findings,
and any new evidence offered by the applicant that was not known to
the applicant at the time of the initial hearing.  The hearing
officer or board conducting the original hearing may not participate
in the review process.  Following the review, a written notice of the
department's decision shall be mailed to the applicant involved.
   (d) At any time after issuance, the department, at its own option
or upon request of the person who was the subject of the hearing, may
reopen the matter, take further evidence, or change or set aside any
order previously made.
   (e) Upon issuance of a final administrative decision, an applicant
may petition for a writ of mandate from any superior court.  The
court shall deny the petition if it finds that the administrative
decision was supported by substantial evidence.
  SEC. 6.  Section 12801.3 is added to the Vehicle Code, to read:
   12801.3.  (a) The applicant who has shown by documentation
pursuant to this section, as specified in paragraph (2) of
subdivision (c) of Section 12801, or other documentation acceptable
to the department that an application or petition for lawful
immigration status or extension of legal presence has been initiated
shall affirm, under penalty of perjury, that neither the applicant
nor, to his or her knowledge, anyone acting on the applicant's
behalf, has been notified by the Immigration and Naturalization
Service of a final denial of the applicant's application or petition
for legal immigration status which is not subject to any further
administrative or judicial review.
   (b) The department may at any time during the term of the driver's
license verify with the Immigration and Naturalization Services,
through the procedures outlined in subsection (d) of Section 1320b-7
of Title 42 of the United States Codes, the status of any application
or petition for lawful immigration status or the application for
extension of an applicant's legal presence.  Only when the
Immigration and Naturalization Services reports to the department
that the applicant's or petitioner's application or petition has been
subject to a final judicial order of deportation or removal, the
department shall immediately revoke the driver's license upon a
hearing that establishes that the license holder is the subject of a
final order of deportation or removal.
   (c) The information obtained pursuant to this section by the
Department of Motor Vehicles or any other agency or individual is
private and confidential, shall not be stored by the department or
any other agency or individual transferred to any public or private
entity or used for any purpose other than to determine the applicants
eligibility for a driver's license, except as provided in
subdivision (b).  Any agency or individual who violates this
subdivision shall be subject to a fine not to exceed ten thousand
dollars ($10,000) for each violation.
  SEC. 7.  Section 12801.4 is added to the Vehicle Code, to read:
   12801.4.  Applicants without a social security number shall submit
an application for renewal of a license after three years.
  SEC. 8.  Section 12801.9 is added to the Vehicle Code, to read:
   12801.9.  Nothing in Section 1653.5, 12800, 12801, or 12801.5
shall be construed to allow any person to apply for and be issued a
commercial driver's license without the submission of his or her
social security number upon application.
  SEC. 9.  Section 12815 of the Vehicle Code is amended to read:

   12815.  (a)  (1)  If a driver's license issued under this
code is lost, destroyed or mutilated, or a new true, full name is
acquired, the person to whom it was issued shall obtain a duplicate
upon furnishing to the department (1) satisfactory proof of that
loss, destruction, or mutilation and (2) if the licensee is a minor,
evidence of permission to obtain a duplicate secured from the
parents, guardian, or person having custody of the minor. Any person
who loses a driver's license and who, after obtaining a duplicate,
finds the original license shall immediately destroy the original
license.  
   (2) (A) When the department issues a duplicate pursuant to this
subdivision, it shall require the applicant to verify his or her
identity with an identification document acceptable to the department
in accordance with paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) of Section
12801.2.
   (B) If the applicant is unable to produce an acceptable
identification document, the department shall retrieve the applicant'
s prior photograph from departmental records. 
   (b) A person in possession of a valid driver's license who has
been informed either by the department or by a law enforcement agency
that the document is mutilated shall surrender the license to the
department not later than 10 days after that notification.
   (c) For purposes of this section, a mutilated license is one that
has been damaged sufficiently to render any or all of the elements of
identity set forth in Sections 12800.5 and 12811 unreadable or
unidentifiable through visual, mechanical, or electronic means.

  SEC. 10.  Section 13000 of the Vehicle Code is amended to read:

   13000.  (a) The department may issue an identification card to any
person attesting to the true full name, correct age, and other
identifying data as certified by the applicant for such
identification card.
   (b)  All applicants for the issuance of an original
identification card must provide evidence of lawful presence as
required in subparagraph (A) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of
Section 12801.
   (c)  Any person 62 years of age or older may apply for, and
the department upon receipt of a proper application therefor shall
issue, an identification card bearing the notation "Senior Citizen".

   (c)  
   (d)  Every application for an identification card shall be
signed and verified by the applicant before a person authorized to
administer oaths and shall be supported by bona fide documentary
evidence of the age and identity of the applicant as the department
may require, and shall include a legible print  or prints of
the thumb  or   ,  finger  , or any
combination thereof requested by the department  of the
applicant.  
   (d)  
   (e)  Any person 62 years of age or older, and any other
qualified person, may apply for, or possess, an identification card
under the provisions of either subdivision (a) or (b), but not under
both of those provisions.   
  SEC. 11.  The Legislative Analyst's Office shall report to the
Legislature every year regarding the effectiveness of the department'
s ability to grant licenses pursuant to the provisions of this bill
and Assembly Bill 60 and methods that can be adopted to improve the
department's ability to grant those licenses.
  SEC. 12.  This act shall become operative only if both this bill
and Assembly Bill 60 are enacted and become effective on or before
January 1, 2003.
  SEC. 13.  It is the intent of the Legislature that the amendments
made to Section 12800 by this act prevail over those proposed by
Assembly Bill 60.
  SEC. 14.  The department shall have authority to adopt regulations
to implement this act and Assembly Bill 60 and, notwithstanding any
other provision of law, may adopt those emergency regulations and
transmit those emergency regulations to the Secretary of State for
filing.  Those emergency regulations shall become effective
immediately upon filing.
  SEC. 15.  No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to
Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because
the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school
district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or
infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty
for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the
Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the
meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
Constitution.    added to Division 21 of the Elections
Code, to read:
      CHAPTER 4.  CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICTS
   21300.  Congressional District Number 01 shall consist of the
following:
       Congressional District Number 02 shall consist of the
following:
   Congressional District Number 03 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 04 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 05 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 06 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 07 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 08 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 09 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 10 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 11 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 12 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 13 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 14 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 15 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 16 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 17 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 18 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 19 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 20 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 21 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 22 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 23 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 24 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 25 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 26 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 27 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 28 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 29 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 30 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 31 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 32 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 33 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 34 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 35 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 36 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 37 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 38 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 39 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 40 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 41 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 42 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 43 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 44 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 45 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 46 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 47 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 48 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 49 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 50 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 51 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 52 shall consist of the following:
   Congressional District Number 53 shall consist of the following:


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