Here are the relevant pleadings in the pending cross-motions for summary judgment in Kostick v. Nago, Cv. No. 12-00184 JMS-LEK-MMM, the case challenging Hawaii’s 2012 Reapportionment Plan for violatating the Equal Protection Clause (among other things). We represent the plaintiffs in that case.

That case resulted from the State of Hawaii classifying its its residents into two categories — “permanentresidents,” and everyone else — and the resulting exclusion from thereapportionment population of 108,767 persons (military personnel, their families, and university students who do not qualify for resident tuition) deemed by the State to have not exhibitedthe intent to remain in Hawaii “permanently.” The plaintiffs argue that this classification does not survive closeconstitutional scrutiny, and that the State has not met its burden to show a”substantial and compelling reason” for excluding nearly 8% of its actualpopulation from equal representation in the Hawaii legislature. The state’s 2012 reapportionment Plan thus denies representationalequality to a huge proportion of Hawaii’s actual population, all of whom have asubstantial presence here, and who are counted by the Census as “usualresidents” ofHawaii.

When the fundamental right to equal representation is burdened by Hawaii’schoice of whom to count, the courts apply a three-part test:

To decidewhether a law violates the Equal Protection Clause, we look, in essence, tothree things: the character of the classification in question; the individualinterests affected by the classification; and the governmental interestsasserted in support of the classification.

Dunn v. Blumstein,405 U.S. 330, 335 (1972). These factors are evaluated by reviewing theclassification with “close constitutional scrutiny,” which places the burdenon the State to prove a “substantial and compelling reason,” id. at 336, supporting “[a]nappropriately defined and uniformly applied requirement.” Id. at 342.

Plaintiffs’ Summary Judgment Motion

Defendants’ Summary Judgment Motion

The hearing on the cross-motions is scheduled for January 14, 2012, before a three-judge federal court in Honolulu.

Background documents:

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