List of Wyoming Senate districts

The U.S. state of Wyoming has two chambers in its state legislature. Its upper chamber, the Wyoming Senate, has currently 31 single-member districts.[1]

The Wyoming Constitution originally mandated a county-based apportionment scheme.[2] Previously, the state legislature had a mixed system, with both multi-member districts and single-member districts. The state Senate specifically had 9 multi-member districts and 8 single-member districts in the 1990 apportionment plan. In a 1991 federal legal case, Gorin v. Karpan, the court ruled the 1990 apportionment plan was unconstitutional. The ruling determined the district map "created unconstitutionally excessive percentage deviations from the equal population principle" established by the United States Supreme Court's interpretation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment in the landmark 1964 case Reynolds v. Sims.[3]

On February 21, 1992, in response to the ruling in Gorin, the state legislature enacted a new apportionment plan, with a new district scheme. The plan replaced the mixed system with a purely single-member district based system. The state Senate had 30 districts, with two state House districts nested in each one of the state Senate districts. The new districts were drawn without respect to county borders.[3]

In the 2022 apportionment plan for the state legislature, there was an additional state Senate district added to the map.[4]

List of current legislative districts

The following is a list of districts in the Wyoming Senate.[1][5][6]

No. Map Counties Party Senator
1st Campbell
Crook
Weston
Rep. Ogden Driskill
2nd Converse
Natrona
Rep. Brian Boner
3rd Goshen
Niobrara
Weston
Rep. Cheri Steinmetz
4th Laramie Rep. Tara Nethercott
5th Laramie Rep. Lynn Hutchings
6th Laramie
Platte
Rep. Taft Love
7th Laramie Rep. Stephan Pappas
8th Laramie Rep. Jared Olsen
9th Albany Dem. Chris Rothfuss
10th Albany Rep. Gary Crum
11th Carbon
Sweetwater
Rep. Larry S. Hicks
12th Sweetwater Rep. John Kolb
13th Sweetwater Rep. Stacy Jones
14th Lincoln
Sublette
Sweetwater
Uinta
Rep. Laura Pearson
15th Uinta Rep. Wendy Schuler
16th Lincoln
Teton
Rep. Dan Dockstader
17th Teton Dem. Mike Gierau
18th Park Rep. Tim French
19th Big Horn
Park
Rep. Dan Laursen
20th Big Horn
Fremont
Hot Springs
Park
Washakie
Rep. Ed Cooper
21st Sheridan Rep. Bo Biteman
22nd Johnson
Sheridan
Rep. Barry Crago
23rd Campbell Rep. Eric Barlow
24th Campbell Rep. Troy McKeown
25th Fremont Rep. Cale Case
26th Fremont Rep. Tim Salazar
27th Natrona Rep. Bill Landen
28th Natrona Rep. James Lee Anderson
29th Natrona Rep. Bob Ide
30th Natrona Rep. Charles Scott
31st Laramie Rep. Evie Brennan

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Senators". Wyoming Legislature. Retrieved November 27, 2025.
  2. ^ Clements, Chris (September 26, 2025). "Future of Wyoming's legislative districts at the heart of Newcastle committee hearing". Wyoming Public Media. Retrieved November 26, 2025.
  3. ^ a b Horan, Michael J.; King, James D. (1999). "The 1992 Reapportionment Law: The Demise of the Multi-Member District System and Its Effect upon the Representation of Women in the Wyoming Legislature". Land & Water Law Review. 34 (2). Laramie, Wyoming: University of Wyoming College of Law: 408–410. Retrieved November 26, 2025.
  4. ^ Haut, Sam (March 15, 2022). "Redistricting Bill Passes Wyoming Legislature with New House and Senate Districts". K2 Radio. Retrieved November 26, 2025.
  5. ^ "Current House Districts". Wyoming Legislature. Retrieved November 26, 2025.
  6. ^ "Map Archive". The American Redistricting Project. Retrieved November 26, 2025.