Oh, yikes. It's much more complicated than that, especially to get localized offices and districts. I used to create voter data systems for candidates (clear back to when the data was available only on 9-track drives!), and it was quite a learning experience.
CA, for example, has become so carefully gerrymandered that one of the buildings in my neighborhood is split between Assembly districts.
It gets worse, or more detailed, anyway. Your city for your mailing address may not be your actual city of residence -- the true boundary is by real estate parcel. For example, there are many Los Gatos mailing addresses that are in Saratoga, or vice-versa, plus many that are on unincorporated (county) land. Mailing address "city" is assigned for the convenience of the Post Office and only roughly parallels actual political boundaries, which are always by parcel.
So, you could differ from your CA neighbor in any of these respects:
Assembly district
Senate district
Congressional district
City (or none, if unincorporated parcel)
County Supervisorial district
City council district (for district cities, as opposed to at-large council cities).
There have been other sites that gave this level of detail:
- Project Vote Smart, which is still there but I can't find any tell-me-my-districs feature anymore, even after registering.
- Smartvoter.org is still there, but it oddly wasn't updated for the 2016 General. You can tell your districts that were up for a given election by looking at that ballot, but I don't see a comprehensive way to see all of your districts there (any seat not on that particular ballot is omitted entirely).
CA, for example, has become so carefully gerrymandered that one of the buildings in my neighborhood is split between Assembly districts.
It gets worse, or more detailed, anyway. Your city for your mailing address may not be your actual city of residence -- the true boundary is by real estate parcel. For example, there are many Los Gatos mailing addresses that are in Saratoga, or vice-versa, plus many that are on unincorporated (county) land. Mailing address "city" is assigned for the convenience of the Post Office and only roughly parallels actual political boundaries, which are always by parcel.
So, you could differ from your CA neighbor in any of these respects:
Assembly district
Senate district
Congressional district
City (or none, if unincorporated parcel)
County Supervisorial district
City council district (for district cities, as opposed to at-large council cities).
There have been other sites that gave this level of detail:
- Project Vote Smart, which is still there but I can't find any tell-me-my-districs feature anymore, even after registering.
- Smartvoter.org is still there, but it oddly wasn't updated for the 2016 General. You can tell your districts that were up for a given election by looking at that ballot, but I don't see a comprehensive way to see all of your districts there (any seat not on that particular ballot is omitted entirely).