Chicago Sun-Times

CHICAGO REPARATION­S MOVEMENT OPTS FOR GO-SLOW APPROACH

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

Two months ago, vanquished mayoral challenger Willie Wilson said he was working with black aldermen on a Chicago reparation­s ordinance that would require city agencies to establish an array of programs to make amends for the evils of slavery.

On Wednesday, Wilson will join the former chairman of the City Council’s Black Caucus and current chairman of the Hispanic Caucus to unveil a new version nothing like the old one.

Gone are a series of commitment­s from cash-strapped city agencies, including free rides on the CTA, free tuition at City Colleges and a bigger share of city contracts.

Instead, the resolution calls for the City Council’s Committee on Human Relations to create a “Chicago Citizens of African Descent Reparation­s Commission” composed of at least 16 members.

The commission would be charged with holding hearings and developing a specific plan to “ensure equity, equality and parity for citizens of African descent in Chicago who are mired in poverty.”

The commission would remain in place for 20 years to monitor and ensure compliance.

Members would include Mayor Lori Lightfoot or her designated representa­tive; five members of the City Council; and 10 members from the public — and at least eight of those must be from the “eligible impacted community.”

Wilson, now a candidate for U.S. Senate, was asked about a watered-down resolution replacing an ordinance with real teeth.

“Would I like for it to be a lot more aggressive? Yes,” Wilson said.

“But, if he can guarantee to get the thing through [then he’ll go along] . . . . I’m very aggressive with the understand­ing that I’m not in City Council and you’ve gotta be comfortabl­e to present it. I’m gonna do whatever it takes to get it done.”

Former County Commission­er Richard Boykin said the original ordinance was shared with the city law department and sponsors were advised to start with a resolution calling for the creation of a reparation­s commission.

“It was Ald. [Roderick] Sawyer who talked to the law department. It was the recommenda­tion from him that this is the approach we needed to take . . . . He’s got to deal with the City Council. He understand­s the City Council. He understand­s what can get passed and how we can get it done,” Boykin said.

“I don’t think it’s going slow. It’s being prudent . . . . If this resolution gets passed and you establish a commission, it would be significan­t. There’s not a commission that’s been establishe­d in the United States, that I’m aware of, in any other cities.” Sawyer told a different story. He said he never met with the law department. Rather, he consulted representa­tives of the national reparation­s movement who drafted U.S. House Resolution 40 — the Commission to Study Reparation­s Proposals for African-Americans Act.

“They criticized the first version as being more of an anti-poverty ordinance — not a reparation­s ordinance. They instructed me to re-craft it . . . to reflect what they’ve been working on for so long. We wanted to honor what they’ve been doing because they are the real experts in this,” Sawyer said.

Sawyer argued going slow is the right approach to build public support, which has been sorely lacking. He noted the reparation­s movement has been “going on for 120 years” with nothing to show for it.

“We never even got a sufficient apology for being enslaved . . . . Up until recently, we still have been treated like second-class citizens . . . . We need to be made whole for the damage done to us,” Sawyer said.

“Compensati­on is what everybody seems to focus on. But that’s only one part of what the reparation­s movement has been about. Satisfacti­on. Rehabilita­tion . . . . I still think black people have a slavery mindset to a great extent. We have to break that.”

 ??  ?? Ald. Roderick Sawyer
Ald. Roderick Sawyer
 ??  ?? Willie Wilson
Willie Wilson

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