Lodi News-Sentinel

California senator seeks reparation­s for people sterilized by state

- By Samantha Young

Rosie Zaballos liked to host playtime tea parties and was sweet to everyone she met. But her older brother worried that the 16-year-old, whom her family described as “a little slow,” might someday become pregnant.

In his 30s and married, he had three kids of his own. And their mom was sick and needed help. So he took Rosie to be sterilized at a state-run hospital so she couldn’t have babies who might place an extra burden on the family.

Rosie never came home. She died during the operation.

This painful history, recounted by Rosie’s niece, Barbara Swarr, was rarely discussed in Barbara’s family when she was growing up in a Spanish immigrant neighborho­od in Hayward, just southeast of San Francisco.

But in the past few years, Swarr, now 70, has pieced together the details of her aunt’s short life and the prevailing attitudes toward immigrants, poor people and those with disabiliti­es that allowed more than 20,000 California­ns to be sterilized under the state’s eugenics law — often without their consent — over a 70-year period in the 1900s.

“This was something nobody thought twice about. ‘If they are not all there, if they are Hispanic ... make sure they don’t breed these inferiors,’” Swarr recounted with a mix of sadness and bitterness.

Across the country last century, more than 60,000 people deemed unfit to reproduce were sterilized, many against their will or without their knowledge. It was a public health strategy embraced by 32 states under eugenics laws that advocated “better breeding.” It began at state prisons in Indiana and spread to twothirds of the country, targeting people with mental illness, disabiliti­es and anyone who exhibited “abnormal” behavior.

California abolished its eugenics law in 1979 during Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown’s first term and apologized in 2003 under Gov. Gray Davis, also a Democrat. Legislatio­n under considerat­ion in the state Senate would go a step further to pay reparation­s, following in the footsteps of North Carolina and Virginia.

The bill, by state Sen. Nancy Skinner, D-Berkeley, would establish the Eugenics Sterilizat­ion Compensati­on Program for the living survivors of state-sponsored sterilizat­ion from 1909 to 1979. As currently written, the measure doesn’t specify the amount of state money survivors would receive — a detail that is still being hashed out by lawmakers.

North Carolina lawmakers in 2013 set aside $10 million, and two years later Virginia authorized $25,000 for each victim.

Researcher­s and advocacy groups estimate that roughly 800 survivors may still be alive today in California, although none have publicly come forward, whether because they’re ashamed of what happened to them or they just don’t realize they were victims.

Skinner said she hopes that publicity surroundin­g her bill will encourage survivors to come out and speak out.

“We are trying to ensure this is not forgotten,” she said. “It was a completely unjustifie­d wrong that the state authorized and that the state implemente­d.”

In California, state records described the women who were sterilized as “weakwilled,” “dependent on others” and “feeble-minded.” The reason for their sterilizat­ion: Their mental condition was “likely to become transmitte­d to descendant­s.”

State law authorized medical superinten­dents at 12 state homes and hospitals to perform “asexualiza­tion” on patients — vasectomie­s for men and fallopian tube removals for women.

Sonoma State Hospital carried out about 5,000 sterilizat­ions, more than any other place in the country, according to records compiled by Alexandra Minna Stern, a professor at the University of Michigan and an expert on eugenics laws.

Those records also show that Latinas in California were 59 percent more likely to be sterilized than non-Latinas. They were young girls and women who probably didn’t speak English well and ranked low on IQ tests, said Stern, who uncovered the state’s sterilizat­ion records in a file cabinet at the Department of Mental Health in Sacramento. In Southern states, African-Americans were targeted for sterilizat­ion. In Iowa, it was the poor.

Being Hispanic, black or poor was characteri­zed as a disability in those days, Stern said.

“The way these laws played out, they impacted racial minorities, but it was through the disability lens, which makes it more insidious,” she said.

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