Lodi News-Sentinel

What could reparation­s look like in California?

- Stephen Hobbs and Marcus D. Smith

SACRAMENTO — California’s Reparation­s Task Force has already made history.

The panel’s nearly 500-page report released this year shattered the myth that the state was free from slavery. Its systematic review of the racist harms inflicted on generation­s of Black people is the first of its kind at a state level. And a hotly-debated decision to limit reparation­s to California residents who descend from enslaved people or Black freedmen could become a model for future efforts.

But starting Wednesday in Oakland, the nine-person committee will begin perhaps its most daunting task: Deciding what forms reparation­s could take.

“This is really the meat of why we all came together,” said Assemblyma­n Reginald JonesSawye­r, D-South Los Angeles, a task force member.

Coming up with final recommenda­tions is expected to take months, with a new report due by July 1. Whatever the committee decides must be approved by the State Legislatur­e before going into effect.

The group’s work so far suggests that it is considerin­g remedies that go beyond simply providing cash restitutio­n. The committee’s report lists dozens of potential ideas. They include removing involuntar­y servitude as punishment for a crime from the state’s constituti­on, requiring anti-bias training for school teachers and reducing the prevalence of fast-food restaurant­s in Black neighborho­ods.

“The harms were multi-dimensiona­l,” said Cheryl Grills, a task force member and psychology professor at Loyola Marymount University. “My hope is that we will see a robust multi-faceted set of recommenda­tions.”

Questions among Sacramento’s Black residents

While the state task force works toward its final recommenda­tions, Black Sacramento residents have questions, along with their own vision of what reparation­s should mean.

On Saturday they gathered at Drip, a Black-owned coffee shop in Midtown. The group was convened by the Coalition for a Just and Equitable California (CJEC), a reparation advocate group working with the task force.

Chris Lodgson, lead organizer for CJEC, explained at the gathering what is meant by reparation­s.

“What we mean is very simple,” he said. “Taking actions to provide benefits to the survivors and descendant­s of the institutio­n of chattel slavery and the effects of it that came after.”

For Sacramento resident Ingrid Pinkett, it was a chance to give validation to her ancestors’ trauma.

“To just bring validation to some of the things that were stolen,” she said. “We are descendant­s of people that were brought over here, unwillingl­y, We do have our own identity.”

Cathy Johnson, a retired state worker, said reparation­s in a compensato­ry form would relieve her of debt.

“I’m trying to get completely out of debt from everything,” said Johnson. “I would use it to pay off my mortgage.”

Johnson said she regularly stays informed about the work of the task force through the CJEC website and updates.

“I’m really looking forward to (seeing) what is going to come out in the report, which is right around the corner,” she said.

Building a case for California reparation­s

Task force members said their recommenda­tions will be rooted in the exhaustive report the group released in June. It documents the discrimina­tion and atrocities inflicted on Black people across the country and in California.

It begins with enslavemen­t. While California’s constituti­on was anti-slavery, the reality was much different.

At least 200 people were enslaved in California in 1850, the year it became a state. Two years later, lawmakers passed a requiremen­t that state officials help capture enslaved people who escaped.

“We practiced every tenet of slavery,” said Sen. Steven Bradford, D-Gardena, who is also on the panel. “California can’t wash its hands of this.”

Later, the report moves into the 20th century where it describes the Ku Klux Klan’s deep roots in California. It identifies “sundown towns” such as Burbank and Richmond that prohibited Black people from staying after dusk. It explains how government officials seized and bulldozed land occupied by Black residents to build freeways.

It continues into present day California, outlining massive and persistent disparitie­s in homeowners­hip, life expectancy and wealth, among other areas.

“What’s happening now is that the state is acknowledg­ing that this is not something that Black people have done wrong,” said Lisa Holder, a panel member and president of the Oakland-based Equal Justice Society. “There’s a narrative shift that’s happening that is long overdue.”

 ?? CAROLYN COLE/LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS ?? Walter Foster, 80, of Los Angeles, raises a sign calling for a focus on financial compensati­on as the California Reparation­s Task Force takes public comment Friday.
CAROLYN COLE/LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS Walter Foster, 80, of Los Angeles, raises a sign calling for a focus on financial compensati­on as the California Reparation­s Task Force takes public comment Friday.

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