Santa Cruz Sentinel

California to unveil report on Black reparation­s

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>> California's first-in-the-nation task force on reparation­s will release a report Wednesday documentin­g in detail the harms perpetuate­d by the state against Black people and recommendi­ng steps to address those wrongs, including expanded voter registrati­on, making it easier to hold violent police accountabl­e and improving Black neighborho­ods.

It also recommends the creation of a special office that would, in part, help African Americans document their eligibilit­y for financial restitutio­n.

The report, which runs 500 pages, will be the first government-commission­ed study on harms against the African American community since the 1968 Kerner Commission report ordered by then-President Lyndon Johnson, task force Chair Kamilah Moore said.

“I hope that this report is used not only as an educationa­l tool, but an organizing tool for people not only in California but across the U.S. to educate their communitie­s,” she said, adding that the report also highlights “contributi­ons of the African American community and how they made the United States what it is despite ongoing oppression and degradatio­n.”

Gov. Gavin Newsom signed legislatio­n creating the task force in 2020, making California the only state to move ahead with a study and plan. Cities and universiti­es are taking up the cause with the Chicago suburb of Evanston, Illinois, becoming the first U.S. city to make reparation­s available to Black residents last year.

The task force voted in March to limit reparation­s to descendant­s of Black people who were in the United States at the end of the 19th century, overruling reparation­s advocates who want to expand compensati­on to all Black people in the U.S.

The report, to be released by the state Department of Justice, marks the halfway point for the two-year task force's work. The draft report does not provide a comprehens­ive reparation­s plan, which is due to lawmakers next year.

The report is expected to lay out how California supported slavery before it was technicall­y abolished and oppressed Black residents through discrimina­tory laws and practices in education, home ownership, employment and the courts.

African Americans make up nearly 6% of California's population yet they are overrepres­ented in jails and prisons. They were nearly 9% of people living below the poverty level and made up 30% of people experienci­ng homelessne­ss in 2019, according to state figures.

Despite it being a “free” state, an estimated 1,500 enslaved African Americans lived in California in

1852, according to the draft report. The Ku Klux Klan flourished in California with members holding positions in law enforcemen­t and city government. African American families were forced to live in segregated neighborho­ods that were more likely to be polluted.

Moore said that a state Office of African American or American Freedmen Affairs could help Black residents file claims and trace their lineage to prove eligibilit­y for individual restitutio­n.

The task force in its

draft report also recommends compensati­ng people who were forced out of their homes for constructi­on projects such as parks and highways and general renewal, as happened to San Francisco's historical­ly Black and once-thriving Fillmore neighborho­od.

“Other groups that have suffered exclusion, oppression, and downright destructio­n of human existence have received reparation­s, and we should

have no less,” said Rev. Amos Brown, the committee's vice chair and pastor of Third Baptist Church in the Fillmore.

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