The Guardian (USA)

Illinois city approves first reparation­s program for Black residents

- Jewel Wicker

An Illinois city has become the first in America to embark upon a reparation­s program for its Black residents after its local council approved the implementa­tion of its first such initiative to tackle the legacy of slavery.

Late on Monday night aldermen in Evanston – a suburban community in Chicago – voted to approve the Local Reparation­s Restorativ­e Housing Program, a $400,000 housing grant program.

Designed to address the inequality gap and ongoing impact of slavery on African Americans in the city, Evanston’s reparation­s program will be funded with sales taxes on recreation­al marijuana. Under this plan, up to $10m of the sales tax would go towards reparation­s over the next decade.

Spearheade­d by alderman Rue Simmons, the program was developed alongside the city’s equity and empowermen­t commission in 2019. It is believed to be the first reparation program with guaranteed funding.

The housing grant will award eligible residents up to $25,000, which can be used for a “home down payment or closing cost assistance within the city; [to] help pay for repairs, improvemen­ts or modernizat­ions of an Evanston property; or [to] help pay down mortgage principal, interest or late penalties on Evanston property,” according to a memo obtained by the Chicago Tribune.

The memo said applicants must have “origins in any of the Black racial and ethnic groups of Africa” and have been a resident or direct descendant of a resident of Evanston between 1919-1969. The newspaper notes that applicants who have experience­d housing discrimina­tion as a result of the city’s policies after 1969 are also eligible.

Simmons told the Guardian last year that the initiative represents the “hope that we will have a fair opportunit­y to live to our highest and best potential, and enjoy the same livability as the average white resident in Evanston”.

“It means that there is an opportunit­y coming for us to bridge the gap of discrimina­tion that has and continues to keep black residents oppressed,” she continued.

In response to the new housing grant program, Simmons told the Chicago Tribune the initiative is a step in the right direction. “It is, alone, not enough,” she said. “We all know that the road to repair and justice in the Black community is going to be a generation of work. It’s going to be many programs and initiative­s, and more funding.”

Alderman Cicely Fleming cast the lone vote against the measure, which passed 4-1. Fleming said the approved expenditur­e is a “housing program with the title reparation­s” and noted that it did not allow people to “dictate the terms of how they are repaired”.

 ??  ?? Houses in the Fifth Ward in Evanston, Illinois. Housing grant will award eligible residents up to $25,000 for a ‘home down payment’ or other costs. Photograph: Eileen Meslar/Reuters
Houses in the Fifth Ward in Evanston, Illinois. Housing grant will award eligible residents up to $25,000 for a ‘home down payment’ or other costs. Photograph: Eileen Meslar/Reuters

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