The Guardian (USA)

Reparation­s panel deliberate­s on compensati­on for Black California­ns

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After more than a year delving into history and studies to make its case for reparation­s to California descendant­s of enslaved Black people, a first-in-thenation taskforce began deliberati­ons on Wednesday to quantify how financial compensati­on might be calculated and what might be required to prove eligibilit­y.

Conversati­ons for how to determine payments are in the early stages, with taskforce members acknowledg­ing they have more questions than answers. Economists hired by the taskforce are seeking guidance in five harms experience­d by Black people: government taking of property, devaluatio­n of Black-owned businesses, housing discrimina­tion and homelessne­ss, mass incarcerat­ion and over-policing, and health.

California’s taskforce met at city hall in Oakland, a city that was the birthplace of the Black Panthers but has lost some of its African American population as rising home prices forced people out.

The taskforce must determine when each harm began and ended and who should be eligible for monetary compensati­on in those areas. For example, the group could choose to limit cash compensati­on to people incarcerat­ed between 1970 – when more people started being imprisoned for drug-related crimes – to the present. Or they could choose to compensate everyone who lived in over-policed Black neighborho­ods, even if they were not themselves arrested.

The taskforce has a 1 July deadline to complete its final report for the Legislatur­e listing recommenda­tions for how the state can atone for and address its legacy of discrimina­tory policies against Black California­ns. Lawmakers will need to pass legislatio­n for payments and other policy changes to take place.

Earlier this year, the committee made the controvers­ial decision to limit reparation­s to descendant­s of Black people in the United States as of the 19th century, either as freed or enslaved people.

Taskforce member Monica Montgomery Steppe said they need to take more time addressing time frames, payment calculatio­ns and residency.

“This is the foundation of all the other recommenda­tions,” she said.

California’s governor, Gavin Newsom, signed legislatio­n in 2020 creating the taskforce, giving hope to reparation­s advocates who had despaired that anything might happen at the federal level. Since then, reparation­s efforts have bubbled up in cities, counties and at colleges.

On Wednesday, the Boston city council voted to form a taskforce to study reparation­s and other forms of atonement to Black residents for the city’s role in slavery and its legacy of inequality. Lawmakers in other parts of the country have pushed their states and cities to study reparation­s without much progress. But Evanston, Illinois, became the first US city last year to make reparation­s available for Black residents, and public officials in New York will try anew to create a reparation­s commission in the state.

About 60 people attended California’s meeting, nodding in agreement as taskforce members spoke of the generation­al trauma suffered by Black children amid inaccurate and depictions of white families as ideal and Black families as not.

Max Fennell, a 35-year-old coffee company owner, said every person should get $350,000 in compensati­on to close the racial wealth gap and Black-owned businesses should receive $250,000, which would help them to flourish.

“It’s a debt that’s owed, we worked for free,” he said. “We’re not asking; we’re telling you.”

Demnlus Johnson III, a Richmond city council member, said it’s remarkable that the issue is even being talked about publicly.

“You have to name a problem in order to address it,” he said. “Of course we want to see it addressed now, the urgency is now, but just having it all aired out and put on the line is a major feat.”

Members of the committee will make preliminar­y policy recommenda­tions, such as audits of government agencies that deal with child welfare and incarcerat­ion with the aim of reducing disparitie­s in how Black people are treated.

The group discussed how the state may address its impact on Black families whose property was seized through eminent domain. The topic garnered renewed attention after lawmakers last year voted to return a beachfront property known as Bruce’s Beach to descendant­s of the Black residents who owned it until it was taken in the 20th century.

Officials from Oakland, Sacramento, Los Angeles and other California cities spoke about local reparation­s efforts.

That included Khansa T JonesMuham­mad, the vice-chair of Los Angeles’ Reparation­s Advisory Commission, created last year under then mayor Eric Garcetti. The goal of the commission is to advise the city on a pilot program for distributi­ng reparation­s to a group of Black residents, but it doesn’t have a timeline set in stone for finishing its work.

In September, economists started listing preliminar­y estimates for what could be owed by the state as a result of discrimina­tory policies. But they said they need more data to come up with more complete figures.

Kamilah Moore, the taskforce’s chairperso­n, said the group has not decided on any dollar amounts or what form reparation­s could take, nor where the money would come from.

California’s secretary of state, Shirley Weber, authored the bill that created the state’s taskforce, and the group began its work last year. The bill was signed into law in September 2020 after a summer of nationwide protests against racism and police brutality following the murder of George Floyd.

 ?? Photograph: Rich Pedroncell­i/AP ?? Amos Brown, the vice-chair for the California taskforce, right holds a copy of the book Songs of Slavery and Emancipati­on, at an event in Sacramento in June.
Photograph: Rich Pedroncell­i/AP Amos Brown, the vice-chair for the California taskforce, right holds a copy of the book Songs of Slavery and Emancipati­on, at an event in Sacramento in June.

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