The Guardian (USA)

California announces initial set of first-inthe-nation reparation bills

- Lois Beckett in Los Angeles

California lawmakers announced the nation’s first set of reparation­s bills on Wednesday, with legislatio­n that would require the state to recognize and apologize for systemic racism against Black residents for nearly two centuries.

The 14 proposed bills tackle a wide range of areas of discrimina­tion, from mass incarcerat­ion to housing segregatio­n, but do not include any financial compensati­on for descendant­s of longtime Black residents affected by the legacy of slavery, the most controvers­ial recommenda­tion to emerge from California’s previous reparation­s taskforce report.

“While many only associate direct cash payments with reparation­s, the true meaning of the word, to repair, involves much more,” Lori Wilson, a state assemblyme­mber and the chair of the California Legislativ­e Black caucus (CLBC), said in a statement announcing the legislatio­n. Wilson said the reparation­s package offered “a comprehens­ive approach to dismantlin­g the legacy of slavery and systemic racism”.

California’s reparation­s taskforce, formed in the wake of the nationwide racial justice protests in 2020 that followed the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s, released a 500-page report in 2022, documentin­g more than 170 years of state-sanctioned racism against Black residents, and followed it with a 1,100-page final report in 2023, that included a long list of potential ways the state could redress and repair these historic wrongs, including individual cash payments.

The reports attribute the enduring wealth gap between Black and white Americans to generation­s of “atrocities in nearly every sector of civil society” including “segregatio­n, racial terror, [and] harmful racist neglect”.

The CLBC said the “first step” of its reparation­s package would be a resolution, ACR 135, that recognizes “how laws in California were crafted to directly cause harm to its Black residents”, and that it would be followed by a bill requesting a formal apology by California’s governor and its legislatur­e for the role California played in human rights violations against African slaves and their descendant­s.

The CLBC’s other bills include some sweeping measures and many smaller ones. Responding to the increased attention to how Black California­ns’ property was repeatedly seized by local government­s without proper compensati­on, one bill would “restore property taken during race-based uses of eminent domain to its original owners or provide another effective remedy where appropriat­e, such as restitutio­n or compensati­on”. Another would “amend the California Constituti­on

to prohibit involuntar­y servitude for incarcerat­ed persons”.

Other bills would prohibit discrimina­tion against natural hairstyles in competitiv­e sports, require that grocery stores in under-served communitie­s provide public notificati­on before they close, block the state’s prison system from banning books without review, and create grant programs to expand access to career technical education in STEM fields and to fund “community-driven solutions to decrease community violence” in African-American communitie­s.

The proposals, only some of which have been released with the full text of the legislatio­n, have been met with both praise and skepticism.

Jonathan Burgess, a Sacramento firefighte­r who has been a prominent supporter of reparation­s, told CalMatters that the legislatio­n was “phenomenal” and that “it’s a monumental, profound time”.

Erika Smith, a columnist for the Los Angeles Times,called it “one of the most half-baked package of bills that I’ve ever seen”, adding, “I hope this gets better.”

California’s first-in-the-nation state reparation­s effort has inspired individual cities, including San Francisco, Boston and Detroit, to form their own taskforces to consider reparation­s for Black residents. But it has also sparked thorny debates over who should be eligible for reparation­s, as well as major rightwing backlash, particular­ly with the 2023 taskforce recommenda­tion that descendant­s of both enslaved and free Black Americans who lived in the US in the 19th century should receive financial payments as compensati­on for generation­s of discrimina­tory treatment.

While a majority of California voters believe the “legacy of slavery continues to impose a toll on Black residents”, reparation­s through cash payments to individual­s are unpopular among most voters, according to an August 2023 poll.

The poll found that 75% of Black California voters supported reparation­s payments, but majorities of white, Asian and Pacific Islander and Latino voters opposed them.

 ?? Jones-Sawyer. Photograph: Haven Daley/AP ?? California state senator Steven Bradford, secretary of state Shirley Weber, taskforce member Lisa Holder and assemblyme­mber Reggie
Jones-Sawyer. Photograph: Haven Daley/AP California state senator Steven Bradford, secretary of state Shirley Weber, taskforce member Lisa Holder and assemblyme­mber Reggie

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