The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Lawmakers revive bills to fight racism

- By Farnoush Amiri

COLUMBUS >> Racism would be declared a public health crisis in Ohio and the day celebratin­g the official end of slavery would become a paid state holiday under racial justice measures reintroduc­ed Tuesday.

The measures were originally introduced in the wake of the killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s, which sparked nationwide protests in the summer. Efforts to pass the measures last legislativ­e session were unsuccessf­ul.

Democratic Sen. Hearcel Craig, of Columbus, is a cosponsor of both measures and has been a vocal advocate for several racial justice proposals in the chamber.

“We still have a long way to go to achieve racial justice, but this bill will help us honor those who have paved the way to where we are today,” Craig, who is Black, said in a release outlining the effort to make Juneteenth a paid holiday in Ohio.

The effort passed through the Senate unanimousl­y in the last General Assembly but didn’t make it to the House.

“Juneteenth was celebrated more widely across the country in 2020.

By declaring it a paid state holiday, I hope this renewed awareness and celebratio­n of Black history will continue to increase in the years to come,” Craig said.

If passed, the bipartisan bill would help Ohio become the second state in the country, behind Texas, to make Juneteenth a paid holiday.

The effort by Black lawmakers to declare racism a public health crisis in Ohio took off shortly after millions took to the streets last May to protest the police killings of Floyd and Breonna Taylor in Lousiville, Kentucky.

Ohio became one of the first states to introduce the measure but it did not move past the committee hearings. More than two dozen cities, counties and boards of health across the state have since passed similar declaratio­ns.

“While Ohioans may not be currently engaging in protesting at the levels we saw last summer, we know that racism didn’t just go away,” Craig said. “Black Ohioans continue to be arrested and incarcerat­ed at alarming rates, experience wage and workforce disparitie­s as well as maternal and infant mortality and get diagnosed with long-term health conditions like diabetes at higher rates than white Ohioans.”

The resolution also came as the rate of Black Americans contractin­g and dying of COVID-19 was proving to be disproport­ionate to their white counterpar­ts. The proposal, according to Craig, aims to officially acknowledg­e racism in Ohio for the first time — and thus allow it to be fully addressed.

The resolution would also provide a glossary of terms to describe instances of systematic racism and how it can affect health. It will also call for funding to be put aside to address the impact of racism in the state, whether in education, housing, criminal justice or health care.

“It shouldn’t be controvers­ial,” Democratic Sen. Sandra Williams, also a cosponsor, said of the effort. “We need to declare racism as a public health crisis to assure every Ohioan that the legislatur­e is working to make Ohio a fairer, more equitable state.”

Farnoush Amiri is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalist­s in local newsrooms to report on undercover­ed issues.

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 ?? TONY DEJAK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A woman holds up a sign during q protest, Tuesday, Sept. 29, 2020, in Cleveland. Racism would be declared a public health crisis in Ohio and the day celebratin­g the official end of slavery would become a paid state holiday under racial justice measures reintroduc­ed Tuesday, Feb. 23, 2021, after unsuccessf­ul efforts to pass them during the last legislativ­e session.
TONY DEJAK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A woman holds up a sign during q protest, Tuesday, Sept. 29, 2020, in Cleveland. Racism would be declared a public health crisis in Ohio and the day celebratin­g the official end of slavery would become a paid state holiday under racial justice measures reintroduc­ed Tuesday, Feb. 23, 2021, after unsuccessf­ul efforts to pass them during the last legislativ­e session.

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