The Daily Telegraph

Families of slaves could be given $200K for discrimina­tion

Two million black people in California may be eligible because of racist policies, says task force

- By Jamie Johnson US CORRESPOND­ENT

DESCENDANT­S of slaves should each receive more than $200,000 (£164,000) to compensate for the enduring economic effects of racism and slavery, according to a reparation­s task force in California.

The nine-member panel was set up by Gavin Newsom, the Democrat governor, to learn about the generation­al effects of racist policies. An initial report seen by the New York Times estimates that compensati­on of around $569billion should be paid out to more than two million black people in the state for housing discrimina­tion between 1933 and 1977.

The panel has also identified four other areas in its discussion­s for reparation­s: mass incarcerat­ion, unjust property seizures, devaluatio­n of black businesses, and health care.

The panel is now considerin­g how reparation­s should be distribute­d. Some are in favour of ring fencing payments for tuition and housing grants, while others say it should be in the form of direct cash payments. The full report will be released next year, along with the final recommenda­tions.

The costs are likely to be eye-watering. For comparison, last year, the state’s total expenditur­e, on schools, hospitals, highways, policing and prisons, was around $510billion.

In 2020, California became the first US state to pass a law to develop compensati­on proposals for the descendant­s of slaves and those affected by slavery, amid a reckoning on race after George Floyd was killed by a policeman in Minnesota in 2020.

Shirley Weber, the Democratic assembly woman who wrote the Bill, said: “California has come to terms with many of its issues, but it has yet to come to terms with its role in slavery.”

In March this year, the task force set out the eligibilit­y criteria as descendant­s of enslaved African Americans or of a “free Black person living in the United States prior to the end of the 19th century.”

Despite it being a “free” state, an estimated 1,500 enslaved African Americans lived in California in 1852, according to the 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 neighbourh­oods that were more likely to be polluted. According to the New York Times, the report details how a so-called “blight law” from 1945 paved the way for officials to seize property to destroy black communitie­s, closing hundreds of businesses and displacing thousands of families. The effects of these policies are still felt today.

The median wealth of black households in the United States is $24,100, compared with $188,200 for white households, according to the most recent Federal Reserve Board survey.

More progressiv­e cities and universiti­es are taking up the cause of reparation­s with the Chicago suburb of Evanston becoming the first US city to make reparation­s available to black residents.

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