Las Vegas Review-Journal

Reparation­s’ fate still murky

Officials back addressing racial injustice, but no specifics yet

- By Janie Har

SAN FRANCISCO — San Francisco supervisor­s have backed the idea of paying reparation­s to Black people, but whether members will agree to lump-sum payments of $5 million to every eligible person or to any of the more than 100 other recommenda­tions made by an advisory committee won’t be known until later this year.

The idea of Black reparation­s is not new, but the federal government’s promise of granting 40 acres and a mule to newly freed slaves was never realized. It wasn’t until George Floyd, a Black man, was killed in police custody in 2020 that reparation­s movements began spreading in earnest across the country.

The state of California and the cities of Boston and San Francisco are among jurisdicti­ons trying to atone not just for chattel slavery but for decades of racist policies and laws that systemical­ly denied Black Americans access to property, education and the ability to build generation­al wealth.

Reparation­s in San Francisco?

Black migration to San Francisco soared in the 1940s because of shipyard work, but racially restrictiv­e covenants and redlining limited where people could live. When Black residents were able to build a thriving neighborho­od in the Fillmore, government redevelopm­ent plans in the 1960s forced out residents, stripped them of their property and decimated Black-owned businesses, advocates say.

Today, fewer than 6 percent of San Francisco residents are Black, yet they make up nearly 40 percent of the city’s homeless population.

Supporters include the San Francisco NAACP, although it said the board should reject the $5 million payments and focus instead on reparation­s through education, jobs, housing, health care and a cultural center for Black people in San Francisco. The president of the San Francisco branch is the Rev. Amos C. Brown, who sits on both the statewide and San Francisco reparation­s panels.

Argument against reparation­s

Critics say California and San Francisco never endorsed chattel slavery, and there is no one alive today who owned slaves or was enslaved. It is not fair for municipal taxpayers, some of whom are immigrants, to shoulder the cost of structural racism and discrimina­tory government policies, critics say.

An estimate from Stanford University’s Hoover Institutio­n, which leans conservati­ve, has said it would cost each non-black family in San Francisco at least $600,000 in taxes to pay for the costliest of the recommenda­tions: The $5 million per-person payout, guaranteed income of at least $97,000 a year for 250 years, personal debt eliminatio­n and converting public housing into condos to sell for $1.

How will the city pay for this?

It’s not clear. The advisory committee that made the recommenda­tions says it is not its job to figure out how to finance San Francisco’s atonement and repair.

That would be up to politician­s, two of whom expressed interest Tuesday in taking the issue to voters. San Francisco Supervisor Matt Dorsey said he would back a ballot measure to enshrine reparation­s in the San Francisco charter as part of the budget. Shamann Walton, the supervisor leading the charge on reparation­s, supports that idea.

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