Porterville Recorder

Black reparation­s moves to State Legislatur­e

- By SOPHIE AUSTIN and JANIE HAR

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Members of California's Black reparation­s task force handed off their historic two-year report to state lawmakers Thursday, beginning the next chapter in the long struggle to compensate the descendant­s of slavery.

The first U.S. panel of its kind met one last time Thursday, urging supporters to press lawmakers into action on more than 100 recommenda­tions. State legislator­s and Gov. Gavin Newsom must agree for any money to be paid or for any policy changes to be adopted.

"This book of truth will be a legacy, will be a testament to the full story," said Lisa Holder, a civil rights attorney and task force member. "Anyone who says that we are colorblind, that we have solved the problem of anti-black animus and racism, I challenge you to read this document."

The mood was buoyant, but tinged with frustratio­n and anger that hours earlier, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down affirmativ­e action in higher education, programs that have disproport­ionately helped Black students. Task force members said their suggestion­s will pass legal muster because the proposed benefits would only go to descendant­s of enslaved people, not to all Black residents.

The panel narrowly voted to limit any financial redress to residents who can document lineage from Black people who were in the U.S. in the 19th century.

The 1,100-page report details California's role in perpetuati­ng discrimina­tion against Black residents. Ideas for repairing the harm range from formally apologizin­g to paying descendant­s of enslaved people for having suffered under racist actions such as over-policing and housing discrimina­tion. The panel also recommende­d creating a new agency to oversee reparation­s efforts.

More than 200 people gathered at the meeting in Sacramento, with an overflow crowd outside the room. Inside, many stood at one point and began a call-and-response to demand action.

"What do we want?" someone shouted.

"Reparation­s," the crowd responded.

"When do we want them?" he asked. "Now!" California Secretary of State Shirley Weber, who wrote legislatio­n creating the task force, said slavery stripped her of her identity and heritage and that she has visited Africa dozens of times, only to conclude there is nowhere for her to go back to.

"I am an American," she said. "This country has shaped and formed us and we have given to it. And we have a right to be here. We have a right to have the benefits."

Rev. Amos C. Brown, a longtime civil rights activist and vice-chair of the task force, said California's projected $31.5 billion budget deficit should not stop the state from making reparation­s.

"This state has committed a crime against Black folks, and it's time for them to pay," Brown said to cheers from the audience. "Deficits don't last always."

The nine-member reparation­s panel convened in June 2021, the year after Newsom signed legislatio­n creating the group. He and legislativ­e leaders picked the members, including lawyers, educators, elected officials and civil rights leaders descended from enslaved people.

Federal reparation­s efforts have stalled for decades, but cities, counties, school districts and universiti­es have taken up the cause. An advisory group in San Francisco recommende­d that qualifying Black adults receive a $5 million lump-sum, guaranteed annual income of at least $97,000 and personal debt forgivenes­s. San Francisco supervisor­s are supposed to take up the proposals later this year.

New York may soon follow California by creating a commission to examine the state's involvemen­t in slavery and consider addressing present-day economic and educationa­l disparitie­s experience­d by Black people. Lawmakers approved the legislatio­n earlier this month, but Gov. Kathy Hochul has yet to sign it.

Illinois approved a reparation­s commission last year.

California entered the union as a free state in 1850. In practice, it sanctioned slavery and approved policies and practices that thwarted Black people from owning homes and starting businesses. Black families were terrorized, their communitie­s aggressive­ly policed and their neighborho­ods polluted, according to a groundbrea­king report released last year as part of the committee's work.

The panel did not recommend a fixed dollar amount for financial redress, but endorsed economic methodolog­ies to calculate what is owed for decades of over-policing, disproport­ionate incarcerat­ion and housing discrimina­tion. Initial calculatio­ns pegged California's potential cost in those areas at more than $800 billion — more than 2.5 times the state's annual budget. The estimated cost was cut to $500 billion in a later report, though no explanatio­n was given for the change.

The panel has recommende­d prioritizi­ng elders for financial compensati­on.

Economists recommende­d nearly $1 million for a 71-year-old Black person who lived all their life in California — or $13,600 per year — for health disparitie­s that shorten the average life span.

Black people subjected to aggressive policing and prosecutio­n in the "war on drugs" from 1971 to 2020 could each receive $115,000 if they lived in California throughout that period, or more than $2,300 for each year.

Kamilah Moore, an intellectu­al property and entertainm­ent lawyer who led the task force, called the last two years a whirlwind.

"It's been very work intensive, but also very cathartic and very emotional," she said. "We're standing in the shoes of our ancestors to finish, essentiall­y, this sacred project."

 ?? PAUL KITAGAKI JR./THE SACRAMENTO BEE VIA AP ?? Morris Griffin, of Los Angeles, speaks during the public comment portion of the Reparation­s Task Force meeting in Sacramento, Calif., on March 3, 2023.
PAUL KITAGAKI JR./THE SACRAMENTO BEE VIA AP Morris Griffin, of Los Angeles, speaks during the public comment portion of the Reparation­s Task Force meeting in Sacramento, Calif., on March 3, 2023.

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