San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

For change that lasts, give reparation­s to neighborho­ods

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This moment is about police brutality, but it’s not only about police brutality. The word I keep hearing is “exhausted.”

People are exhausted by and fed up with the enduring wealth disparitie­s between white and black, with the health disparitie­s that leave black people more vulnerable to COVID-19, with the centuriesl­ong disparitie­s in violence and the threat of violence, with the daily indignitie­s of African Americans and the stains that linger on our nation decade after decade.

The killing of George Floyd happened in a context — and that context is racial disparity.

Racial disparity doesn’t make for gripping YouTube videos. It doesn’t spark mass protests because it’s not an event; it’s just the daily condition of our lives.

It’s just a condition that many black families send their kids to struggling inner-city schools while white families move to the suburbs and put on black T-shirts every few years to protest racial injustice.

The response to this moment will be inadequate if it’s just police reforms. There has to be a greater effort to tackle the wider disparitie­s.

Reparation­s and integratio­n are the way to do that. Reparation­s would involve an official apology for centuries of slavery and discrimina­tion, and spending money to reduce their effects.

There’s a wrong way to spend that money: trying to find the descendant­s of slaves and sending them a check. That would launch a politicall­y ruinous argument over who qualifies for the money, and at the end of the day people might be left with a

$1,000 check that would produce no lasting change.

Giving reparation­s money to neighborho­ods is the way to go.

A lot of the segregatio­n in this country is geographic. In Minneapoli­s, where Floyd was killed, early-20th-century whites-only housing covenants pushed blacks into smaller and smaller patches of the city. Highways were built through black neighborho­ods, ripping their fabric and crippling their economic vitality.

Today, Minneapoli­s is as progressiv­e as the day is long, but the city gradually gave up on aggressive desegregat­ion. And so you have these long-suffering black neighborho­ods. The homeowners­hip rate for blacks in Minneapoli­s is one-third the white rate. The typical black family earns less than half as much as the typical white family.

To really change things, you have to lift up and integrate whole communitie­s. That’s because it takes a whole community to raise a child, to support an adult, to have a bustling local economy and a vibrant civic life. The neighborho­od is the unit of change.

Who has the expertise to lift up whole neighborho­ods? It’s the people who live in the neighborho­ods themselves. No outsider with a foundation grant or a government contract really knows what’s going on in any neighborho­od or would be trusted to make change. The people who live in the neighborho­ods know what to do. They just need the resources to do it.

A few weeks before the lockdown I was in and around South Los Angeles. In Watts I interviewe­d Keisha Daniels from Sisters of Watts, which helps kids and homeless people in a variety of ways. I interviewe­d Barak and

Sara Bomani of Unearth and Empower Communitie­s, which helps educate and nurture young people in nearby Compton.

Daniels and the Bomanis are experts in how to lift up their neighborho­ods. If we got them money and support they would figure out what to do.

How can government focus money on formerly redlined neighborho­ods and other communitie­s?

National service programs would pay young people to work for these organizati­ons. A National Endowment for Civic Architectu­re, modeled on, say, the National Endowment for the Arts, could support neighborho­od groups around the country. A Social Innovation Fund would be a private/public partnershi­p to fund such organizati­ons. Moving to Opportunit­y grants and K-12 education savings accounts would help minorities move to integrated schools. Collective impact structures could coordinate local action and use data to find what works.

In the progressiv­e era, government­s built libraries across the country, which remain vital centers of neighborho­od life. We’re about to have a lot of empty retail space. Why can’t we build Opportunit­y Centers where all the groups moving children from cradle to career could work and collaborat­e?

It’s true this has sort of been tried before. The Great Society had a “Community Action” project that professed to redistribu­te power to neighborho­ods. But it did it in the worst possible ways. A lot of what it did involved sending disruptive agitators to stir up conflict between local activists and local elected officials. The result was rancor and gridlock.

This tumultuous moment offers a chance to launch a new chapter in our history, and reparation­s are part of that launch. They offer a chance to build vibrant neighborho­ods where diverse people want to live together, where the atmosphere is kids playing on the sidewalks and not a knee in the back of the neck.

 ??  ?? People gather to clean a Los Angeles neighborho­od after riots last week. The neighborho­od is the unit of change, because residents know how to lift them. They just need the resources.
People gather to clean a Los Angeles neighborho­od after riots last week. The neighborho­od is the unit of change, because residents know how to lift them. They just need the resources.
 ??  ?? DAVID BROOKS
DAVID BROOKS

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