San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Tying center ownership, reparation­s a bold move

- San Francisco Chronicle columnist Justin Phillips appears Sundays. Email: jphillips@ sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @JustMrPhil­lips

Black community leaders in San Francisco have spent the past few years wrestling the city for control of the Fillmore Heritage Center. They say turning the city-owned property over to Black residents is the key to resurrecti­ng a neighborho­od once known as the Harlem of the West.

Monday marked an escalation in their tactics. In a bid to push city officials to do what many Black San Franciscan­s have long thought was right, they tied Black ownership of the center to reparation­s.

“A landless people is a hopeless people,” the Rev. Amos Brown, a San Francisco native and NAACP chapter president, told me. Brown also belongs to

a state Reparation­s Task Force committee advocating alongside residents and community groups for control of the heritage center.

There’s a savvy strategy in linking its ownership to reparation­s, because it could very well force the city’s hand. But if the city does hand over the center without helping the Black community bring it back to life, any failure to revive the center and the neighborho­od that surrounds it could hurt the broader reparation­s movement, which is already fragile and poorly understood.

Slave reparation­s are an old, divisive topic in America. Black people were promised 40 acres and a mule as repayment for slavery in 1865. What we got instead was 156 years of systemic oppression. Only recently have elected officials taken the dialogue seriously, with California starting the first-in-the-nation task force over the summer to study and recommend reparation­s for descendant­s of slaves.

San Francisco and Oakland have created guaranteed­income pilot programs and reinvestme­nt initiative­s shaped by the spirit of reparation­s, even though local officials avoid publicly describing them as such.

That could be because of how poorly the term polls.

More than 60% of Americans, and 90% of Republican­s, oppose reparation­s, according to a recent national poll by the University of Massachuse­tts Amherst. Only 28% of white people support it.

Local officials dance around the word. Black leaders in the Fillmore have embraced it.

“I see (the Fillmore Heritage

The Fillmore Heritage Center sits empty now. Community leaders are demanding that ownership of the property be turned over to the city’s Black community.

Majeid Crawford, New Community Leadership Foundation

Center) as something that can whet the appetite around reparation­s talk in the city,” said Majeid Crawford, who, as associate director of the New Community Leadership Foundation, has tried over the years to breathe new life into the vacant Fillmore Heritage Center. “But it shouldn’t become the symbol of reparation­s.”

Here’s where it gets complicate­d: It already has.

The Fillmore neighborho­od was the city’s Black cultural epicenter in the 1940s. Black shipyard workers flocked to the area for jobs during World War II. They set down social and economic roots, turning the Fillmore into a self-sustaining chocolate city wrapped inside of a largely white one. Then came urban renewal of the 1950s and 1960s, which razed non-white neighborho­ods like the Fillmore in the name of “redevelopm­ent.”

San Francisco’s efforts to revitalize the neighborho­od have been scattersho­t and more performati­ve than substantiv­e in recent years. Multimilli­on-dollar projects have come and gone, yet the area is still plagued by infrastruc­ture woes. Even the $75 million Fillmore Heritage

Center, built in 2007 to be a premier attraction headlined by a short-lived, high-end Japanese restaurant and nightclub, failed to attract enough foot traffic to keep local businesses afloat.

The heritage center was supposed to mark a new chapter for the neighborho­od. It never materializ­ed.

San Francisco and its redevelopm­ent agency, which currently own the property, have acknowledg­ed that the space belongs under Black ownership. But after the heritage center closed in 2019, they’ve rejected proposals from Black-led community groups vying to take it over.

“It’s an absolute outrage that a beautiful building like this has sat vacant over the years because the city can’t get its act together,” said District Five Supervisor Dean Preston, who has helped nonprofits pitch reopening plans to the city.

This feels even more jarring when looking at what’s happening across the Bay Bridge. Last week, Oakland officials took one step closer to handing over their share of the Coliseum, the city’s largest piece of public land, to a Black-led entity called the African American Sports and Entertainm­ent Group.

It didn’t take calls for reparation­s. The group just had a detailed plan — possibly bringing an WNBA team to Oakland, housing and the creation of a cultural hub celebratin­g Black culture — and Oakland officials agreed.

There’s some desperatio­n in the reparation­s demand made by Black community leaders in San Francisco. The city isn’t going to change its ways, they say, so even without a plan for what nonprofit will run the heritage center, they still chose to go public with their demand.

That makes me a little nervous about how all this will turn out, but I understand why they’re fed up. And Crawford said that what worriers like me don’t appreciate is that this is actually part of a multistep plan that the state Reparation­s Task Force is putting together.

“The reparation­s committee’s upcoming five-month plan is the steak. This call for the Fillmore Heritage Center is just the appetizer when it comes to reparation­s in the city,” Crawford said.

Black leaders took a risk by invoking “reparation­s” in a serious way for the first time last week. I just hope it was a calculated one.

“I see (the Fillmore Heritage Center) as something that can whet the appetite around reparation­s talk in the city.”

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 ?? Santiago Mejia / The Chronicle 2019 ??
Santiago Mejia / The Chronicle 2019

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