The Guardian (USA)

San Francisco backs reparation­s plans, including $5m to eligible Black adults

- Lois Beckett and agencies

San Francisco lawmakers heard a range of options on Tuesday to provide reparation­s to Black people for decades of racist treatment by the city government.

The more than 100 recommenda­tions included payments of $5m to every eligible Black adult, the eliminatio­n of personal debt and tax burdens, guaranteed annual incomes of at least $97,000 for 250 years and homes in San Francisco for just $1 a family.

The San Francisco board of supervisor­s hearing the report for the first time on Tuesday voiced enthusiast­ic support for the ideas listed, with some saying money should not stop the city from doing the right thing.

Several supervisor­s said they were surprised to hear pushback from politicall­y liberal San Franciscan­s apparently unaware that the legacy of slavery and racist policies continues to keep Black Americans on the bottom rungs of health, education and economic prosperity and overrepres­ented in prisons and homeless population­s.

“Those of my constituen­ts who lost their minds about this proposal, it’s not something we’re doing or we would do for other people. It’s something we would do for our future for everybody’s collective future,” said Rafael Mandelman, a supervisor, whose district includes the heavily LGBTQ+ Castro neighborho­od.

Black residents once made up more than 13% of San Francisco’s population, but more than 50 years later, they account for less than 6% of the city’s residents – and 38% of the city’s homeless population. The reparation­s attempt to rectify historic injustices by focusing not on slavery but rather the city’s discrimina­tory treatment of Black residents during the period of “urban renewal” in the 1950s through 1970s, which included the razing of a thriving Black neighborho­od and the displaceme­nt of nearly 20,000 people in the name of “economic developmen­t”.

Adopting any of the recommenda­tions would make San Francisco the first major US city to fund reparation­s, though the effort faces steep financial headwinds and criticism from conservati­ves.

The draft reparation­s plan, released in December, is unmatched nationwide in its specificit­y and breadth. The committee hasn’t done an analysis of the cost of the proposals, but critics have slammed the plan as financiall­y and politicall­y impossible. An estimate from Stanford University’s Hoover Institutio­n, which leans conservati­ve, has said it would cost each non-Black family in the city at least $600,000.

Tuesday’s unanimous expression­s of support for reparation­s by the board do not mean all the recommenda­tions will ultimately be adopted, as the body can vote to approve, reject or change any or all of them. A final committee report is due in June.

San Francisco’s reckoning with the city’s historic treatment of Black people is being considered at a time of current economic instabilit­y, as the region’s tech industry reels from the failure of the Silicon Valley Bank and local businesses are seeing waves of layoffs.

Tinisch Hollins, vice-chair of the African American reparation­s advisory committee, alluded to those comments and several people who lined up to speak reminded the board they would be watching closely what the supervisor­s do next.

“I don’t need to impress upon you the fact that we are setting a national precedent here in San Francisco,” Hollins said. “What we are asking for and what we’re demanding for is a real commitment to what we need to move things forward.”

An estimated 50,000 Black people currentlyl­ive in San Francisco, but it is not clear how many of them would be eligible for financial reparation­s. The recommenda­tions lay out a number of possible criteria, such as living in San Francisco during a certain time period and descending from someone.

Eric McDonnell, chair of San Francisco’s African American reparation­s advisory committee, said he was disappoint­ed by people who do not understand the legacy of US slavery and how structural racism reverberat­es through institutio­ns today.

“There’s still a veiled perspectiv­e that, candidly, Black folks don’t deserve this,” he said. “The number itself, $5m, is actually low when you consider the harm.”

The idea of paying compensati­on for historic wrongs has taken off across the country, with California in 2020 becoming the first state in the US to form a reparation­s taskforce. The idea has not been taken up at the federal level.

The Chicago suburb of Evanston became the first US city to fund reparation­s in 2021, using tax money from the sale of recreation­al marijuana. The city gave money to qualifying people for home repairs, property down payments and interest or late penalties due on property in the city. In December, the Boston city council approved a reparation­s study taskforce.

Critics of reparation­s for Black Americans often ignore the movement’s focus on government discrimina­tion against Black people in the 20th century and say the payouts make no sense in a state and city that never enslaved Black people. California joined the United States in 1850 as a “free

state”, but the state’s reparation­s committee has documented numerous accounts of land confiscati­on and housing discrimina­tion, among other forms of institutio­nalized racism. Generally, reparation­s opponents say taxpayers who were never slave owners should not have to pay money to people who were not enslaved.

Reparation­s advocates say that view ignores a wealth of data and documentat­ion showing how even after US slavery officially ended in 1865, government policies and practices worked to imprison Black people at higher rates, deny access to home and business loans and restrict where they could work and live. San Francisco’s report examines the legacy of discrimina­tion against Black people in public education, as well as the toll of racial violence. It notes that at least 25 San Francisco police officers were members of the Ku Klux Klan, and that, since its founding, the police department has “killed African Americans at disproport­ionate rates”.

Justin Hansford, professor at Howard University School of Law, says no municipal reparation­s plan will have enough money to right the wrongs of slavery, but he appreciate­s any attempts by city officials to “genuinely, legitimate­ly, authentica­lly” make things right. And that includes cash, he said.

“If you’re going to try to say you’re sorry, you have to speak in the language that people understand, and money is that language,” he said.

John Dennis, chair of the San Francisco Republican party, said he did not support reparation­s, and called the city’s current conversati­on “completely unserious”.

The $5m lump sum payment “seems ridiculous, and it also seems that this is the one city where it could possibly pass”, Dennis said.

 ?? Photograph: Rich Pedroncell­i/AP ?? Dr Amos C Brown Jr, vice-chair for the California reparation­s task force, holds a copy of the book Songs of Slavery and Emancipati­on.
Photograph: Rich Pedroncell­i/AP Dr Amos C Brown Jr, vice-chair for the California reparation­s task force, holds a copy of the book Songs of Slavery and Emancipati­on.
 ?? Photograph: Yalonda M James/AP ?? Shamann Walton, San Francisco board of supervisor­s president, delivers remarks during a press conference in March 2022.
Photograph: Yalonda M James/AP Shamann Walton, San Francisco board of supervisor­s president, delivers remarks during a press conference in March 2022.

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