The Oklahoman

Calif. panel OKs limit on reparation­s

- Janie Har

California’s first-in-the-nation task force on reparation­s has decided to limit state compensati­on to the descendant­s of free and enslaved Black people who were in the U.S. in the 19th century, narrowly rejecting a proposal to include all Black people regardless of lineage.

The vote Tuesday split 5-4, and the hourslong debate was at times testy and emotional. Near the end, the Rev. Amos Brown, president of the San Francisco branch of the NAACP and vice chair of the task force, pleaded with the commission to move ahead with a clear definition of who would be eligible for restitutio­n.

“Please, please, please, I beg us tonight, take the first step,” he said. “We’ve got to give emergency treatment to where it is needed.”

Gov. Gavin Newsom signed legislatio­n creating the two-year reparation­s task force in 2020, making California the only state to move ahead with a study and plan, with a mission to study the institutio­n of slavery and its harms and to educate the public about its findings.

California’s task force members – nearly all of whom can trace their families back to enslaved ancestors in the U.S. – were aware that their deliberati­ons over a pivotal question will shape reparation­s discussion­s across the country.

Those favoring a lineage approach said that a compensati­on and restitutio­n plan based on genealogy as opposed to race has the best change of surviving a legal challenge.

They also opened eligibilit­y to free Black people who migrated to the country before the 20th century, given possible difficulties in documentin­g family history and the risk at the time of becoming enslaved.

Others on the task force argued that reparation­s should include all Black people in the U.S. who suffer from systemic racism in housing, education and employment and said they were defining eligibilit­y too soon in the process.

Civil rights attorney and task force member Lisa Holder proposed directing economists working with the task force to use California’s estimated 2.6 million Black residents to calculate compensati­on while they continue hearing from the public.

“We need to galvanize the base, and that is Black people,” she said. “We can’t go into this reparation­s proposal without having all African Americans in California behind us.”

But Kamilah Moore, a lawyer and chair of the task force, said expanding eligibilit­y would create its own fissures and was beyond the purpose of the committee.

“That is going to aggrieve the victims of the institutio­n of slavery, which are the direct descendant­s of the enslaved people in the United States,” she said. “It goes against the spirit of the law as written.”

The committee is not even a year into its two-year process, and there is no compensati­on plan of any kind on the table.

The eligibilit­y question has dogged the task force since its inaugural meeting in June, when viewers called in pleading with the nine-member group to devise targeted proposals and cash payments to make whole the descendant­s of enslaved people in the U.S.

 ?? OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR VIA AP FILE ?? California Gov. Gavin Newsom in 2020 signs into law a bill establishi­ng a task force to study reparation­s for Black people.
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR VIA AP FILE California Gov. Gavin Newsom in 2020 signs into law a bill establishi­ng a task force to study reparation­s for Black people.

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