The Reporter (Vacaville)

The trouble with this reparation­s package

- — Vacaville author Danette Mitchell is a social issues advocate. 2022 Women of the Year Congressio­nal Award Recipient. E-mail: damitchell@earthlink. net

As a Black American who is a descendant of persons enslaved in the United States, a California resident, and a voter, I'm insulted and angered by the slate of reparation­s bills recently introduced by the California Legislativ­e Black Caucus.

While some of the 14 bills presented could qualify as reasonable policy, they all deserve a thumbs down regarding genuine reparation­s.

If you're not distributi­ng cash payments as part of the reparation­s package, you're not doing reparation­s.

After two years of research, debate, meetings, and public comments in person and by Zoom, including the 111-pages of recommenda­tions completed in 2023 by the California Reparation­s Task Force, Assemblyme­mber Lori Wilson, D-Suisun City, also Chair of the California Legislativ­e Black Caucus (CLBC), said we have a budget shortfall. She also said in a press statement that reparation­s don't only mean cash; the true meaning of the word repair involves much more. How can you repair anything without money?

The measures introduced are placed in categories representi­ng education, civil rights, criminal justice reform, health, and business. Some of the bills contain ambiguous language. Specificit­y always matters in legislatio­n.

The CLBC actually believed that the first set of measures introduced — some of them without any numbers, like remakes of previous bills — would be acceptable to Black Americans, who wouldn't benefit from any of them.

The CLBC actually believed that they could present a reparation­s package that would include other people. The package should only benefit qualified Black Americans. No other groups get to piggyback on our reparation­s when many of them have already benefited under laws and protection­s that were previously meant for Black people, like affirmativ­e action.

The CLBC must think their Black constituen­ts are naïve, gullible, and desperate. And are OK with an installmen­t plan when reparation­s should be timely and include transforma­tive benefits.

I agree with Wilson that we need a “comprehens­ive approach to dismantlin­g the legacy of slavery and systemic racism.” However, reparation­s should be a multigener­ational package, and the first round of bills should have prioritize­d cash payments for all qualified Black Americans. Next, a reparation­s package must include targeted policies and protection­s enacted into a Black Agenda, eliminatin­g the divides.

Any Black Empowermen­t plan must include cash. For one, the greatest crimes committed in the United States were against Black people for centuries. And money was used to build generation­al wealth at Black people's expense.

I could go on. Intelligen­t people make up the CLBC. They know that other groups in the past have received direct payments as part of their reparation­s package. They're familiar with the history of Black people in California and have seen the data.

Yet, their actions a few days ago have devalued and disrespect­ed Black people by expecting them to accept a reparation­s package that's not sustainabl­e enough and without direct monetary payments.

Their actions have insulted Black people's intelligen­ce by pretending reparation­s are being enacted by attempting to redefine it. So far, what's being presented has taken us away from reparation­s and not toward it.

Perhaps we should let our feelings concerning some of our CLBC lawmakers, whom we thought had our backs be known on election day.

Moving forward, first, we define reparation­s and won't allow our lawmakers to redefine it.

Chris Lodgson, lead organizer of Coalition for a Just and Equitable California, is calling on Black Americans, especially, to call or email the CLBC, telling them that the bill package isn't good enough. We want bills with targeted, tangible, timely monetary resources for Black American descendant­s now, not later.

The American Descendant­s of Slavery (ADOS) Advocacy Foundation, a grassroots organizati­on, has formed chapters across the nation in response to a landscape rife with yawning racialized gaps, the website reads. Anyone can become a member to help and expand the reparation­s movement.

Meanwhile, a known adage goes like this: As go California, as go the nation.

To other states who are contemplat­ing proposing reparation­s for Black Americans or, in the process, don't model California. Right now, we have the beginnings of a reparation­s package full of dribble and nothing about monetary compensati­on.

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