Times-Herald (Vallejo)

State to study reparation­s for Black Americans

- By Adam Beam

SACRAMENTO >> California will develop a detailed plan for granting reparation­s to Black Americans under a new law Gov. Gavin Newsom signed Wednesday.

The law creates a ninemember task force to come up with proposals for how the state could provide reparation­s to Black Americans, what form those reparation­s might take and who would be eligible to receive them.

The reparation­s would not be limited to slavery, but the law requires the task force to give special considerat­ion for Black people who are descendant­s of slaves. The task force’s recommenda­tions would not be binding. The task force must give a report to the state Legislatur­e one year after its first meeting.

“This is not just about California, this is about making an impact, and a dent, across the rest of the country,” Newsom said moments after signing the bill during a ceremony broadcast on his YouTube channel

alifornia never had a gover nment- sa nc tioned system of slavery. It entered the Union in 1850 as a free state. But the state did let slave- owning whites bring their slaves to California. The Legislatur­e even passed a law making it legal to arrest runaway slaves and return them to their owners.

Reparation­s for slavery have been debated for decades in the United States. A similar proposal to study reparation­s for Black Americans was first introduced in Congress in 1989. It has never passed, but Congress held a hearing on the proposal last year.

Reparation­s would not be unpreceden­ted in the United States. The U.S. government partially funded German reparation­s to Holocaust victims following World War II. And in 1988, the federal government set up a reparation­s program for Japanese- Americans who were held in concentrat­ion camps during World War II.

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