The California Black Caucus Introduces 1075 Page Reparations Package

By
Antonio Ray Harvey | California Black Media
California State Sen. Steven Bradford (D-Inglewood) rolled out his reparations package at the State Capitol on the first day of Black History Month, Feb. 1, 2024. CBM photo by Antonio Ray Harvey.
California State Sen. Steven Bradford (D-Inglewood) rolled out his reparations package at the State Capitol on the first day of Black History Month, Feb. 1, 2024. CBM photo by Antonio Ray Harvey.

*Members of the California Legislative Black Caucus (CLBC) announced plans to introduce a package of bills this year designed to address the recommendations the California Reparations Task Force made last year in its final report.

Certain advocacy groups and individuals say the legislative package the lawmakers
announced on Jan. 31 and Feb. 1 does not go far enough. They criticize the
absence of direct cash payments, an element they campaigned for as a centerpiece
to any compensation due to the descendants of people who endured slavery in the
Deep South and more than a century of social, economic and political injustices
after abolition.

Chris Lodgson, a member of the Coalition for a Just and Equitable California
(CJEC), released a statement after CLBC members made the announcement
during a press briefing with reporters held on Jan.31.

“As we’ve communicated to elected officials directly for some time, we believe
Any reparations package must be targeted explicitly and exclusively to
California’s 2 million Black American descendants of persons enslaved in the U.S.
(American Freedmen),” Lodgson said in a letter obtained by California Black Media.

“In addition, a true reparations package must include timely, tangible benefits (i.e. direct monetary payments). Our team will continue to review the proposals announced (Jan. 31 and Feb. 1) and any related bill/resolution language as they become available. But the time for strong, bold Reparations is now, not later.”

Los Angeles-based attorney and former chairperson Kamilah Moore, Esq. of the California Reparations Task Force holds he 1075-page report submitted to the legislature on June 28, 2023. The report contains 100-plus reparations recommendations. CBM photo by Antonio Ray Harvey.
Los Angeles-based attorney and former chairperson Kamilah Moore, Esq. of the California Reparations Task Force holds he 1075-page report submitted to the legislature on June 28, 2023. The report contains 100-plus reparations recommendations. CBM photo by Antonio Ray Harvey.

Members of CLBC first presented 14 reparations bills on Jan. 31 while on a Zoom
call with Black media outlets from across the state.

CLBC chairperson Assemblymember Lori D. Wilson (D-Suisun City) outlined the goals of the package and stated its intention to right the wrongs of historical injustices that African Americans endured in the state of California.

Sen. Steven Bradford (D-Gardena), the vice chair of CLBC, presented additional pieces of legislation to implement reparations at the State Capitol on the first day of Black History Month, Feb. 1.

Wilson said the Caucus’s package is a “first step” in a multi-year effort to implement the legislative recommendations in the report.

Wilson was joined on the briefing by Assemblymembers Corey Jackson (DMoreno Valley), Reggie Jones-Sawyer (D-Los Angeles), and Akilah Weber (D-LaMesa) – all members of the CLBC.

Khansa “Friday Jones” Jones-Muhammad, the vice president of the Los Angeles Reparations Advisory Commission speaks during the public comment period during a California Reparations Task Force meeting in Sacramento in March 2023. Jones-Muhammad recently stated that the CLBC's reparations package does not address direct cash payments. CBM photo by Antonio Ray Harvey.
Khansa “Friday Jones” Jones-Muhammad, the vice president of the Los Angeles Reparations Advisory Commission speaks during the public comment period during a California Reparations Task Force meeting in Sacramento in March 2023. Jones-Muhammad recently stated that the CLBC’s reparations package does not address direct cash payments. CBM photo by Antonio Ray Harvey.

“While many only associate direct cash payments with reparations the true
meaning of the word, to repair, involves much more. As laid out in the report, we
need a comprehensive approach to dismantling the legacy of slavery and systemic
racism,” Wilson said in a statement. “This year’s legislative package tackles a wide
range of issues; from criminal justice reforms to property rights to education,
civil rights and food justice.”

Bradford first introduced legislation Senate Bill (SB) 490 in August 2023. The bill
would create a new state agency called the California American Freedman Affairs
Agency (CAFAA).

The CAFAA would be responsible for managing the infrastructure required to
manage reparations as determined by the Legislature and Governor.

“Our coalition’s unwavering commitment has been to pursue lineage-based
reparations, encompassing direct monetary payments/compensation, state
recognition of descendants as a protected class, and the establishment of the CA
American Freedman Affairs Agency through SB490 (Bradford)” Lodgson stated.

The report documented numerous cases of social injustices against Black
Californians that occurred either by custom or by law across the state. For
example, last year the city of Palm Springs issued an apology for destroying the
homes of Black people on short notice under eminent domain laws in an area of
the city known as Section 14. However, the affected families that lost their homes
were never compensated for them.

The descendants of the Section 14 property owners filed a claim against Palm
Springs seeking $2 billion for alleged harms due to the removal of their forebears,
according to the family members’ attorney, Areva Martin.

Before issuing the apology, Palm Springs officials investigated the removal
process of the houses, and they voted to provide compensation in the form of
reparations.

Martin said the city has not taken any action yet.

The CLBC bill packages were released three weeks after Gov. Gavin Newsom
presented a $291 billion spending plan to the California Legislature on Jan. 10.
Newsom expects the state to have a $37.9 billion deficit, a figure much lower than
the nearly $68 billion deficit projected by the nonpartisan Legislative Analyst
Office (LAO) in December.

Bradford said the state budget will affect potential reparations policies.
“Without a doubt, the budget will impact what we do but we’ve often said in
California the budget is a reflection of our priorities and a reflection of our values,”
Bradford said during his news conference.

“If we say we value reparations and want to heal the harms of slavery in this country and in this state, we have to make this a priority.”

Last year, on June 28, the nine-member panel, officially called the Task Force to
Study and Develop Reparations Proposals for African Americans submitted a
1075-page, comprehensive reparations plan that includes more than 115
recommendations and a survey.

Khansa Jones-Muhammad, better known as “Friday Jones,” a reparations advocate, educator, and Vice President of the Los Angeles Reparations Advisory
Commission (RAC), sent a message to the CLBC to share her thoughts about the
reparations package.

The RAC is a seven-member task force comprised of activists, academicians,
attorneys, racial justice advocates, and more. It is supported by Los Angeles’ Civil
+ Human Rights and Equity Department’s Office of Racial Equity.
RAC’s main function it to advise the city on the formation of a reparations pilot
program for Californians who are descendants of enslaved Black Americans in the
Los Angeles area.

“I just emailed @CABlackCaucus to let them know we deserve better
#Reparations bill package with targeted, timely, tangible, monetary resources for
Black American descendants of U.S. chattel slavery,” Jones-Muhammad posted
Feb. 1.

Wilson and Bradford said that additional legislation concerning legislation would
be considered in the future.

“The Caucus is looking to make strides in the second half of this legislative session
as we build towards righting the wrongs of California’s past in future sessions,”
Wilson stated.

MORE NEWS ON EURWEB: Remaining Tulsa Race Massacre Survivors to Speak Before Oklahoma Supreme Court – Fighting for Reparations 

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