African American Reparation Bill Passes California Assembly

xoxodede

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African American Reparation Bill Passes California Assembly

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — A proposal to establish a task force to study and prepare recommendations for how to give reparations to African Americans passed the California Assembly on Thursday.

The bill advanced with a 56-5 vote as protests nationwide over police brutality re-energized the movement for racial justice and activists pressed for sweeping reforms. It is a top priority for California’s Legislative Black Caucus.

If the bill passes the Senate and is signed into law by Gov. Gavin Newsom, eight people with backgrounds in racial justice reforms would lead a study into who would be eligible for compensation and how it should be awarded.

Assemblywoman Shirley Weber, a Democrat from San Diego who wrote the bill, said the study would reiterate California’s history of abetting slavery, even as it joined the union as a “free state” in 1850.

“The discriminatory practices of the past echo into the everyday lives of today’s Californians,” said Weber, who leads the Legislative Black Caucus.

The panel would start meeting no later than June 2021

Congress last June held the first hearing on reparations in over a decade about a bill to study providing compensation to atone for the country’s history of slavery. But the legislation did not make it to a vote.

The federal government has given reparations before. After 120,000 Japanese Americans were held at internment camps during World War II, the U.S. government apologized and in 1988 paid $20,000 to each surviving victim.

“We seem to recognize that justice requires that those who have been treated unjustly need the means to make themselves whole again,” Weber said.

Another priority of California’s Legislative Black Caucus passed Wednesday when lawmakers approved a proposal to repeal California’s affirmative action ban, passed the Assembly. Voters will decide on the measure in November if the Senate approves the bill by June 25.
 

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ADOS chapters are doing the work. Many do not watch Yvette or Tone weekly -- or at all. These are people who are serious about policies for ADOS and reparations for ADOS.

Do not let people who are obsessed with Tone, Yvette and their Twitter takes - make you think this isn't serious. Or think they represent what most who support the ADOS initiatives are doing and fighting for.
 

xoxodede

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This already voted on a national "study" last year. It was pretty big news. But its a study. Don't get too excited yet.

This is a study - and it needs to be done for correct assessment. They have been working directly with their reps. It's a good thing.

Also, today this happed.

Democratic lawmakers call for vote on bill to study reparations - CNNPolitics


Democratic lawmakers call for vote on bill to study reparations

By Jamie Ehrlich, CNN

Updated 1:37 PM ET, Wed June 10, 2020

190709171651-mitch-mcconnell-reparations-descendants-slave-holders-obama-vpx-00000000-exlarge-169.jpg

establish a commission
to study the consequences and impacts of slavery and make recommendations for reparations proposals is likely to get a vote this year from the full Congress, Democratic lawmakers said.

A spokesperson for Democratic Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee of Texas, who is the sponsor of the legislation, said she is "confident" the bill will receive a vote in the House during this Congress, though its future is uncertain at the moment.

"In response to our current focus on Black inequality, H.R. 40 allows for the first constructive, scholarly conversation on race that is clearly needed in the U.S. today," Remmington Belford, a spokesperson for Jackson Lee, told CNN. "It offers full discussion on the analysis of economic, political, psychological, scientific, and sociological effects of slavery in the US."
The House held a Judiciary subcommittee hearing on the bill, titled "H.R. 40 and the Path to Restorative Justice," in 2019. The bill's next stop is a full committee hearing, followed by a vote in the House.

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer's office told CNN that the bill will get a vote if it comes out of committee.

A potential reexamining of the proposal comes as the United States is reeling from the recent deaths of several black Americans at the hands of the police, including Floyd, who died in Minneapolis last month after a white police officer knelt on his neck for more than eight minutes. Widespread protests across the country have called for codified change in how the law treats the black community.

Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton, the District of Columbia's nonvoting House member, said in an interview with CNN that recent events "virtually mandate" the passage of the legislation.
"The vote has not been set this year ... but I would be very surprised if we didn't have a vote this year," Norton said, adding that very few votes have been scheduled given the chaos brought by the pandemic.

"Given this huge crisis in our country, with the hearing having already taken place, I would expect a vote this year even though a vote on almost nothing has been set at this moment," Norton, a civil rights lawyer, said.

Jackson Lee's office said it has the support of 128 members of the House -- more than half of the Democratic caucus.

"The present racial tensions and attention given to black inequality has directly contributed to the supportive stance in pressing forward many members have taken. We still have much work to do, but we are closer than ever before," Belford said.

Norton says if it were not for the virus, she thinks the House would have passed the bill by now.
"I would venture to say that I would expect some bipartisan support for this bill, this is not a controversial bill. It's a bill to study, and it doesn't say do something specific, it would be hard to be against it," Norton said.
The bill would create a commission of 13 members who would compile a report of findings and recommendations on the issue and send it to Congress. Former Democratic Rep. John Conyers of Michigan, who served until 2017, had previously introduced legislation on reparations repeatedly over the span of multiple sessions of Congress.

When she first introduced the legislation, Jackson Lee said in a press release that "the Commission aims to study the impact of slavery and continuing discrimination against African-Americans, resulting directly and indirectly from slavery to segregation to the desegregation process and the present day."

The issue of reparations also gained steam through the 2020 Democratic primary, with several candidates endorsing some form of reparations. Several endorsed Jackson Lee's bill, including Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden.

Democratic Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey has introduced a companion version of the bill in the Senate, but its future remains uncertain under Majority Leader Mitch McConnell's leadership.

Booker, the first witness to speak at the House subcommittee hearing, told the committee that America has not yet grappled with racism and white supremacy and that the hearing presents a "historic opportunity to break the silence, to speak to the ugly past and talking constructively about how we will move this nation forward."

But McConnell said last year he opposed paying reparations, arguing "none of us currently living are responsible" for what he called America's "original sin."

"I don't think reparations for something that happened 150 years ago for whom none of us currently living are responsible is a good idea," the Kentucky Republican told reporters.
CNN's Haley Byrd and Clare Foran contributed to this report.
 
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