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Reparations in California: What can lawmakers achieve?

The California Reparations Task Force on Thursday delivered a final report with sweeping recommendations for financial, legislative, and administrative steps toward closing racial gaps in wealth, health, and opportunity. 

The nine-member task force, appointed by the governor and legislature, spent two years on its 1,100-page report – the first attempt by a U.S. state to take up the issue of reparations to Black residents. Those involved hope it will become a template for other states. 

Why We Wrote This

California is the first U.S. state to take steps toward reparations for harms caused by slavery and institutional racism. With a sweeping report from the state task force, it’s now up to state lawmakers.

State lawmakers and most Californians acknowledge a history of violence and racism in need of correction, in a state not generally linked with slavery. But there’s no consensus on how best to do that, and now lawmakers begin the complex work of administering justice.

In a large and demographically diverse state, the work of delivering myriad legislative reforms is politically fraught, especially when the state is tackling a $32 billion shortfall.

State Senator Steven Bradford, a member of the task force and vice chair of the California Legislative Black Caucus, does not expect immediate legislative action. He references Martin Luther King Jr.’s counsel to “accept the finite disappointment and yet cling to the infinite hope.”

“I’m hopeful that this state will do the right thing,” says Mr. Bradford, “but I enter this with the understanding that disappointment will probably be a part of it. … So I have infinite hope that at some point, this country will recognize its original sin. And that was slavery.”

How do you put a price on slavery’s continuing harm? That question is what California lawmakers will take up now that a historic report, released yesterday, has landed – with sweeping recommendations for financial, legislative, and administrative steps to take toward closing racial gaps in wealth, health, and opportunity. 

State lawmakers and most Californians acknowledge a history of violence and racism in need of correction, in a state not generally linked with slavery. But there’s no consensus on how best to repair, and now lawmakers begin the complex work of administering justice that heals the past and recalibrates fairness moving forward.

Implementing the report in its entirety would overhaul state government and the distribution of public resources. But in a demographically diverse state with 40 million people, 6.5% of them Black residents, the work of delivering myriad legislative reforms – while the state tackles a $32 billion shortfall – is politically fraught for this Democratic supermajority.

Why We Wrote This

California is the first U.S. state to take steps toward reparations for harms caused by slavery and institutional racism. With a sweeping report from the state task force, it’s now up to state lawmakers.

“Although it would be foolish to downplay the historical and unconscionable discrimination against African Americans, how would an attempt to provide cash or other tangible reparations to only that one aggrieved group sit with the general population?” asks veteran Democratic strategist Garry South. “My bet is it wouldn’t sit very well.”  

The nine-member Reparations Task Force, appointed by the governor and legislature, spent two years on its 1,100-page report – the first state in the nation to do so – with the hope of those involved that it will become a template for other states.

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