Home>Articles>California Reparations Task Force Releases Final Reparations Report

California State Capitol on March 11, 2022. (Photo: Kevin Sanders for California Globe).

California Reparations Task Force Releases Final Reparations Report

‘This is an embarrassing, patronizing, slapdash, and offensive list of recommendations’

By Evan Symon, June 29, 2023 7:18 pm

The California Reparations Task Force released their final report Thursday, outlining more than 100 recommendations on how descendants of slaves in California could receive some form of compensation.

Since the Task Force was first put together in late 2020, the Task Force has had a long, controversial road to a final report. While initially encompassing all people of African descent, the group of those qualified to receive reparations was significantly narrowed in March 2022 when the task force voted to limit the possible reparations to those who are an African American descendant of an enslaved person or free Black person living in the US prior to the end of the 19th century.

In June 2022 the Task Force released its first report, giving a recommendation of reparations, in the form of home buying assistance, free college tuition, and business grants. However, one of the many criticisms against the report recommendations was that no estimated monetary figure was attached. In early December, an estimate of $569 billion was provided by the state, leading to disbelief and the threat of lawsuits if the number holds. Later that month, compensation compensation and eligibility requirements were discussed.

However, since the beginning of the year, many parts of the Task Force’s actions have been scrutinized. The question of compensation has in particular been trounced by the media, as well as residents, with so many opposing the $800 billion compensation plan approved by the Task Force in May that Task Force members came out and said “STOP focusing on the monetary part of the plan.” A more recent figure of $1.2 million given to each black resident has been similarly scrutinized.

It was so much that Governor Newsom said that he would not support cash payments, both due to the large cost and the massive $22.5 billion budget deficit that the state is facing. Also not working in the Task Force’s favor is an overall lack of support, as a poll earlier this month found that only 39% of voters support the Task Force. Despite waning popularity, the Task Force kept most of their previously floated recommendations, releasing the final report on Thursday.

The List of Recommendations

According to the final report, the Task Force recommends the following:

General Structural Policy Recommendations:

  • Mandate Effective Racial Impact Analyses
  • Create and Fund the California American Freedman
    Affairs Agency
  • Repeal Proposition 209
  • Require Agency Transparency
  • Make Legislative Findings that Build Legislative Records
    that Reflect the Historic and Present State of Pervasive
    Structural Barriers and Discrimination Against African
    Americans and Support Reparative Enactments
  • Transmit the AB 3121 Task Force Report to the President
    of the United States and the United States Congress

Policies Addressing Enslavement:

  • Enact a Resolution Affirming the State’s Protection of
    Descendants of Enslaved People and Guaranteeing
    Protection of the Civil, Political, and Socio-Cultural
    Rights of Descendants of Enslaved People
  • Amend the California Constitution to Prohibit
    Involuntary Servitude
  • Require Payment of Fair Market Value for Labor
    Provided by Incarcerated Persons (Whether in Jail
    or Prison)
  • Emphasize the “Rehabilitation” in the California
    Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR)
  • Abolish the Death Penalty
  • Prohibit Private Prisons from Benefiting from
    Contracts with CDCR to Provide Reentry Services to
    Incarcerated or Paroled Individuals

Policies Addressing Racist Terror:

  • Advance the Study of the Intergenerational, Direct,
    and Indirect Impacts of Racism
  • Establish and Fund Community Wellness Centers in
    African American Communities
  • Fund Research to Study the Mental Health Issues
    Within California’s African American Youth
    Population, and Address Rising Suicide Rates Among
    African American Youth
  • Expand the Membership of the Mental Health
    Services Oversight and Accountability Commission
    to Include an Expert in Reducing Disparities in
    Mental Health Care Access and Treatment
  • Fund Community-Driven Solutions to Decrease
    Community Violence at the Family, School, and
    Neighborhood Levels in African American Communities
  • Address and Remedy Discrimination Against African
    American LGBTQ+ Youth and Adults, Reduce
    Economic Disparities for the African American
    LGBTQ+ Population, and Reduce Disparities in
    Mental Health and Health Care Outcomes for
    African American LGBTQ+ Youth and Adults
  • Implement Procedures to Address the Over-Diagnosis
    of Emotional Disturbance Disorders, Including
    Conduct Disorder, in African American Children
  • Disrupt the Mental Health Crisis and County Jail
    Cycle in African American Communities
  • Create and Fund Equivalents to the UC-PRIME-LEADABC Program for Psychologists, Licensed Professional
    Counselors, and Licensed Professional Therapists
  • Eliminate Legal Protections for Peace Offcers Who
    Violate Civil or Constitutional Rights
  • Recommend Abolition of the Qualifed Immunity
    Doctrine to Allow Access to Justice for Victims of
    Police Violence
  • Assess and Remedy Racially Biased Treatment of African
    American Adults and Juveniles in Custody in County
    Jails, State Prisons, Juvenile Halls, and Youth Camps

Policies Affecting Political Disenfranchisement:

  • Require District-Based Voting and Independent
    Redistricting Commissions to Safeguard Against the
    Dilution of the African American Voting Bloc
  • Increase Funding to Support the California
    Department of Justice’s Enforcement of Voting
    Rights in California
  • Enact Legislation Aligning with the Objectives of
    AB 2576 and Establish Separate Funding to Support
    Educational and Civic Engagement Activities
  • Provide Funding to NGOs Whose Work Focuses on
    Increasing Civic Engagement Among African Americans
  • Declare Election Day a Paid State Holiday and Provide
    Support to Essential Workers to Increase Access to
    the Polls
  • Remove the Barrier of Proving Identity to Vote
  • Increase Jury Participation of Persons with Felony
    Convictions and Discourage Judges and Attorneys
    from Excluding Potential Jurors Solely for Having a
    Prior Felony Conviction
  • Increase Efforts to Restore the Voting Rights of
    Formerly and Currently Incarcerated Persons
    and Provide Access to Those Who

Housing Segregation and Unjust Property Takings:

  • Enact Policies Overhauling the Housing
    Industrial Complex
  • Collect Data on Housing Discrimination
  • Provide Anti-Racism Training to Workers in the
    Housing Field
  • Expand Grant Funding to Community-Based
    Organizations to Increase Home Ownership
  • Provide Property Tax Relief to African Americans,
    Especially Descendants, Living in Formerly Redlined
    Neighborhoods, Who Purchase or Construct a
    New Home
  • Provide Direct Financial Assistance to Increase Home
    Ownership Among African Americans, Especially
    Descendants, Through Shared Appreciation Loans
    and Subsidized Down Payments, Mortgages, and
    Homeowner’s Insurance
  • Require State Review and Approval of All Residential
    Land Use Ordinances Enacted by Historically and
    Currently Segregated Cities and Counties
  • Repeal Crime-Free Housing Policies
  • Increase Affordable Housing for African
    American Californians
  • Provide Restitution for Racially Motivated Takings
  • Provide a Right to Return for Displaced African
    American Californians

Separate and Unequal Education:

  • Increase Funding to Schools to Address Racial Disparities
  • Fund Grants to Local Educational Agencies to Address
    the COVID-19 Pandemic’s Impacts on Preexisting
    Racial Disparities in Education
  • Implement Systematic Review of School Discipline Data
  • Improve Access to Educational Opportunities for All
    Incarcerated People
  • Adopt Mandatory Curriculum for Teacher
    Credentialing and Trainings for School Personnel
    and Grants for Teachers
  • Employ Proven Strategies to Recruit African
    American Teachers
  • Require that Curriculum at All Levels Be Inclusive
    and Free of Bias
  • Advance the Timeline for Ethnic Studies Classes
  • Adopt a K-12 Black Studies Curriculum
  • Adopt the Freedom School Summer Program
  • Reduce Racial Disparities in the STEM Fields for
    African American Students
  • Expand Access to Career Technical Education
    for Descendants
  • Improve Access to Public Schools
  • Fund Free Tuition to California Public Colleges
    and Universities
  • Eliminate Standardized Testing for Admission to
    Graduate Programs in the University of California
    and California State University Systems
  • Identify and Eliminate Racial Bias and Discrimination
    in Statewide K-12 Profciency Assessments

Racism in Environment and Infrastructure:

  • Increase Greenspace Access and Recreation
    Opportunities in African American Communities
  • Test for and Eliminate Toxicity in
    Descendant Communities
  • Increase Trees in Redlined and
    Descendant Communities
  • Develop Climate Resilience Hubs in Redlined and
    Descendant Communities
  • Remove Lead in Drinking Water
  • Prevent Highway Expansion and Mitigate
    Transportation Pollution
  • Address Food Injustice

Pathologizing the African American Family:

  • Reduce and Seek to Eliminate Racial Disparities in the
    Removal of African American Children from Their
    Homes and Families
  • Reduce the Placement of African American Children
    in Foster Care and Increase Kinship Placements for
    African American Children
  • Establish and Fund Early Intervention Programs that
    Address Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) Within the
    African American Community
  • Eliminate Interest on Past-Due Child Support and
    Eliminate Back Child Support Debt
  • Eliminate or Reduce Charges for Phone Calls
    from Detention Facilities Located Within the State
    of California
  • Address Disproportionate Homelessness Among
    African American Californians
  • Address Disparities and Discrimination Associated
    with Substance Use Recovery Services
  • End the Under-Protection of African American
    Women and Girls

Control Over Creative, Cultural, And Intellectual Life:

  • Provide State Funding to African Americans to
    Address Disparity in Compensation Among Athletes
    in the University of California and State System and
    Funding to Support African American Athletes in
    Capitalizing on their Name, Image, and Likeness and
    Intellectual Property
  • Prohibit Discrimination Based on Natural and
    Protective Hair Styles in All Competitive Sports
  • Identify and Remove Monuments, Plaques, State
    Markers, and Memorials Memorializing and
    Preserving Confederate Culture; Erect Monuments,
    Plaques, and Memorials Memorializing and
    Preserving the Reconstruction Era and the African
    American Community
  • Provide Funding to the Proposed California American
    Freedmen Affairs Agency, Specifically for Creative,
    Cultural, and Intellectual Life
  • Eliminate the California Department of Corrections
    and Rehabilitation’s Practice of Banning Books

Stolen Labor And Hindered Opportunities:

  • Create Greater Transparency in
    Gubernatorial Appointments
  • Provide Guaranteed Income Program for Descendants
  • Eliminate Barriers to Licensure for People with
    Criminal Records
  • Transform the Minimum Wage Back into a Living Wage
  • Advance Pay Equity Through Employment Transparency
    and Equity in Hiring and Promotion
  • Create and Fund Professional Career Training
  • Create or Fund Apprenticeship Grant Programs
  • Fund African American Businesses
  • Fund African American Banks

The Unjust Legal System:

  • Allocate Funds to Remedy Harms and
    Promote Opportunity
  • Eliminate Barriers for African American Prospective
    Attorneys by Funding Legal Education and Ending
    Discriminatory Gatekeeping at the State Bar
  • Prohibit Cash Bail and Mandate that Those Who Are
    Acquitted or Exonerated be Reimbursed by the Entity
    or Entities at Fault
  • Enact Enforceable Legislation with Penalties that
    Dismantles the School to Prison Pipeline and
    Decriminalizes the Youth Justice System
  • Amend the Penal Code to Clarify and Confirm
    Decriminalization of Transit and Other Public
    Disorder Offenses
  • Amend the Penal Code to Shift Public Disorder
    Infractions and Low-Level Crimes Outside of Law
    Enforcement Jurisdiction
  • Prohibit Pretextual Traffic and Pedestrian Stops,
    Probation Inquiries, and Consent-Only Searches
  • Mandate Policies and Training on Bias-Free Policing
  • Enact Legislation that Requires the Department
    of Justice to Promulgate Model Law Enforcement
    Policies Designed to Prevent Racial Disparities
    in Policing
  • Repeal Three Strikes Sentencing
  • Abolish the Death Penalty
  • Strengthen and Expand the Racial Justice Act
  • Assess and Remedy Racially Biased Treatment of
    African American Adults and Juveniles in Custody
    in County Jails, State Prisons, Juvenile Halls, and
    Youth Camps
  • Accelerate Scheduled Closures of Identified
    California State Prisons and Close Ten Prisons Over
    the Next Five Years, with Financial Savings Redirected
    to the California American Freedmen Affairs Agency
  • Require Payment of Fair Market Value for Labor
    Provided by Incarcerated Persons
  • Emphasize the “Rehabilitation” in the California Department of
    Corrections and Rehabilitation
  • Prohibit Private Prisons from
    Benefting from Contracts with
    CDCR to Provide Reentry Services to Incarcerated or
    Paroled Individuals
  • Increase Efforts to Restore the Voting Rights of
    Formerly and Currently Incarcerated Persons
    and Provide Access to Those Who Are Currently
    Incarcerated and Eligible to Vote
  • Eliminate Legal Protections for Peace Officers Who
    Violate Civil or Constitutional Rights
  • Recommend Abolition of the Qualified Immunity
    Doctrine to Allow Victims of Police Violence
    Access to Justice
  • End the Under-Protection of African American
    Women and Girls

Mental Physical Harm And Neglect:

  • Address Health Inequities Among African American
    Californians by Funding the California Health Equity
    and Racial Justice Fund
  • Improve Health Insurance Coverage
  • Evaluate the Effcacy of Health Care Laws, Including
    Recent Enactments
  • Address Anti-Black Discrimination in Health Care
  • Mandate Standardized Data Collection
  • Provide Medical Social Workers/Health Care Advocates
  • Improve Diversity Among Clinical Trial Participants
  • Remedy the Higher Rates of Injury and Death Among
    African American Mothers and Infants
  • Fund Community Wellness Centers in African
    American Communities
  • Fund Research to Study the Mental Health Issues
    Within California’s African American Youth Population,
    and Address Rising Suicide Rates Among African
    American Youth
  • Meet the Health Needs of African American Elders
  • Remedy Disparities in Oral Health Care
  • Address Disparities and Discrimination Associated
    with Substance Use Recovery Services
  • Fix Racially Biased Algorithms and Medical Artifcial
    Intelligence in Health Care
  • Fund and Expand the UC PRIME-LEAD-ABC Program
    to be Available at All UC Medical Campuses
  • Create and Fund Equivalents to the UC-PRIME-LEADABC Program for Psychologists, Licensed Professional
    Counselors, and Licensed Professional Therapists
  • Permanently Fund the California Medicine Scholars
    Program and Create and Fund Equivalent Pathway
    Programs for Students in the CSU and UC Systems
  • Review and Prevent Racially Biased Disciplinary
    Practices by the Medical Board of California
  • Address Food Injustice
  • Increase Greenspace Access and
    Recreation Opportunities in African American Communities
  • Test for and Eliminate Toxicity in Descendant
    Communities
  • Increase Trees in Redlined and Descendant
    Communities
  • Develop Climate Resilience Hubs in Redlined and
    Descendant Communities
  • Remove Lead in Drinking Water
  • Prevent Highway Expansion and Mitigate
    Transportation Pollution

The Wealth Gap:

  • Fund and Conduct a Study to Calculate the Overall
    Racial Wealth Gap in California
  • Encourage the Federal Government to Use the National
    Racial Wealth Gap to Determine Federal-Level Reparations

In addition, while monetary compensation is also recommended, it did not give any recommended amounts, largely due to the continued backlash that the Task Force has received over compensation proposals that had reached over $800 billion in the past few years.

The Final Report

Task Force members defended their final report on Thursday, noting that California needs to address these issues now, before they “get worse.”

“We’re putting before the legislators in California the challenge to come up with a feasible way to address these issues over the years,” said Task Force member Don Tamaki on Thursday. “To ignore them is to just invite not only the harm to continue, but to grow worse. We need to start this process. These are harms that were literally centuries in the making. So the repairs have to be long in the implementation.”

Others also addressed the issue of compensation, with Task Force Chairwoman Kamilah Moore adding that “Overall, what we said is we believe there should be compensation, elders should be prioritized and it should be in installments.”

However, most recommendations were not received well by legal experts and members of the general public who questioned if most could be implemented due to various issues, and the open question of compensation.

“This is an embarrassing, patronizing, slapdash, and offensive list of recommendations,” explained Legal adviser Richard Weaver to the Globe on Thursday. “First of all, they didn’t even bother to spellcheck it, as it is riddled with typos, misspellings, and errors. The most important thing these members have ever done, and they couldn’t be bothered to run spellcheck. If they cared so much about this, they would have put more care into it.”

“A lot of these recommendations California is currently working on, so their inclusion here is meaningless. Others are now pretty much illegal, like the repeal of Prop 209 since that was solidified into federal law on Thursday. And still others are not a matter for the legislature to decide, but rather voters, the court system, or other means. Some are even repeated numerous times, like abolishing the death penalty.”

“There are some good ideas in here. Addressing food injustice, for example, like solving food deserts, is a major issue, but one that also affects more than just African Americans. Issuing an apology for past injustices is also fine. But, again, a lot we are already doing here. Like NCAA athlete compensation. That has been on the books in California for awhile now. There was no reason to put it in here. And then there are others that are just political minefields, like not requiring ID to vote.”

“What is going to happen is that the ones ultimately put into a bill are the zero or low cost things listed here, along with the recommendations that California has either done or has already been working on. A lot of the other ideas, well, there is just no way no sane members of the legislature will try.”

“If the Task Force’s goal was try to get legislation passed or help convince the public to bring about some of the more controversial ideas here, they went the wrong way with this report. I wouldn’t be surprised if no bill comes up as a result of this. This was not something to feel proud about.”

It is currently unknown what, if any, bills will be written as a direct result of the report in the next session.

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
Evan Symon
Spread the news:

 RELATED ARTICLES

9 thoughts on “California Reparations Task Force Releases Final Reparations Report

  1. The Democrat party promoted slavery, segregation, discrimination, Jim Crow laws, lynchings, KKK, etc. It’s time that California Reparations Task Force members got off the Democrat’s plantation and start holding their Democrat masters accountable?

  2. Leave it to our leaders to ignite a race war then get termed out and move to Texas where they have laws and equal justice.

  3. The reparations task force using our tax dollars came up with this crap? If any member of our Legislature supports this they need to be replaced at the ballot box. Stop voting for Democraps!

  4. There’s a basic scientific principal: “correlation is not causation.” What that means is that, while it may well be true that blacks own fewer homes and have more medical issues, there’s no proof whatsoever that these problems were caused by “racism,” much less by slavery. Any social scientist will tell you that there are many factors that contribute to social problems, and blacks are not the only group who suffers from them. The entire reparations argument starts from a presumption that slavery has caused all these social problems, but that is actually what needs to be proven first — before a penny of reparations is even considered.

  5. California was not a slave state and my ancestors were not slave owners, nor was I or any of the Black people who are currently alive were alive during the slave era. I strongly oppose my tax dollars going to any of this. Enough is enough- it is just really sad that there are so many voters in CA that approve of this state legislature.

  6. If they want to give cash out to any individuals, I think the cash should come out of the pay of the elected officials of this state, for what they do they are well overpaid.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *