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    California sets aside $12 million for nation’s largest reparations effort

    By Lauren Taylor,

    1 day ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2NsKpU_0u7sC9sx00

    The state of California announced on Friday, June 28, that it will be allocating $12 million in its next budget to provide compensation to Black residents for racial injustices. Th effort would be the largest government-funded reparations effort of its kind in the country.

    The money is a far cry from the billions of dollars that a reparations task force recommended earlier this year. However, considering the state is facing a $50 billion budget shortfall , some advocates said that they were pleased any money got allocated for reparations. Still, some said that while the money is a step in the right direction that "it's not enough" but added that this is "the first time ever" reparations "will be a line item in a state budget."

    Movements to compensate Black people for the wounds of slavery and segregation in the United States gained new steam following the 2020 death of George Floyd at the hands a Minneapolis police officer and the ensuing protests.

    The movement has prompted expanded efforts to explore reparations across the United States. For instance, the District of Columbia's 2025 budget proposal includes $1.5 million to study the feasibility of reparations and to come up with proposals to address the harms of slavery.

    However, some efforts to compensate Black people for a history of racism have hit a roadblock. In late May, a conservative advocacy group sued to halt the country's first ever government-funded reparations program in Evanston, Illinois. The plaintiffs argue that the effort to compensate Black residents through reparations discriminates against other ethnicities. Despite the challenge, around $5 million has already been paid out to 193 Black residents.

    In another setback for reparations advocates, the Oklahoma Supreme Court struck down a lawsuit seeking reparations for the last two survivors of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre.

    California's effort to deliver on its reparations promise still face opposition from Republicans as well as some Asian and Latino lawmakers, who argue that it's unfair to make current residents pay for the wrongs of the past.

    The Golden State's budget still doesn't outline how the reparations will be paid out to Black residents, but state lawmakers said that it will be worked into reparations-related bills currently circulating in the Legislature.

    The post California sets aside $12 million for nation’s largest reparations effort appeared first on Straight Arrow News .

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