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CA Ass'y Advances Bill For CA Study Of Reparations For Slavery; LB Area Lawmakers O'Donnell, Gipson & Rendon Vote "Yes" Advancing Bill To State Senate


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(June 12, 2020) -- On a 61-12-6 vote onm June 11, the CA Assembly has advanced AB 3121 (full text here) that would initiate a state study of reparations for African-Americans.

The bill doesn’t speak solely in terms of reparations for slavery. (CA wasn’t a slave state.) It empowers a state legislature created Task Force to also consider what it calls slavery’s ongoing legacy of discriminatory policies and practices that it argues continue to the present day.

One Republican (Tyler Diep, R, Huntington Beach/Garden Grove) voted for the bill. Four Republicans were recorded as "no vote recorded" along with two Democrats. To view the full vote tally, click here.

AB 3121 would establish a "Task Force to Study and Develop Reparation Proposals for African Americans." with 8 members: 2 chosen by the Governor, three by the President Pro Tem of the state Senate and three by the Assembly Speaker [all currently Dems.] Up to four can be members of the state legislature and each appointing authority can appoint up to two members from the same political party.

At minimum four appointees must "represent major civil society and reparations organizations that have historically championed the cause of reparatory justice" and "shall be drawn from diverse backgrounds to represent the interests of communities of color throughout the state, have experience working to implement racial justice reform, and, to the extent possible, represent geographically diverse areas of the state."

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The bill would require the Task Force to recommend, among other things, "the form of compensation that should be awarded, the instrumentalities through which it should be awarded, and who should be eligible for this compensation." It would also require the Task Force to submit a written report of its findings and recommendations to the state legislature.

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Presumptive Democrat Presidential candidate Joe Biden has voiced support for a "study" of reparations while stopping short of supporting reparations themselves. As the Washington Post noted in a July 2019 analysis, former President Obama, America's first African-American President, isn't a descendant of black slaves; his father immigrated to the U.S. from Kenya to attend graduate school. As a 2008 presidential candidate, Obama argued that the political will didn't exist to provide reparations and thus favored pursuing what he called more practical policy goals.

It's unclear if the former President's views on reparations have changed since then.

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Last year, the CA Ass'y approved and sent to the state Senate Assembly Joint Resolution (AJR) 21 by Assemblywoman Gonzalez. The measure would voice the CA Legislature's support for H.R. 40, to establish a Commission to Study and Develop Reparation Proposals for African-Americans, now in the U.S. House of Representatives, introduced by Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee (D, TX) with co-sponsors including Congressman Alan Lowenthal (D, LB-west OC) and others listed here.

AJR 21 would also apologize for CA's complicity in slavery and make a number of findings and declarations. All LB Assemblymembers (including O'Donnell and Gipson) joined as co-authors. 58 Assembly Dems voted for it; 4 Repubs voted against it, and 17 Repubs chose "no vote recorded." AJR 21 is now in the state Senate's Rules Committee.

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June 15: Text added noting that the bill doesn’t speak solely in terms of reparations for slavery but includes consideration of what it calls slavery’s ongoing legacy of discriminatory policies


Support really independent news in Long Beach. No one in LBREPORT.com's ownership, reporting or editorial decision-making has ties to development interests, advocacy groups or other special interests; or is seeking or receiving benefits of City development-related decisions; or holds a City Hall appointive position; or has contributed sums to political campaigns for Long Beach incumbents or challengers. LBREPORT.com isn't part of an out of town corporate cluster and no one its ownership, editorial or publishing decisionmaking has been part of the governing board of any City government body or other entity on whose policies we report. LBREPORT.com is reader and advertiser supported. You can help keep really independent news in LB similar to the way people support NPR and PBS stations. We're not non-profit so it's not tax deductible but $49.95 (less than an annual dollar a week) helps keep us online.


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