Current:Home > MyNew York City lawmakers approve bill to study slavery and reparations -WealthGrow Network
New York City lawmakers approve bill to study slavery and reparations
View
Date:2025-04-12 13:15:22
NEW YORK (AP) — New York City lawmakers approved legislation Thursday to study the city’s significant role in slavery and consider reparations to descendants of enslaved people.
The package of bills passed by the City Council still needs to be signed into law by Democratic Mayor Eric Adams, who didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
New York fully abolished slavery in 1827. But businesses, including the predecessors of some modern banks, continued to benefit financially from the slave trade — likely up until 1866.
“The reparations movement is often misunderstood as merely a call for compensation,” Council Member Farah Louis, a Democrat who sponsored one of the bills, told the City Council. She explained that systemic forms of oppression are still impacting people today through redlining, environmental racism and services in predominantly Black neighborhoods that are underfunded.
The bills would direct the city’s Commission on Racial Equity to suggest remedies to the legacy of slavery, including reparations. It would also create a truth and reconciliation process to establish historical facts about slavery in the state.
One of the proposals would also require that the city install a sign on Wall Street in Manhattan to mark the site of New York’s first slave market.
The commission would work with an existing state commission also considering the possibility of reparations for slavery. A report from the state commission is expected in early 2025. The city effort wouldn’t need to produce recommendations until 2027.
The city’s commission was created out of a 2021 racial justice initiative during then-Mayor Bill de Blasio’s administration. Although it was initially expected to consider reparations, instead it led to the creation of the commission, tracking data on the cost of living and adding a commitment to remedy “past and continuing harms” to the city charter’s preamble.
“Your call and your ancestor’s call for reparations had not gone unheard,” Linda Tigani, executive director of the racial equity commission, said at a news conference ahead of the council vote.
A financial impact analysis of bills estimate the studies would cost $2.5 million.
New York is the latest city to study reparations. Tulsa, Oklahoma, the home of a notorious massacre against Black residents in 1921, announced a similar commission last month.
Evanston, Illinois, became the first city to offer reparations to Black residents and their descendants in 2021, including distributing some payments of $25,000 in 2023, according to PBS. The eligibility was based on harm suffered as a result of the city’s discriminatory housing policies or practices.
San Francisco approved reparations in February, but the mayor later cut the funds, saying that reparations should instead be carried out by the federal government. California budgeted $12 million for a reparations program that included helping Black residents research their ancestry, but it was defeated in the state’s Legislature earlier this month.
veryGood! (77)
Related
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Today’s Climate: June 22, 2010
- King Charles III and Queen Camilla Officially Crowned at Coronation
- Sea Level Rise Is Accelerating: 4 Inches Per Decade (or More) by 2100
- John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
- This rare orange lobster is a one-in-30 million find, experts say — and it only has one claw
- Coal’s Decline Sends Arch into Bankruptcy and Activists Aiming for Its Leases
- New Federal Rules Target Methane Leaks, Flaring and Venting
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- So you haven't caught COVID yet. Does that mean you're a superdodger?
Ranking
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- 2 teens who dated in the 1950s lost touch. They reignited their romance 63 years later.
- The hidden faces of hunger in America
- Telemedicine abortions just got more complicated for health providers
- Have Dry, Sensitive Skin? You Need To Add These Gentle Skincare Products to Your Routine
- Planned Parenthood mobile clinic will take abortion to red-state borders
- Who are the Rumpels? Couple says family members were on private plane that crashed.
- Hospitals have specialists on call for lots of diseases — but not addiction. Why not?
Recommendation
Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
Joe Biden says the COVID-19 pandemic is over. This is what the data tells us
PGA Tour and LIV Golf to merge, ending disruption and distraction and antitrust lawsuit
2 teens who dated in the 1950s lost touch. They reignited their romance 63 years later.
Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
Electric Car Bills in Congress Seen As Route to Oil Independence
At Freedom House, these Black men saved lives. Paramedics are book topic
Wisconsin mothers search for solutions to child care deserts