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An activist has warned California‘s reparations task force that there will be ‘a serious backlash’ if they do not comply with his demands for more than $800,000 to be handed out black residents,Â
Deon Jenkins told the first meeting of the Task Force to Study and Develop Reparation Proposals for African Americans that money given to black people in the California should be in-line with the average price of a home in the state, around $800,000.
Following that appearance at the public hearing in Oakland’s City Hall on Wednesday, Jenkins, who refers to himself as a ‘hip hop organizer’ said in an interview: ‘Either they’re going to comply or it’s going to be a serious backlash.’
Since 2021, the first of its kind in the nation task force has been delving into history and studies to make its case for reparations to California descendants of enslaved Black people. The group has until July 1 before they have to make a decision on reparations.
Deon Jenkins, shown here, ran for president in 2016 and 2020 and ran for the US Senate in California in 2022, gaining less than 7,000 votes
Jenkins ran for president in 2016 and 2020 and ran for the US Senate in California in 2022, gaining less than 7,000 votes. On his official website, Jenkins calls himself as ‘grassroots hip hop organizer.’
In his speech before the task force, Jenkins also said: ‘Defense, money, land, grants. Four elements of every society, every nation – a defensive structure, economy, land and having access to that economy.’
He continued: ‘If that is not being addressed reparations will not hold. Reparations – repair is the root word, we cannot have repair if those elements are not addressed.’Â
In his speech before the task force, Jenkins also said: ‘Defense, money, land, grants. Four elements of every society, every nation – a defensive structure, economy, land and having access to that economy’
Also speaking on Thursday, was Rev. Tony Pierce of the Black Wall Street Project who shouted as his time for speaking ran out: ‘$230,000 is not enough!’
Another speaker, Carol Williams, who said that she lived through homelessness since moving to the state in 1985 from Memphis, stated her belief that all reparations should be tax free.Â
She said: ‘I consider myself a foundational black American. he reparation should be tax free, so that when we get the money the IRS won’t come after us. And I’m pleading and I’m asking that when we make the decision of lineage, we save those who have been in California since 2000.’
While another speaker said: ‘I can’t even walk down the street without being judged. There’s nothing I can do in this world without being judged. Why should I be judged … only by the color of my skin?’
Max Fennell and fellow activist Jenkins pictured after the meeting, Jenkins asked for reparations in the amount of $800,000 to be handed out
Former Democratic congressional candidate Morris Griffin holds up a sign during the meeting
At Wednesday’s hearing, 35-year-old entrepreneur and the first black professional tri-athlete, Max Fennell who said that every person should get $350,000 in compensation to close the racial wealth gap and Black-owned businesses should receive $250,000, which would help them to flourish.
Fennell added: ‘It’s a debt that’s owed, we worked for free,’ he said. ‘We’re not asking; we’re telling you.’
He concluded his remarks by saying: ‘The tangibles of what I’m asking for is $350,000 per black American in California that’s tangible, small business grant $250,000 and land 15-20 acres.’
Fennell posted a video on Instagram showing him at the hearings, with around 60 others, alongside the caption: ‘Witnessing history with the tribe.’
Task Force Chair Kamilah Moore listens to public comment during the meeting
While, Demnlus Johnson III, a Richmond City Council member, said it’s remarkable that the issue is even being talked about publicly.
‘You have to name a problem in order to address it,’ he said. ‘Of course we want to see it addressed now, the urgency is now, but just having it all aired out and put on the line is a major feat.’
The day before the hearings began, the chair of the committee hit out at reports that the group plans to recommend that $225,000 will be handed out to each person applying for the program.
In a series of interviews on December 13, Kamilah V. Moore said that the figure presented to the committee by an economic research team represents the state of California’s ‘maximum culpability’ for housing discrimination.
It only applies to people who were impacted by housing discrimination between 1933 and 1977, and not just black people.
Entrepreneur and professional triathlete Max Fennell spoke at the debate saying: ‘It’s a debt that’s owed, we worked for free,’ he said. ‘We’re not asking; we’re telling you.’
Moore said: ‘In reality, that number would be minimized when you take into account the fact that the task force decided in March that the community of eligibility would be lineage based rather than race based.’
She added: ‘When you really look at who was really impacted by housing discrimination during that particular time period it most likely won’t be all black folks.’
In a separate interview on Spectrum News, Moore pointed out the need for a Bureau of African American affairs in order to handle the payments, pointing to the success of the Bureau of Indian Affairs record of handling similar issues for Native Americans.
Moore opened the hearing on Wednesday by saying: ‘September’s meeting in L.A. and today’s meeting in Oakland, characterized a development stage. Now, we are not really looking for folks to provide personal and expert testimony.’
She continued: ‘It is important to get this right because we are setting the precedent for other states and localities, and also for the federal government as well.’
The meeting attracted a paltry crowd of activists at Oakland’s City Hall on Wednesday
Councilmember Carroll Fife of Oakland pointed out the problems of homelessness in California.
Fife said: ‘Homelessness is off the charts in California. And that’s part because there have been populations, particular black Americans, who have barred from access to housing.’Â
Members of the committee will make preliminary policy recommendations, such as audits of government agencies that deal with child welfare and incarceration with the aim of reducing disparities in how Black people are treated.
The group discussed how the state may address its impact on Black families whose property was seized through eminent domain. The topic garnered renewed attention after lawmakers last year voted to return a beachfront property known as Bruce’s Beach to descendants of the Black residents who owned it until it was taken in the 20th century.
Officials from Oakland, Sacramento, Los Angeles and other California cities spoke about local reparations efforts.
That included Khansa T. Jones-Muhammad, vice-chair of Los Angeles’ Reparations Advisory Commission, created last year under then-Mayor Eric Garcetti. The goal of the commission is to advise the city on a pilot program for distributing reparations to a group of Black residents, but it doesn’t have a timeline set in stone for finishing its work.
In September, economists started listing preliminary estimates for what could be owed by the state as a result of discriminatory policies. But they said they need more data to come up with more complete figures.
California Secretary of State Shirley Weber, a former assemblywoman, authored the bill that created the state’s task force, and the group began its work last year.
The bill was signed into law in September 2020 after a summer of nationwide protests against racism and police brutality following the killing of George Floyd, a Black man, by a white police officer in Minnesota.
In June, the task force released a 500-page report describing discriminatory policies that drove housing segregation, criminal justice disparities and other realities that harmed Black Californians in the decades since the abolition of slavery.
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