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		Chicago suburb's plan to pay Black residents reparations could be a 
		national model
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		 [March 22, 2021] 
		By Brendan O'Brien and Joseph Ax 
 EVANSTON, Ill. (Reuters) - Decades ago, in 
		the Chicago suburb of Evanston, Cordelia Clark ran a restaurant out of 
		her kitchen and parked cabs for her taxi company in her backyard because 
		Black residents were effectively barred from owning or renting 
		storefronts in town.
 
 Now Evanston is poised to become the first U.S. city to offer reparation 
		money to Black residents whose families suffered lasting damage from 
		decades of discriminatory practices.
 
 "It's about time that something has come from the hard work of African 
		Americans in this city, proving that they should be treated as anyone 
		else," said Clark's great-granddaughter, Delois Robinson, 58.
 
 Evanston's initial approach to reparations is narrow and targeted. The 
		city council, which has already committed $10 million over a decade to 
		the effort, will vote on Monday to begin with a $400,000 round of 
		payments. The first phase will provide $25,000 to a small number of 
		eligible Black residents for home repairs, down payments or mortgage 
		payments in a nod toward historically racist housing policies.
 
		
		 
		
 The program could become a model for other cities and states grappling 
		with whether to pursue their own reparations programs. The burgeoning 
		national movement has gained traction amid a reckoning on racial 
		inequity following the police killing of George Floyd and other Black 
		Americans last year.
 
 In Congress, a bill that would establish a national reparations 
		commission to study the issue has drawn around 170 co-sponsors in the 
		House of Representatives, all Democrats. President Joe Biden has not 
		endorsed the legislation but says he supports a study. Advocates plan to 
		lobby the White House for executive action if the bill, as expected, 
		fails to pass a divided Senate.
 
 Other cities, including Chicago; Providence, Rhode Island; Burlington, 
		Vermont; Asheville, North Carolina; and Amherst, Massachusetts, have 
		launched initiatives, though none has yet identified specific funding. 
		California passed a bill modeled after the federal legislation, and 
		lawmakers in New York and Maryland have introduced similar measures.
 
 Private institutions have also announced campaigns. The Jesuit order of 
		Catholic priests last week pledged $100 million to benefit the 
		descendants of the enslaved people it once owned.
 
 "Reparations is the public policy prescription that addresses - and 
		redresses - systemic racism," said Ron Daniels, who oversees the 
		National African American Reparations Commission, which consulted with 
		Evanston on its proposal.
 
 OBJECTIONS
 
 The practicality of implementing reparations programs, especially on a 
		national scale, is still a matter of debate.
 
 Reuters/Ipsos polls taken in June 2020, at the height of racial justice 
		protests, found only one in five respondents agreed the United States 
		should pay damages to descendants of enslaved people.
 
 Some opponents ask whether taxpayers can afford to pay out what could be 
		billions, or even trillions, of dollars. Others question how eligibility 
		for such programs would be determined, whether by race, ancestry or 
		evidence of discrimination.
 
 In Evanston, Black residents are eligible for the housing program if 
		they, or their ancestors, lived in the city between 1919 and 1969 or if 
		they can show they suffered housing discrimination due to the city's 
		policies. The recipients will be randomly selected if there are more 
		applicants than available funds in the housing program.
 
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			Delois Robinson washes dishes at her home in Evanston, Illinois, 
			U.S., March 18, 2021. Robinson’s great-grandmother ran a restaurant 
			and cab company out of her home in the Fifth Ward because she was 
			not able to get a separate business building due to the colour of 
			her skin. REUTERS/Eileen T. Meslar 
            
			 
            Some Black Evanston residents have objected to the plan's scope and 
			size as inadequate, highlighting the difficulties inherent in 
			designing a program that by all accounts can never fully ameliorate 
			centuries of discrimination.
 'HARD TO CATCH UP'
 
 Evanston, home to Northwestern University, lies between Chicago to 
			its south and the wealthy North Shore suburbs along Lake Michigan. 
			About 16% of its 75,000 residents are Black.
 
 As across the United States, Blacks in Evanston were subjected to 
			"redlining," a practice in which banks refused to make housing loans 
			in predominantly Black neighborhoods. That kept Black residents from 
			home ownership, a key source of wealth.
 
 The impact of historic and systemic discrimination on Evanston's 
			Black community persists. The Fifth Ward, where Robinson's 
			great-grandmother ran two businesses out of her home, is 
			predominantly Black and struggling with inferior infrastructure.
 
 "We're trying to catch up from hundreds of years of being 
			suppressed, and its just hard to catch up without some assistance," 
			said Evanston resident and real estate agent Vanessa Johnson-McCoy, 
			who is Black.
 
 The city's campaign will draw from a new tax on legalized marijuana. 
			Supporters say the funding mechanism is particularly apt, given how 
			devastating the country's criminalization of marijuana has been to 
			Black communities.
 
 Evanston Rejects Racist Reparations, an opposition group, has noted 
			that the initial payments will cover only 16 households. The group 
			also opposes restricting that money to housing needs.
 
 "True reparations repair you – you get a chance to say what it is 
			that repairs you," said Rose Cannon, a member of the group, who is 
			Black.
 
 National advocates say viewing reparations as only cash payments is 
			far too reductive and that there is a need for policies that tackle 
			the institutional racism that created the inequities in the first 
			place.
 
 "These vestiges have to be addressed – or they will continue on into 
			the future, no matter how many equity programs are in place," said 
			Kamm Howard, co-chair of the National Coalition of Blacks for 
			Reparations in America, or N’COBRA.
 
            
			 
			Even in cities facing limited resources, local governments can still 
			make restitution by updating school curricula, improving business 
			development, providing housing opportunities and offering apologies 
			for past racism, Howard said.
 
 Evanston Alderman Robin Rue Simmons, who is Black, spearheaded her 
			city's initiative. She sees the upcoming payments as a critical 
			first step.
 
 "This is about our humanity," she said. "It's overdue, and the time 
			is now."
 
 (Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Evanston, Illinois, and Joseph Ax 
			in Princeton, New Jersey; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Matthew 
			Lewis)
 
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