California Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoes bill to help Black families reclaim
taken land
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[September 26, 2024]
By SOPHIE AUSTIN
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — California Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoed a bill
Wednesday that would have helped Black families reclaim or be
compensated for property that was unjustly taken by the government.
The bill would have created a process for families to file a claim with
the state if they believe the government seized their property through
eminent domain due to discriminatory motives and without providing fair
compensation.
The proposal by itself would not have been able to take full effect
because lawmakers blocked another bill to create a reparations agency
that would have reviewed claims.
"I thank the author for his commitment to redressing past racial
injustices,” Newsom said in a statement. “However, this bill tasks a
nonexistent state agency to carry out its various provisions and
requirements, making it impossible to implement.”
The veto dealt a blow to a key part of a package of reparations bills
the California Legislative Black Caucus backed this year in an effort to
help the state atone for decades of policies that drove racial
disparities for Black Americans. The caucus sent other proposals to
Newsom's desk that would require the state to formally apologize for
slavery and its lingering impacts, improve protections against hair
discrimination for athletes and combat the banning of books in state
prisons.
Democratic state Sen. Steven Bradford introduced the eminent domain bill
after Los Angeles-area officials in 2022 returned a beachfront property
to a Black couple a century after it was taken from their ancestors
through eminent domain. Bradford said in a statement earlier this year
that his proposal was part of a crucial “framework for reparations and
correcting a historic wrong.”
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Morris Griffin holds up a sign during a meeting by the Task Force to
Study and Develop Reparation Proposals for African Americans in
Oakland, Calif., Dec. 14, 2022. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu, File)
Bradford also introduced a bill this year to create an agency to
help Black families research their family lineage and implement
reparations programs that become law, and a measure to create a fund
for reparations legislation.
But Black caucus members blocked the reparations agency and fund
bills from receiving a final vote in the Assembly during the last
week of the legislative session last month. The caucus cited
concerns that the Legislature would not have oversight over the
agency’s operations and declined to comment further on the
reparations fund bill because it wasn’t part of the caucus'
reparations priority package.
The move came after the Newsom administration pushed for the agency
bill to be turned into legislation allocating $6 million for
California State University to study how to implement the
reparations task force’s recommendations, according to a document
with proposed amendments shared by Bradford’s office.
Newsom’s office declined to comment to The Associated Press last
month on the reparations agency and fund proposals, saying it
doesn't typically weigh in publicly on pending legislation.
The administration's Department of Finance said earlier this year it
opposed the eminent domain bill because it was not specifically
included in the budget. The agency said the cost to implement it was
unknown but could have ranged “from hundreds of thousands of dollars
to low millions of dollars annually, depending on the workload
required to accept, review, and investigate applications.”
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