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California lawmakers introduce reparations package with formal apology for slavery

Members of California's Legislative Black Caucus introduced 14 reparations bills Wednesday that make a formal apology for slavery, return property stolen from Black residents and more.

California lawmakers introduced a reparations package to their state house on Wednesday, including 14 bills they claim will help support Black communities across the state following historical mistreatment.

Members of California's Legislative Black Caucus said the 14 reparations bills seek a formal apology for slavery and other human rights violations from the governor and legislature, and the return of property taken in race-based cases of eminent domain, among other restitution.

The bills are intended to be just the first legislative actions in an effort that will likely span years.

"While many only associate direct cash payments with reparations, the true meaning of the word, to repair, involves much more," Assemblywoman Lori D. Wilson, chair of the California Legislative Black Caucus, said per Reuters.

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The 14 bills follow an extensive 1,100-page report written in June by the California Reparations Task Force, a group of lawmakers created by a state bill in 2020.

The task force includes Wilson as chair, Assembly members Steven Bradford as vice chair, Isaac Bryan, Dr. Akilah Weber, Mia Bonta, Christopher Holden, Dr. Corey Jackson, Kevin McCarty, Tina McKinnor, Lola Smallwood-Cuevas, Mike Gipson and Reggie Byron Jones-Sawyer, Sr.

Their work on the report spanned two years and they ultimately made over 100 recommendations to legislators in the state.

Among the above issues, the other recommendations include compensating people and funding community-based programs to decrease violence in Black communities.

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Wednesday's 14 bills —

The items were initially announced in January. None of the initial 14 bills proposed on Wednesday call for cash reparations, a subject which has garnered criticism from both sides of the proverbial aisle.

Assemblymember Jones-Sawyer argued the bills would address decades of laws and policies designed to ostracize Black Americans.

"These atrocities are found in education, access to homeownership, and to capital for small business startups, all of which contributed to the denial of generational wealth over hundreds of years," Jones-Sawyer said, Reuters reported.

Reuters contributed to this report.

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