- Jun 12, 2005
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I have been seeing this discussed in several news venues and was wondering what the forums thoughts are on this recommendation of the AARAC.
I personally find it to be way overreaching considering San Francisco's annual budget is way less than the 560 billion estimated expense of the reparations. California was also a free state and always has been. In my opinion this is just more virtue signalling on their part and nothing is going to come out of it.
www.sfchronicle.com
AARAC calls for one-time, lump-sum reparations payments of $5 million to each eligible recipient. The amount could cover the “the economic and opportunity losses that Black San Franciscans have endured, collectively, as the result of both intentional decisions and unintended harms perpetuated by City policy,” the draft states.
To qualify for the payments, residents must be 18 at the time the committee’s proposal is enacted, and have identified as Black or African American on public documents for at least 10 years. They may also have to prove they were born in the city between 1940 and 1996, have resided in San Francisco for at least 13 years, and be someone, or the direct descendant of someone, incarcerated during the war on drugs.
I personally find it to be way overreaching considering San Francisco's annual budget is way less than the 560 billion estimated expense of the reparations. California was also a free state and always has been. In my opinion this is just more virtue signalling on their part and nothing is going to come out of it.

$5 million for each longtime Black resident? S.F. has a bold reparations plan to consider
Martin Luther King Jr. demanded “riches of freedom” for Black Americans. A local...
AARAC calls for one-time, lump-sum reparations payments of $5 million to each eligible recipient. The amount could cover the “the economic and opportunity losses that Black San Franciscans have endured, collectively, as the result of both intentional decisions and unintended harms perpetuated by City policy,” the draft states.
To qualify for the payments, residents must be 18 at the time the committee’s proposal is enacted, and have identified as Black or African American on public documents for at least 10 years. They may also have to prove they were born in the city between 1940 and 1996, have resided in San Francisco for at least 13 years, and be someone, or the direct descendant of someone, incarcerated during the war on drugs.