Bynum preps Tulsans for reality of what ‘reparations’ commission can accomplish

In announcing the formation of a commission to “develop a plan for reparations in Tulsa,” Mayor G.T. Bynum asked citizens to “keep an open mind.”

“When the term ‘reparations’ is used, we jump to the end of the conversation without hearing our neighbors out,” Bynum said Thursday. “If you’re looking for reparations, people opposed think you’re just looking for a handout. And if you’re opposed to reparations, people in favor of them think you’re heartless.”

City Councilor Vanessa Hall-Harper, who announced formation of the commission with Bynum at a noon press conference, said it was “yet another day of progress and celebration, filled with uplifting news not only for the survivors of the massacre, but also the descendants of the 1921 Race Massacre and the Greenwood community.”

The Beyond Apology Commission is the product of a similarly named initiative led by Hall-Harper and others to collect input from Tulsans across the city about repercussions from Tulsa’s 1921 Race Massacre and how to address inequities Hall-Harper and others believe still exist, wholly or in part, because of it.

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The commission will consist of 13 members serving staggered three-year terms. One member will be directly appointed by the mayor and another by the city councilor whose district includes historical Greenwood.

The other 11 members will be recommended by city staff and community members from among applicants fitting one of eight categories: youth (18-24), elder (60+), massacre descendant, north Tulsa community leader, policy and legislative expert, housing equity expert, health equity expert, and at-large (four positions).

A press release said the commission’s first task will be a plan for “a housing equity program.”

“One of the most challenging issues to navigate during my time as mayor has been the issue of reparations for the victims of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre,” Bynum said at Thursday’s press conference.

“This is what made the issue of reparations so difficult,” he said. “The preconceived notions around that one word ‘reparations’ has prevented us from doing what I am confident most Tulsans would agree we should do.”

Bynum acknowledged that he and Hall-Harper have often been at odds, especially concerning cash payments, which he opposes.

“She strongly disagrees with me on that,” he said. “The easiest thing in the world would be for her to write me off and ignore me because of that disagreement. But she hasn’t. She has instead chosen to work with me toward what we both believe is an important step in the right direction.”

Apparently in reference to the word “equitable” in the press release, Harper said it “is essential to differentiate and understand the difference between a reparations program and equitable policy. While the city of Tulsa should strive to have equitable policies, and I believe we do, reparations specifically addresses the past harms inflicted on a specific group, namely Black Tulsans suffering for over 100 years after the repercussions following the 1921 Race Massacre.”

“We can’t go back,” said Bynum. “And we can never repair all that was lost. But we can acknowledge the tragedy that occurred. And we can recognize the impact that such a loss has happened. And we can do more out of compassion for our neighbors. We’ve made so much progress in the last decade in Tulsa when it comes to racial reconciliation. Sometimes I know it doesn’t feel like it. But growth is usually hard. It usually hurts.

“My heartfelt request of my fellow Tulsans is that, before you make any assumptions about this issue, let your fellow Tulsans on the commission do their work,” the mayor said, asking Tulsans to keep an open mind. “My hope is that we will allow … compassion, reason and dialogue to help heal a hurt that has plagued our city for over a century.”

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