California wrestling with hidden cost of reparations push

California is struggling to figure out how to deal with a massive budget deficit and reparations the state Democrats are looking to turn into law. 

The Golden State is currently contending with a $68 billion deficit, a loss mostly due to a decline in revenue during fiscal 2022-2023. Still, it has been recommended the state pay out reparations, with some estimates predicting it could be on the hook for nearly $800 billion paid out, which is three times as high as a typical budget for California.

This week, California’s Legislative Black Caucus embarked on a statewide tour to argue in favor of 14 reparation bills, including two proposed constitutional amendments.

The California Senate passed three of the bills in the legislation, including one that would create the California Freedmen Affairs Agency, which would help black Californians research their family lineage to confirm possible eligibility for future reparations the state would pay out.

The constitutional amendments include one measure that would amend the state’s constitution to outlaw prison labor. The amendment failed to make its way out of the state legislature in 2022. 

Gov. Gavin Newsom (D-CA) previously warned that eliminating involuntary servitude could require the state to pay its inmates minimum wage and cost California $1.5 billion more per year.

California has a long history of using prison labor, including the state’s Conservation Camp Program, in which inmates are trained to become firefighters to fight wildfires. As firefighters, they earn between $2.90 and $5 per day, but upon release, they cannot become firefighters as those with criminal convictions are barred from doing so in the state.

“It’s quite clear we want to eliminate involuntary servitude in California,” state Sen. Steven Bradford, a Democrat, said. “Anything less than that is falling short of the objective.”

“Reparations, as the public have come to understand them, are not popular,” Giuliana Perrone, a historian and professor at the University of California Santa Barbara, told Newsweek

“That’s because the public does not actually understand reparations. Many imagine that reparations are just payments or benefits given to certain people for past harms that occurred to their ancestors. This is incorrect,” she said. “Reparations are meant to address the specific, ongoing harms that have continued to exist because the nation failed to fully abolish slavery.”

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In 2020, California made history when it became the first state to create a task force dedicated to studying methods to resolve the enduring legacy slavery and Jim Crow-era laws have placed on black people. The task force came back with more than 100 recommendations for the state.

For the task force to be on the ballot for a vote this year, lawmakers would need to get it off the ground quickly as the deadline for finalizing ballot measures is June 27. 

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