Site icon Metro Voice News

Kansas City forms committee to consider reparations payments for slavery

reparations

Kansas City has formed a committee to consider slavery reparations for black citizens. After passing a vote in January to form the commission, Democratic Mayor Quinton Lucas appointed 13 people to sit on the board and begin the process of forming reparation proposals.

The Mayor’s Commission for Reparations reportedly will research the city’s historical treatment of African Americans and, according to a 2022 proposal, be “expressing apologies on behalf of the city of Kansas City and declaring the city’s intent to make amends for its participation in the sanctioning of the enslavement of black people.”

Members of the new commission include Chair Terri Barnes, Linwood Tauheed, Cornell Ellis, Dionne King, Madison Lyman, Ryan Sorrell, Kenneth Ford, Fritz Riesmeyer, Bridgette Jones, Kelli Hearn, Will Bowles, Danise Hartsfield, Ajia Morris, Ex-Officio Mickey Dean and Ex-Officio Ester Holzendorf, FOX4 News reported.

READ: Missouri lawmakers celebrate gospel music, with its hall of fame coming to St. Louis

 

The city filed Ordinance #220966 in 2022 laying out the city’s reparations proposal and “expressing apologies on behalf of the city of Kansas City and declaring the city’s intent to make amends for its participation in the sanctioning of the enslavement of black people and any historical enforcement of segregation and accompanying discriminatory practices against black citizens of Kansas City, encouraging others to join the city in this effort and establishing a commission within 90 days to be known as the Mayor’s Commission on Reparations to advise the City regarding reparation issues.”

It is unknown at this time exactly what type of payments or how much in payments the commission will be seeking for black residents. However, the ordinance states that “the commission will issue a preliminary report of its findings within one year of its inaugural meeting, and a final report will be issued within six months thereafter.”

Proposals from San Francisco and California task forces are reportedly seeking to charge each individual taxpayer an estimated $600,000 for reparation payments to eligible black residents in the state.

–Lee Hartman | Metro Voice

Exit mobile version