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Gov. Hochul signs bill to create reparations commission

Governor Kathy Hochul signed legislation to continue New York’s leadership on racial equity by creating a new commission to study reparations and racial justice Dec. 19, 2023.
Don Pollard
Governor Kathy Hochul signed legislation to continue New York’s leadership on racial equity by creating a new commission to study reparations and racial justice Dec. 19, 2023.

Governor Kathy Hochul signed into law a measure to look at potential reparations for New Yorkers whose ancestors suffered under slavery in the state.

The new law establishes a task force to study the impact of slavery on present day New Yorkers, and look at the possibility of paying monetary reparations, as well as looking at changing housing policies, and reforming a criminal justice system that disproportionately imprisons Black and Brown people.

“By signing this bill today, I'm authorizing the creation of a commission,” Hochul said. “A committee to study what reparations might look like in New York.”

Hochul says New York often pats itself on the back for being the center of the abolitionist movement in the 1800’s, with famous residents including Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman and Sojourner Truth and a robust underground railroad.

But she says New York’s history has a darker side. Before slavery was abolished in the state in 1827, 20% of New York City’s population was enslaved Africans. 40% of colonial households owned slaves. A slave market existed on Wall Street for 100 years.

“Here in New York there was a slave market where people bought and sold other human beings with callous disregard,” Hochul said. “It happened right on Wall Street for more than a century.”

Even after the North won the civil war, redlining in white neighborhoods and other forms of segregation kept black and brown New Yorkers form getting ahead economically.

Speakers at the announcement included the first African -American woman leader of the state Senate, Andrea Stewart-Cousins, the black New York State Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie, and the Reverend Al Sharpton. Sharpton credits Hochul for her courage in creating the commission. The civil rights leader says it’s long overdue.

“Where you go and cut deals on Wall Street our forefathers were put on blocks and sold like soap,” Sharpton said.

The governor admits that the idea of reparations for slavery, which ended in the US over 150 years ago, is controversial, and she says she struggled with the notion. But she says descendants of slaves need more than just an apology. Hochul says the 2022 mass shooting in her hometown of Buffalo where a white gunman targeted and killed black shoppers demonstrates there’s more to be done.

I don't want to pretend I didn't have some concerns about this,” Hochul said. “ Anyone thinks that racism and hatred toward blacks no longer exists, tell that to the families of the 10 victims in the grocery store in Tops at the massacre in Buffalo, who once again once again, will be staring at empty chairs over their Christmas dinner.”

The state of California has created a similar commission. That panel recommended that thousands of dollars be paid to each descendant of slavery to make up for disparities in health care, access to housing, and mass incarceration and policing policies that disproportionately impacted people of color.

New York’s commission will be required to issue it’s report one year after its first meeting, which should happen sometime next year.

In a statement, the Republican leader of the State Senate, Minority Leader Robert Ortt, called the commission “divisive” and “unworkable”. He says “ The reparations of slavery were paid with the blood and lives of hundreds of thousands of Americans who fought to end slavery during the Civil War."

Karen DeWitt is Capitol Bureau Chief for New York State Public Radio, a network of 10 public radio stations in New York State. She has covered state government and politics for the network since 1990. She is also a regular contributor to the statewide public television program about New York State government, New York Now. She appears on the reporter’s roundtable segment and interviews newsmakers. Karen previously worked for WINS Radio, New York, and has written for numerous publications, including Adirondack Life and the Albany newsweekly Metroland.