Update! Raleigh NC Reparative Justice Resolution
To: Supporting Organizations and IndividualsFrom: Raleigh Reparative Justice Community Working GroupRe: UPDATE on the Reparative Justice Resolution: A SHIFT IN STRATEGY
On Wednesday, July 5, the Raleigh City Council passed unanimously a weakened version of our resolution [LINK to news account]. The Council removed the creation of a commission, the most important part of our resolution - a commission of qualified community members who would study issues of systematic racism for 180 days, and make recommendations of concrete steps to remedy the impact of racism on the African American community in Raleigh. The Council expressed a public apology for past racism against the African American community in Raleigh. We welcome this initial step, but the Council provided no mechanism for redress. We feel strongly that an apology without concrete steps to remedy the destructive impact of both past and ongoing systematic racism is insincere and totally unacceptable. We knew there would be pushback and that meaningful progress would require several steps.
The Reparative Justice Community Working Group met this past Friday, July 7. We debated our next steps, and decided on a shift in strategy.
● We want the Council to form a Reparative Justice Task Force with a new name but the same job description we gave the commission in our original resolution
● The Human Relations Commission was able to move the Resolution forward and received the current response from the City Council. We now need to move to an all-community initiative making a direct appeal to the Council.
● ACTION NEEDED: We are asking everyone to contact their City Council members and tell them what we want and why (talking points to follow), and to remind them that we put them in office, and we will be remembering how they voted in the next election cycle
● ACTION NEEDED: We need strong demonstrations of broad community support for our initiative whenever public comment is permitted at City Council meetings –
August 15, September 12, and we will keep you posted about other dates. See dates here. PLEASE SIGN UP TO MAKE PUBLIC COMMENT THAT WHILE WE ARE APPRECIATIVE OF THE CITY’S FIRST STEP ON APPROVING THE RESOLUTION, WE NEED FURTHER ACTION. THE CREATION OF A REPARATIVE JUSTICE TASKFORCE IS CRUCIAL TO FURTHERING ANTI-RACISM WORK IN RALEIGH.
● ACTION REQUESTED: We are asking you to commit to send representatives to these crucially important public comment opportunities and to keep us informed so that we can coordinate our efforts.
It is critically important each council member knows that the Raleigh community takes Reparative Justice and its full implementation very seriously. To see who your city council member is, go to: https://raleighnc.gov/city-council
We welcome any questions and feedback you may have. Stronger Together!
Peace,The Reparative Justice Resolution Working GroupMark Davidson, John Shuford, Diane Bell, Mary Thompson, Deborah Bromiley (deborahbromiley12@gmail.com)
We need your support! The Human Relations Commission will present a Reparative Justice Resolution to the Raleigh City Council. The resolution is below. Please sign the petition as soon as possible, to show strong community support! (We are not soliciting funds for this effort.) We are waiting to hear a date for this to be presented to the Raleigh City Council.
RESOLUTION SUPPORTING COMMUNITY REPARATIVE JUSTICE FOR THE AFRICAN-AMERICAN COMMUNITY IN RALEIGH
Whereas, African and African-American persons have beenunjustly enslaved, lynched, segregated, and incarcerated;
Whereas, African-American persons have experienced housingdiscrimination by government agencies, banks, and the private realestate market, through redlining, steering, blockbusting, denial ofmortgage loans, urban renewal, gentrification, and more;
Whereas, African-American communities have been harmed by thehealth effects of environmental racism, including thedisproportionate location of industrial, dump, and toxic waste sitesin African-American neighborhoods;
Whereas, African-American persons have been harmed by economicdisinvestment in their communities by banks and grocery stores,creating food deserts and lack of access to key services;
Whereas, African-American persons have experiencedemployment discrimination, restricted opportunities, and wagedisparities in the local economy regardless of credentials andexperience;
Whereas, African-American businesses and communities havesuffered from a disproportionately low share of economicdevelopment funding;
Whereas, African-American students have been educationallymarginalized through the history of segregated, unequal schoolsystems, and a persistent achievement gap due to underinvestment,discriminatory disciplinary practices, and exclusion from academicallygifted, advanced placement, and honors classes;
Whereas, African-American communities suffer from a history ofinadequate and detrimental health care as exemplified bydisproportionate morbidities and mortality rates resulting from thegenerational trauma of white supremacy, discriminatory treatment by medical professionals, medical deserts, involuntary sterilizations, denialof adequate testing, preventive and curative procedures;
Whereas, African-American persons have been targeted by thecriminal justice system through racial profiling, police brutality,inadequate legal representation, prosecutorial misconduct, unjustrulings, harsh sentencing, and barriers to reintegrating into society;
Whereas, local, state, and federal governments have a moral andpractical obligation to adopt policies, develop programs, and allocatefunding to redress demonstrable harms to African-Americans to whichthose governments have contributed;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COUNCILOF THE CITY OF RALEIGH THAT:
The City of Raleigh
1) Apologizes for Raleigh’s past participation in, enforcement of, andbenefiting from the enslavement of African and African-Americanpersons;
2) Apologizes for Raleigh’s enforcement of segregation and Jim Crowlaws;
3) Apologizes for Raleigh’s designing and implementing “urbanrenewal” programs that destroyed multiple thrivingAfrican-American communities in Raleigh;
4) Establishes a Racial Equity and Reparative Justice Commission,to be comprised of 15 members that shall include residents ofRaleigh with expertise in anti-racism practices, to meet regularlyto identify and study Raleigh’s role in the historic oppression ofAfrican and African-American persons through slavery and any ofRaleigh’s past acts, practices, and policies that discriminatedagainst African-American persons, including in the areas ofhousing, economic opportunity, educational opportunity,environmental harm, public health, and criminal justice; and topropose policies to remediate identifiable harms stemming fromany past acts of discrimination by Raleigh against theAfrican-American community that the Commission identifies,which are not inconsistent with the City Charter, North CarolinaGeneral Statutes, or state and federal constitutions;
5) Calls on the Commission, with support from the City Manager andthe Office of Equity and Inclusion, to produce a report for the CityCouncil with findings and preliminary recommendations within180 days of the passage of this resolution.
6) Will, within 60 days of the adoption of this Resolution,establish a formal bi-annual review process to review andassess the progress of work pursuant to this Resolution,including engaging the public in feedback on thesereviews.
7) Calls on public and private organizations and institutionsin Raleigh that have advanced and benefitted from racialinequity to work cooperatively with the City tocomprehensively redress policies and practices of systemicracism within their own structures and programs.
8) Calls on the State of North Carolina, the Governor, andthe North Carolina General Assembly to initiatereparative justice policies at the state level.