San Francisco mayor sneaks through reparations bill just before Christmas that could give each black resident $5MILLION
Mayor Daniel Lurie quietly signed the incredibly divisive Reparations Bill just two days before Christmas.
The mayor of San Francisco discreetly approved a bill to create a fund that may eventually grant each of the city's eligible black residents $5 million in reparations.
Mayor Daniel Lurie quietly signed the incredibly divisive Reparations Bill just two days before Christmas.
The ordinance establishes a Reparations Fund, as recommended by the city's African American Reparations Advisory Committee (AARAC) in its 2023 report.
The legislation merely establishes the fund but does not allocate any money to it - setting up the framework for any future contributions, whether they be through the city or privately donated.
The AARAC is tasked with developing 'recommendations for repairing harm in our black communities,' according to its website.
Per the 2023 report, every African American adult in San Francisco should be handed a $5 million lump sum to 'compensate the affected population for the decades of harms that they have experienced.'
While this effort has captured the most attention - and sparked the most controversy - the AARAC rattled off more than 100 suggestions, including debt relief, guaranteed annual income of $97,000, debt forgiveness and city-funded homes for black people.
In 2023, the conservative public policy think tank Hoover Institution said the plan would cost each non-African American household in the city about $600,000 in tax dollars.
San Francisco lawmakers have approved a bill to set up a Reparations Fund
Mayor Daniel Lurie quietly signed the divisive Reparations Bill two days before Christmas
However, Lurie told the Daily Mail that this is not the case, citing the city's struggling finances.
'For several years, communities across the city have been working with the government to acknowledge the decades of harm done to San Francisco’s black community,' Lurie wrote.
'While that process largely predates my administration, I am signing the legislation to create this fund in recognition of the work of so many San Franciscans and the unanimous support of the Board of Supervisors.'
But Lurie said the city is bracing for a $1 billion budget deficit next year.