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An Illinois commission seeking reparations for black residents has released a report laying out the state’s history of harm to black residents on friday.
“Facing the truth about our state’s history is a necessary first step in building a more equitable future,” said Marvin Slaughter, Jr., Chairman of the Illinois African Descendant Citizens’ Reparations Commission (ADCCRC).
“By grounding our work in historical evidence and the lived experiences of those who have suffered harm, we are laying the foundation for informed and meaningful restorative action,” Slaughter said.

An Illinois commission is recommending legislation to provide reparations to black residents. (Getty Images)
The ADCRC released what it calls the “first comprehensive, evidence-based” report examining “how slavery and its remnants caused historical harm and continue to create inequities for Black people in Illinois.”
The report, “Narrative: A History of Racial Injury and Injustice Against Black People in Illinois,” was prepared by the commission to trace “racial injustice from colonial enslavement and early statehood to Reconstruction, Jim Crow, urban renewal, and mass incarceration.”
The 294-page report Lists “nine broad categories of harm” and provides “a comprehensive assessment of how slavery and its remnants contributed to the racial harm and injustice that Black people in Illinois have historically experienced and continue to experience today.
“Based on academic analysis, historical archives, government data, and community perspectives, this report describes not just individual harms but the cumulative impact of harms over generations,” the report states. “Ultimately, it provides an evidence-based accounting of Black lives in Illinois that will help inform critical debates about how to repair, correct, and ameliorate these lasting harms.”
The committee will develop legislative recommendations to “promote recovery and restorative justice.”
The ADCRC is “an Illinois-appointed commission dedicated to promoting equity and opportunity for African Americans with American slave-trading ancestry.”

The Illinois African Descendant Citizens’ Reparations Commission (ADCCRC) has released what it calls the “first comprehensive, evidence-based” report examining “how slavery and its remnants caused historical harm and continue to create inequities for Black people in Illinois.”
Illinois city sends $25,000 in cash to 44 black residents through reparations program
Illinois may follow the lead of several states and local governments in seeking to implement reparations to some extent. Many are asking for reparations to redress historical harm done to black people. Some of these programs are Facing legal challenges Consider that they have race-based implications. For example, one San Francisco resident claimed that the city’s compensation fund Divide the city.
Chicago suburb Evanston, Illinois, first district to pay reparations to black residents housing expenditure. The program provides direct cash payments of $25,000 to black residents and descendants of black residents who lived in Evanston between 1919 and 1969.
Evanston’s compensation plan also facing lawsuit.

Evanston, Illinois, awarded $25,000 in compensation to 44 residents. (Getty Images)
Cincinnati will reportedly discuss a compensation plan this week. Ohio City expected to discuss “Cincinnati Real Estate Compensation Program,” a proposal co-sponsored by Vice Mayor Jan-Michel Lemon Kearney and Councilman Scotty Johnson.
The Cincinnati Enquirer said the program would help “low- and moderate-income residents” and “any individual or family member of an individual who has been prevented from purchasing a home due to discriminatory practices.” report.
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