
A proposed California reparations bill would require occupational licensing boards in the state to prioritize black applicants, especially descendants of slaves.
A.B. 2862, introduced last week by Assemblyman Mike Gipson (D.), would update Californiaās Business and Professions Code, seemingly requiring every certification board in the stateāincluding medical boardsāto favor black applicants. The billās preamble mentions licensure for real estate and āhealing arts,ā which includes health care professions such as physicians, nurses, and therapists.
āExisting law prescribes requirements for licensure and regulation of various businesses and professions, including healing arts and real estate businesses and professions,ā reads the text of the bill. āThis bill would require boards to prioritize African American applicants seeking licenses under these provisions, especially applicants who are descended from a person enslaved in the United States.ā
Gipsonās bill is part of a package of 14 pieces of legislation that the stateās Legislative Black Caucus announced in late January. Other bills in the package include one that would fund ācommunity-driven solutionsā to violence in black communities and another that would issue a formal apology for atrocities inflicted on black slaves and their descendants.
The caucusās package represents Californiaās first legislative action on reparations since the stateās Reparations Task Force over the summer issued a 1,100-page report that recommended what Gipsonās bill would accomplish. The caucus in a release described the package as the āfirst step in what will be a multi-year effort to implement the legislative recommendations in the report.ā Neither the task forceās report nor the caucusās legislative package called for direct cash payments to descendants of slaves.
Gipsonās office declined a request for comment.
California has long pursued legislation and programs related to racial reparations. The Reparations Task Forceās summer reportāwhich it issued after two years of deliberationāalso included recommendations that the state replace school police officers with social workers and decriminalize public urination.
Democratic state senator Steven Bradford introduced a bill last week to divert money toward reparations. Bradfordās bill would require 6 percent of money directed to one of the stateās reserve funds to go to another fund that would support policies that āindemnifyā descendants of slaves or free black people who lived in the United States before 1900. The bill came days after a watchdog warned that the stateās budget deficit is projected to reach $73 billion.
Original News Source ā Washington Free Beacon
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