Evanston, Illinois. will issue $25,000 to 44 residents in reparations payments, the City’s Reparations Committee has announced. Established in 2019 and approved by the City Council in 2021, the ...
San Francisco could be in hot water over a plan to pay reparations to black residents. Two San Francisco taxpayers, activist Richie Greenberg and resident Arthur Ritchie, have sued the city over the ...
Judicial Watch, a conservative watchdog group, told Fox News Digital on Tuesday it filed a lawsuit against Evanston, Illinois, to stop the city from paying Black residents reparations. "There's a ...
In 2019, Evanston became the first city in America to give publicly funded reparations to Black Americans. The first program approved for using the funds, which was focused on giving cash payments for ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The Golden Gate Bridge stands in San Francisco, Calif. Photo: Sarah Roderick-Fitch / The Center Square (The Center Square) – A ...
Richie Greenberg, one of the plaintiffs suing San Francisco over its reparations fund, claimed the measure is divisive because it solely favors Black residents. "It is dividing the city rather than ...
The payments are meant to cover housing costs. The Reparations Committee in Evanston, Illinois, will begin issuing $25,000 payments to 44 Black residents as part of its ongoing reparations initiative.
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. San Francisco is being sued over its reparations fund on grounds that its taxpayer money is being "unlawfully" used for a policy ...
More than four dozen Evanston residents are set to receive $25,000 payments as part of the city’s ongoing reparations initiative, officials confirmed this week. According to Fox News, the city’s ...
Late Struggle stalwarts such as Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, Bram Fischer, Job Tabane, Dulcie September, Ruth First, and Joe Slovo are among thousands of victims of apartheid-era atrocities whose ...
The Chicago suburb says current taxes are not enough to cover millions of dollars of promised payments.