What Reparations Look Like for Black Californians
<p>During this morning’s post-meditation scroll through my Instagram feed, I learned that a few of my local business owner friends, Tony Jolly of HOT and COOL CAFE and Ade Neff of Ride On Bike Shop Co-Op — along with another Leimert Park shop owner — are looking to buy the building in which they're all currently leasing. For more than 50 years, Leimert Park has been the hub of Black arts and culture in Los Angeles, but much of the property in and around the Leimert Park Village business district isn’t owned by Black folks.</p>
<p>The issue goes back decades to Jim Crow-era laws that weren’t just regulated to the South. The West Coast — California, included — had its own restrictive covenants that that prevented Black and Asians from owning property in certain areas;</p>
<p><a href="https://momentum.medium.com/what-reparations-look-like-for-californias-black-residents-and-business-owners-357859ff2d10"><strong>Website</strong></a></p>