On the steps of
City Hall, Councilmember Bill Perkins (D- Harlem)
announced hearings on legislation that would force companies seeking
business with the city to disclose if they profited from slavery.
The city is following the lead of several other major cites like
Detroit, Chicago and Los Angeles that have already passed laws making
companies doing business with them disclose their slave history.
''This legislation will force companies to examine their pasts, uncover
truths about slavery and help all of us think seriously and severely
about this reprehensible period in our history,'' said Perkins, who
chairs the Governmental Operations Committee. While companies that
reveal that they have profited from slavery will
not be kept from doing business with the city, companies who have
business with the city and are caught hiding past slave profits will be
stripped of their contacts, Perkins said. The hearings, jointly
held with Governmental Operations and Contracts
Committees, raise the question of whether individuals of slave
descendants will be able to bring lawsuits against companies that
disclose they benefited from slavery in the past. The support for such
legislation also comes as a minor victory to local-based groups like
Millions for Reparations, which has been pushing the Governmental
Operations Committee to pass resolutions that will help their
''campaign for reparations.'' Millions for Reparations is among
the organizations and individuals
scheduled to testify this week. Additional testimonies will come from
members of the Bloomberg Administration, Howard Dodson of the Schomburg
Center and Dorothy Tillman, the Chicago Alderman who announced last
year that J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. indirectly profited from slavery
in the 1800s. ''Too often when we think of slavery, we only think
of southern cotton
fields. New York has a substantial history of slavery,” Perkins said.
“In fact, the government of New York State not only legalized the
enslavement of Africans and their descendants, but also enacted slave
codes and taxes on the sale of enslaved persons. This legislation is a
giant step to getting the reality out. We must acknowledge the past. We
must uncover the truth. [more]
Reparations are 'common sense,' says Webster professor [more]