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From YouTube: Reparations Commission
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B
All
right,
good
afternoon,
everyone
I'm
going
to
start
with
Alicia
Ballard.
D
E
A
Before
we
begin
I'd
like
to
welcome
our
guests
and
for
those
of
you
who
are
in
with
us
virtually
as
well
as
those
of
you
who
are
in
person
to
remind
you
that
there
is
public
comment
at
the
end
of
our
agenda,
and
we
will
also
like
to
thank
you
for
your
attention
to
our
focus
groups.
You
are
also
welcome
to
attend
and
those
dates
and
times
and
places
have
been
noted
on
our
website.
A
Also
on
our
website,
there
are
articles
just
for
your
advantages
of
your
consideration
that
are
keeping
our
seatings
here
in
the
context
of
what's
going
on
in
other
parts
of
the
country
as
well
as
internationally
I.
Invite
you
to
read
those
and
keep
up
with
those.
For
example,
there
is
an
article
on
in
in
your
packet
online
on
a
question
that
was
raised
in
our
last
meeting
regarding
coven
and
African
Americans
in
button
County.
A
The
meeting
agenda
has
been
distributed
in
your
board
packet,
and
there
is
one
change
that
I'd
like
for
you
to
accept
and
that
I'm
offering
this
chair
to
postpone
the
consideration
of
an
action
movement
that
considers
the
formal
promo
acceptance
of
the
report.
Groups.
I
need
to
have
more
than
even
questions
and
answers.
So,
if
it's,
if
it's
with
your
consent,
to
postpone
it
for
our
next
meeting
before
we
take
formal
action
on,
let's
see
where
it
was.
A
Yes,
it's
under
old
business
and
it's
it's.
It's
unbean
action
item
to
establish
the
work
groups
I
like
the
postpone
that
for
the
next
meeting,
if
I
have
your
permission
to
do
that,
what.
A
Was
our
formal
action
to
accept
the
existence
of
a
work
groups
to
established
in
the
work
groups?
There
are
a
couple
of
questions
regarding
parameters
of
your
responsibilities.
There
are
just
some
others
about
the
public
nature
of
those
meetings.
I
just
need
to
be
more
food,
so
that
you
have
more
information
on
what
you're
looking
through
is
that
procedure
or
consent
and.
H
A
And
in
terms
of
the
work
groups
and
the
work
that
you
all
have
been
doing,
I'd
like
to
congratulate
you
on
starting
and
forming
your
own
set
of
questions
already
and
for
both
data
as
well
as
direction.
Thank
you.
Thank
you
really
showing
the
enthusiasm.
I
hope
would.
Thank
you.
Are
there
other
amendments
to
the
agenda.
A
If
not
we'll
proceed
as
it
is
amended
of,
with
the
exception
of
the
courtroom,
you
also
receive
the
August
15th
minutes
in
your
commission
packet
of
Eastern
draft
of
them.
Are
there
any
additions
or
corrections
to
those
benefits.
A
You
thank
you.
Minutes
will
be
filed
as
amended
Deborah
Clark
Jones
is
the
moderator
for
today's
meeting
two
mind
presenting
the
commission,
reminding
us
with
Mrs
commission.
Yes,.
H
Yes,
on
page
five
in
your
board
packet,
you
have
the
community
Recreations
commission
charge
and
I'll
read
it
based
on
the
city
council's
July,
14
2020
resolution.
H
The
commission
is
tasked
with
issuing
a
report
in
a
timely
manner
for
consideration
for
a
corporation
and
Corporation,
rather
into
short
and
long-term
priorities
and
plans,
and
providing
budget
and
program
priorities
for
the
following
to
include,
but
not
being
limited
to
increasing
minority
home
ownership
and
access
to
other,
affordable
housing,
increasing
minority
business
ownership
and
career
opportunities,
developing
strategies
to
grow
equity
and
generational
wealth
and
closing
gaps
in
health
care,
education,
employment
and
pay.
Neighborhood
safety
and
fairness
within
criminal
justice.
H
I
will
also
they
will
be
amended
based
on
the
amendment
of
the
agenda.
But
the
objectives
of
tonight's
meeting
are
one
to
learn
about
principles
for
laying
the
foundation
for
local
reparations
from
National
expert
and
Recreations
activist
Mr.
Cam
Howard,
commissioner,
with
the
national
African-American
reparations
commission,
he's
also
director
of
reparations
United
and
has
also
been
a
lifetime
member
of
in
Cobra,
and
the
second
objective
now
is
to
also
receive
updates
on
Buncombe
County's
reparations
budget
action.
H
The
meeting
venue
assessment
and
also
to
touch
on
the
commission's
two-day
meeting
currently
planned
for
September
I,
would
also
just
like
to
quickly
note
that
you
have
an
overview
of
a
high
level
overview
of
some
of
the
topics
for
the
remainder
of
this
year,
and
you
will
be
getting
more
detail
as
that
is
developed.
A
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
We're
on
Roman
numeral,
six
regarding
the
appointment
of
an
alternative
as
a
full
commissioner
and
regrettably,
Kelsey
Simmons
has
informed
us
that
she's
no
longer
able
to
serve
on
the
commission.
She
has
other
commitments
that
have
interfered
and
but
I'm
happy
to
announce
that
the
Burlington
County
Board
of
Commissioners
has
named
ultimate
Dwayne
Richardson.
J
First
I'm
hearing
of
it
that's
a
lot
of
time
typically
took
a
few
minutes
ago.
Honor.
A
A
Our
moderators
has
talked
about
the
stages
that
we're
involving
in
terms
of
understanding
with
reparations
and
what
this
process
is
doing.
The
last
few
meetings
we've
we've
involved
ourselves
with
perspectives
that
were
given
to
us
by
professors
out
of
Duke
University
representatives
from
in
Cobra
and
tonight
is
another
perspective
that
we
are
looking
forward
to
hearing.
A
But
what
is
reparations
and
what
should
we
be
looking
forward
to
to
design?
It
is
this
part
of
our
considerations
tonight
and
helping
us
do
this
would
be
Mr
Kim
Howard
his
presentations
entitled
laying
foundation
for
local
representative
representation,
correct
preparations
I
have
an
introduction
as
I
was
reading.
It
I
want
to
read
this
to
you
if
they
have
to
say
this
is
a
synopsis.
A
Distillation.
Camp
Howard
is
an
internationally
respective
for
his
reparations
work.
Last
month,
through
his
new
organization
reparations
United,
he
led
a
cohort
of
reparations
organizations
called
Global
Circle
preparations
in
dealings
to
the
Vatican
to
deliver
represent
reparations,
present
presentment
to
the
Catholic
Church.
The
presentment
laid
out
the
church's
role
in
the
transatlantic
slave
trade,
the
legacy
of
those
arms
and
the
repubatory
Justice
programs
require
prior
from
the
church.
A
A
As
a
member
of
National
African-American
reparations
commission,
he
represented
he's
been
chosen
to
lead
a
group
of
Scholars
attorneys
in
clergy
and
Grassroots
leaders
as
to
revised
the
house
bill
40
the
federal
reparations
proposal,
the
consideration
before
Congress
as
lead
writer
of
the
new
bill
emphasis
was
changed
from
being
just
the
study
of
what
maybe
me,
too
reparations
to
an
actual
bill
for
remedy
for
representative
reparations
he's
working
with
currently
with
Representatives
Sheila
Jackson
Lee,
and
the
reparations
strategy
group
to
move
HR
40
into
law
again
is
a
lifetime
member
of
incobra
as
well
as
National
Coalition
of
blacks
for
reparations
in
America.
A
Going
back
to
the
2006.
he's
worked
with
Alder
woman,
Robin
Simmons,
who
led
Evanston
Illinois
reparations
efforts
in
June
20
successfully
the
Chicago's
efforts
to
become
the
Second
City
to
establish
a
reparations
program,
he's
documented
key
Lessons,
Learned
guidance
and
through
his
book
that
we
have
in
front
of
us
laying
the
foundation
for
local
reparations
and
I,
encourage
you
to
read
it.
It's
it's
thin,
but
it's
heavy.
A
Let's
stand
up
Cameron's,
just
returning
from
Accra
in
Ghana,
where
he
was
a
kid
contributor
to
advancing
Justice
and
reparations
and
racial
racial
healing
Summit.
Earlier
this
month,
many
of
you
may
realize
that
our
reparations
efforts
here
locally
are
in
harmony
with
reparations
efforts
on
the
continent
regarding
damages
from
around
enslavement
as
well
as
Colonials
camera
account
was
involved.
It
has
based
much
of
his
work
and
came
out
of
the
reparations
following
the
apartheid
see.
What
we're
doing
is
small,
but
it's
significant.
K
Thank
you
all
for
that.
Welcome
I
also
want
to
thank
personally
Miss
Jones,
who
inviting
me
into
Asheville
I.
Thank
the
commission,
chair
and
co-chair
for
accepting
that
invitation.
I
want
to
thank
the
commission.
It's
yourself
for
this
tremendous
work
that
you've
taken
upon
yourself
to
do.
We
are.
We
are
the
people
we've
been
waiting
for?
We
are
making
history
together
each
each
one
of
us
here
in
this
room.
K
K
and
share
me
what
you
were
doing
here,
and
certainly
that
excited
me
then,
and
excites
me
now
to
see
what
you're
doing.
K
As
the
chairman
said
this,
it
seems
like
it's
just
work
here
on
the
local
level,
for
what
you're
doing
as
National
and
international
reverberations
the
African
world.
You
talked
about
me
leading
an
effort
to
the
Vatican.
K
It
was
the
Roman
Catholic
Church
that
inaugurated
the
transatlantic
slavery
that
told
the
Portuguese
government
to
go
into
Africa,
to
plunder,
to
subdue
its
inhabitants
and
commit
his
progeny,
his
children
to
Perpetual
enslavement.
What
we
know
as
a
Transit
line
of
slave
trade
came
out
of
that
order.
How
does
that
eat
it
out
of
that
paper
glory
and
the
subsequent
paper
boys
that
followed,
and
so
what
happens
at
any
space
on
the
planet?
When
we
rise
up
for
reparations,
we
are
benefiting
and
we're.
K
We
are
leading
and
we're
benefiting
every
other
African
for
African
descendant
on
the
planet,
because
they
now
see
that
it's
possible
and
see
that
there's
something
that
they
can
emulate.
It
gives
us
all
hope
and
because
it's
all
power,
so
thank
you
for
the
energy
that
you're
putting
into
this
movement.
K
The
pamphlet
that
I,
wrote,
land
and
foundation
for
local
reparations
was
something
that
ottoman
Robin
Simmons
out
of
Evanston
suggested
that
I
write.
We
had
just
passed
a
local
local
initiative
in
Chicago
about
six
months
after
the
Evanston
initiative
and
then
Asheville
that
just
recently
passed
one
a
month
after
later,
you
had
passed
your
your
resolution,
your
legislation,
about
a
month
later,
and
we
were
getting
calls
all
around
the
country
about
what
his
local
reparations.
What
is
local
reparations
so.
K
At
what
was
common
and
what
Robin
had
did
and
haven't
said
what
we
did
in
Chicago
talking
to
Rob
what
you
did,
and
so
you
know
you
fed
that
pamphlet
as
well
and
try
to
look
at
what
are
the
principles
working
with
narc
that
we
should
all
be
focused
on
as
we
try
to
do
this
work
on
a
local
level
and
so
that
produced
land
and
Foundation.
This
is
dated
2020,
but
actually
outdated.
K
This
for
this
particular
presentation,
but
that
was
something
I
put
together
in
2020,
but
it's
been
updated
for
this
presentation,
so
I'll
just
get
into
it.
So.
K
I,
always
look
at
the
Historical
Foundation
of
everything
that
we
do,
because
it's
there
that
you're
able
to
see
clearly
what's
taking
place
when
you
have
an
historical
framework
and
so
I'll
talk
a
little
about
a
little
bit
about
local
reparations
too
pre-2018
I
talk
about
local
reparations
2019
to
the
current,
where
we
are
now
I
share.
How
all
that
we
do
in
the
reparation
space
as
black
people,
no
matter
where
we
are
it.
All
Began,
in
2021,
at
the
Durbin
World
Conference
Against
Racism.
That's
the
foundation
of
the
work
that
we're
doing.
K
K
About
the
global
framework
and
then
just
finish
with
the
local
reparations.
K
So,
where
we
are
today,
we
had
a
unique
time
in
America's
history,
not
since
the
Reconstruction
appeared
from
1865
to
1877..
Had
you
had
this
much
energy
in
this
country
around
the
issue
of
redress
for
the
crimes
committed
against
our
people
in
this
country.
At
that
time
you
had
both
houses
of
Congress
debating
the
issue.
The
president
was
fully
into
this
issue.
The
the
the
army
I
was
fully
into
this
issue.
Every
University
was
writing
around
about
this
issue
and
now
we're
in
that
space.
It's
not.
K
K
Backwards,
you
have
you're
charged
with
moving
your
city
forward
and
there
are
some
areas
that
this
city
and
every
city
in
America
has
been
afraid
to
deal
with
and
you're
charged
to
bring
those
issues
to
the
Forefront
in
a
way
to
move
Justice
forward.
The
way
that
moves
healing
for
it
not
only
for
our
community,
but
this
city
and
Nation
can
heal.
K
If
we
do
this
work
collectively
and
we
do
it
correctly,
there's
research
data
that
shows-
and
we
have
to
make
this
argument
more
and
more
as
we
move
forward,
especially
when
it
comes
to
the
funding
aspect
of
this
work,
that
the
research
shows
that
every
dollar
you
put
into
black
reparations.
You
get
a
100
to
200
percent
return,
not
a
10
return,
not
a
fifteen
percent,
not
a
50
return,
but
a
100
to
200
percent
return
that
research
was
done
by
Citibank
about
two
years
ago.
K
So,
as
we
do
this
work,
it
doesn't
have
to
be
contentious
between
Black
and
White
America.
We
don't
have
to
focus
on
the
rape.
We
don't
have
to
focus
on.
We
know
that
happened.
Oh,
we
know
there's
some
injury
that
still
results
from
that,
but
we
don't
have
to
focus
on
that.
We
want
to
focus
on
the
healing
and
and
making
our
argument
for
the
resources
for
those
crimes
that
were
committed.
We
can
also
say
that.
M
K
Benefit
also-
and
that's
really
what
I
want
what
we
want
to
focus
there's
been
unprecedented
collaboration
in
the
movement
right
now
we
have
allies
in
the
Japanese
American
Community.
We
have
allies
in
the
Jewish
Community.
The
Jewish
reform
movement
came
out
with
a
resolution
in
support
of
HR
40..
We
sent
a
letter
to
Congress
and
to
the
president.
We
have
350
organizations
that
assigned
on
to
that
letter
why
we
can't
wait
it's
the
name
of
the
letter.
You
can
go
online
and
look
for
that
letter.
K
Why
we
can't
wait
over
350
National
and
some
local
organizations
sign
on
majority
of
them
are
non-black
unprecedented
allyship.
K
I'm,
sorry
I
don't
have
the
name
of
that
bank.
The
National
Bank
that
came
out
also
last
year
late
last
year
in
favor
of
reparations
universities,
the
philact
philanthropic
community
right
now
I'm
putting
tremendous
amount
of
assets
or
Capital
into
the
movement
funding
into
the
movement
to
move
it
forward,
so
we're
in
an
unprecedented
time.
K
There
is
so
much
energy
in
this
movement
on
the
local
levels.
When
I
got
into
this
movement,
everything
was
National.
Everything
was
Federal.
Everything
was
pushing
the
federal
legislation
forward
and
up
until
probably
two
years
ago,
90
of
the
energy
was
still
on
the
federal
level
now
across
the
country.
K
Additionally,
at
the
local
level,
we
were
creating
what
we
call
slavery-
disclosure
laws
it
started.
First
in
Massachusetts,
Chicago
was
the
first
city,
Massachusetts
was
the
first
state.
K
California
was
another
state
that
created
slavery,
disclosure
laws
and
some
a
dozen
or
so
or
more
cities
created
slavery,
disclosure
laws
and
what
these
laws
stated
is
that
any
Corporation
or
institution
that
wanted
to
do
business
with
the
city
had
to
research
their
history
and
disclose
whether
or
not
they
had
any
involvement,
any
complicity
in
the
enslave
any
benefit
from
the
enslavement
of
our
ancestors,
whether
they
were
corporations
like
railroads
banking
institutions,
Insurance
institutions
we're
seeing
more
and
more
that
there
were
other
corporations
that
still
exist
today,
like
in
Atlanta
I,
think
there's
a
Chattahoochee
Bridge
Brick
Company,
this
company
that
made
bricks
with
primarily
with
the
convict
lease
labor.
K
We
know
that
whole
system,
post
enslavement
was
worse
than
enslavement
when
it
came
to
the
survivability
of
our
ancestors.
Well,
they
work
them
during
that
period,
17
to
18
hours
a
day,
literally
work
them
to
death
for
another
20
30
40
years
after
enslavement,
to
propel
to
deal
with
the
labor
shortage
of
these
Southern
States,
because
after
the
slavery
that
was
there
there's
a
huge
labor
shortage,
so
they
went
out
and
they
arrested
Africans
and
you.
K
M
K
We
also
make
our
argument
for
state
and
local
reparations,
because
it
was
after
enslavement
that
that
the
injury
continued
and
in
huge
ways
it
continued,
not.
D
D
K
For
instance,
in
Chicago
I
know
we,
there
was
one
done
in
Philadelphia
around
community
control
of
the
police
as
a
reparations
issue.
In
Chicago
we
did
one
around
around
the
slave
disclosure
around.
These
corporations
mandating
that
they
pay
because
of
slavery,
disclosure
ordinance,
The,
Way,
It,
Was
Written
in
Chicago.
They
simply
had
to
disclose,
but
we
did.
A
referendum
did
weren't
successful,
but
we
did
a
referendum
to
raise
the
issue
around,
not
only
after
disclosing
should
they
were
they
mandated
or
obligated
to
engage
in
the
repetitive
initiative
with
the
communities.
K
California
has
a,
and
that
was
a
study
commission
based
on
the
federal
bill
at
the
time
H.R
40,
which
was,
as
the
chairman
said,
was
basically
a
study
bill
and
that
would
come
out
and
and
conclude
with
recommendations
and
what
we
did
with
the
Federal
bill
was
to
not
only
study
the
federal
Bill
initially
was
designed
to
determine
whether
or
not
there
was
continued
injury.
K
Let's
look
at
all
that
happened
and,
let's
see
if
this
continued
in,
let's
see
if
there's
any
Legacy
of
that
that's
impacting
black
people
today,
because
it
wasn't
something
that
was
accepted.
K
In
fact,
anybody
was
saying
that
happened
so
long
ago.
Y'all
know
that
right.
It
happened
so
long
ago.
Why
don't
y'all
just
get
over
it?
Yeah,
yeah
and
so
Congressman
Conyers
said
well.
We
need
to
study
this
and
determine
if
there's
a
continued
Legacy
in
2014
2015
when
narc
was
created.
We
said,
there's
already
been
too
many
studies
to
determine
the
continued
injury.
The
United
Nations
in
2001,
which
I'll
talk
about
the
world
conferences.
K
Against
Racism
says
that
globally
this
continued
injury,
not
just
in
America,
not
just
in
South
America,
the
Caribbean,
but
globally,
wherever
you
find
African
people
on
the
continent
in
Europe,
there's
continued
injury
from
the
crimes
committed
during
the
transatlantic
slave
trade,
colonialism,
apartheid
and
neocolonialism,
and
what
I'm
calling
here
in
America
that
we
exist
in
today.
It's
a
Neo
apartheid.
K
Yeah
forgot,
what's
going
on
with
that,
so
yeah,
so
hr40
and
the
California
bill
they
lifted
what
we
put
in
HR
40
the
purpose
and
findings
right
out
of
the
HR
40
Bill
and
laid
the
bases
word
for
word
for
the
California
bill.
So
the
new
bill,
in
addition
to
well
I'm,
not
going
to
say
studying
whether
or
not,
but
if
this
is
It's
focused,
it
begins
with
the
premise
with
the
fact
that
there's
continued
injury.
K
It
begins
from
that
premise
and,
and
so
then
it
starts
with
what
was
the
extent
of
the
harms
of
the
crimes.
And
what
is
the
extent
of
the
injury
that
has
resulted
from
those
crimes?
That's
what
it's
designed
to
study
and
from
there
you
get
your
output
but
I'm
getting
ahead
of
myself,
so
the
California,
so
Illinois
produced
a
bill
that
was
patterned
after
the
original
H.R
40
in
2014,
and
not
much
has
happened
from
that
study.
K
K
K
Our
work
has
to
be
about
looking
at
our
communities
and
say:
what
will
they
look
like
in
a
healthy
state?
All
the
data
I
was
talking
with
the
chairman
earlier.
You
look
at
it
that
it's
depressing
of
the
state
of
Black
America
state
of
black
Chicago,
the
state
of
black
evidence
in
the
state
of
black
I'm
sure
the
state
of
black
Asheville.
K
K
That's
your
charge
to
get
this
community
to
that
place,
and
it's
perfect
that
you
have
short
medium
and
long
term
charge
to
come
up
with
with
Solutions
in
those
three
time
periods.
That's
perfect
that
you,
you
created
your
legislation
in
that
fashion,
because
a
lot
of
it
is
long-term.
K
K
K
K
Non-Federalist
legislators
to
produce
a
local
reparations
initiative,
and
then
we
know
in
2019
Evanston,
which
was
successful,
Chicago
and
Asheville
both
were
in
2020
and
California
in
2020,
in
Illinois,
New,
Jersey
and
right
now,
there's
over
100
cities
that
has
that
in
the
process
pushing
for
some
type
of
local
legislation.
K
So
I
started
off
by
saying
this
all
began
with
Durbin
prior
to
the
Durban
World
Conference
Against
Racism.
We
were
in
this
mode
of
trying
to
convince
Advocate
trying
to
convince
trying
to
persuade
trying
to
influence
that
something
was
going
on
in
our
community
that
wasn't
right
and
that
was
connected
to
this
deep
past
history
and
the
powers
that
be
were
not
buying
at
all.
As
I
stated
when
it
was
like,
you
know,
get
over
it.
It's
happened
so
long
ago.
K
The
outcome
document
of
these
World
conferences
are
the
leading
thought
globally
on
a
particular
issue,
and
so
this
outcome
document
was
very
important
to
this
particular
Globe.
To
this
issue
about
racism,
xenophobia
and
other
related
intolerances,
and
what
the
African
world
collectively
decided
and.
K
The
African
World
initially
talking
about
the
United
States,
the
Caribbean
and
Central
American
Latin
America,
the
diaspora
or
the
African
descendant
worlds.
Those
who
descended
from
Africans,
who
had
been
enslaved
here
in
the
west,
but
we
decided
as
a
body,
was
that
we
would
not
go
all
go
to
Durban
with
our
own
individual
issues.
K
You
know
what
what
y'all
experiencing
in
America,
what
y'all
experiencing
in
Colombia,
what
y'all
experiencing
Black
Folk
in
Brazil
or
in
Jamaica,
who
are
going
to
do
that?
We
were
going
to
be
have
a
unified
front,
go
to
the
bourbon
and
said
three
things
must
come
out
of
this
particular
World.
Conference
one
is
that
the
Chinese
united
slave
trade
enslavement
colonialism
part-time,
which
is
called
Jim
Crow
in
America.
K
But
it's
supposed
to
part-time,
with
crimes
against
humanity
and
the
reason
we
wanted
to
be
labeled
crimes
against
humanity,
because
crimes
against
humanity
have
no
statue
of
limitation
and
they're
the
most
egregious
crimes
that
a
government
can
can
commit
or
allow
to
be
committed
against
a
civilian
population,
not
a
population
of
people.
They
have
war
with
it's
like
genocide,
and
so
we
wanted
to
raise
the
transatlantic
slave
trade
up
to
the
same
standard.
K
We
also
wanted
to
come
out
this
document
out
of
this
conference
that
there
was
an
economic
basis
to
these
crimes.
When
you
look
around
the
world-
and
you
see
the
prosperous
Nations
on
this
planet,
they
all
cats
are
rude
in
the
tragic
Landing
slave
trade.
The
root
of
their
wealth
was
built
out
of
the
transatlantic
slave
trade,
and
you
look
at
all
the
countries
that
are
poor
and
impoverished.
They
were
all
the
victims
of
these
crimes
in
the
human
development
index.
K
I
think
it's
put
out
by
the
World
Bank
or
one
of
international
monetary
final,
one
of
those
global
organs.
K
They
have
a
four-tier
measurement
of
country's
development.
They
have
very.
D
K
M
K
African
nations
are
in
High
human
development.
69
of
African
nations
are
in
very
low
human
development,
zero
European
nations
and
very
very
low
human
development.
That
all
is
evidence
of
the
crimes
committed
by
the
Global
European
World
against
the
Global
African
world,
and
so
they
wanted
that
to
come
out
of
this
World
Conference
Against
Racism.
That.
K
Not
because
of
in
America
personal
responsibility
right,
you
poor,
because
you
choose
to
be
poor,
no,
that's
not
the
case,
and
so
the
International
Community
debated
this
issue.
United
States
walked
out.
You
know
this
Superior
complex
walked
out,
but
still
they
have
to
uphold
to
the
outcome.
Doctrine
They
concluded
that
there
was
an
economic
basis
and
that
we
see
those
see
it
in
the
living
conditions
of
black
people
all
around
the
planet.
K
K
So
that's.
K
K
K
K
D
K
M
K
K
That
is
how
I
stated
earlier
is
to
demonstrate
the
benefit
it
that
the
repair,
not
only
the
psychological
benefit
or
the
psychological
health
benefit
to
White
America,
because
you
know
White
America
got
some
psychological
issues
that
they
need
to
deal
with,
and
this
will
help
them
deal
with
it.
But,
aside
from
that,
the
economic
benefit
to
this
nation's
dealing
with
this
issue
of
redressing
Justice.
This
is
a
Justice.
This
is
a
planetary
justice
issue,
we're
dealing
with.
K
So
this
is
particular
language
to
the
welcome
to
the
outcome
document
of
the
World
Conference
Against
Racism.
We
acknowledge
that
slavery
and
slave
trade,
including
the
transatlantic
slave
trade,
for
appalling
tragedies
in
the
history
of
humanity,
not
only
because
of
their
barbarism,
but
also
in
terms
of
their
magnitude,
organized
nature
and
especially
the
negation
of
the
essence
of
the
victim
and
further
acknowledges
slavery
and
the
Chinese
and
the
slave
trade
are
a
crime
against
humanity.
It
should
have
always
been
so.
K
K
You
had
separate
resources,
went
into
white
schools,
then
they
went
into
black
schools
and
you
produced
a
development
out
of
that.
That
was
separate
and
we
see
the
effects
of
that
develop
that
separate
development.
Today
anywhere,
you
see
disparities
in
America
racial
disparities,
you're
viewing
the
evidence
of
Apartheid
whether.
K
It's
in
housing,
whether
it's
in
criminal
justice,
whether
it's
in
in
wealth,
wherever
you
see
disparities
and
how
you're
treated
in
the
hospital,
wherever
you
see,
disparities
and
as
the
author
Tom
Burrell
states
that
black
people
on
the
bottom
of
every
good,
listening
American
on
the
top
of
very
Badness.
K
K
It
is
from
these
terms
that
we
get
our
ability
to
to
fight
back
fighting
the
way
that
we
went.
O
K
Canada
and
Australia
three
of
the
top
white
Southern
Nations,
there
were
three
pairs
of
those
crimes
when
I
was
in
the
crowd.
I
argued
that
on
the
African
continent
it
was
also
three
periods
for
them.
For
us,
it
was
a
fear
of
the
slave
man,
15,
probably
15
50.
K
In
in
1619,
but
it
was
Spanish
and
French
was
here
much
earlier,
Peterman
slayman
ended
it
officially
in
1865.,
I
grew
into
a
new
period
of
enslavement
or
slaving
by
another
name.
K
There
were
certain
parts
of
that,
but
officially
it
was
called
the
apartheid
period
or
Jim
Crow,
and
then
that
ended
so
apparently
with
the
passage
of
the
Civil
Rights
bill,
the
Boating
Rights
Act
and
the
Fair
Housing
Act,
and
today
we
live
in
a
new
apartheid
Escape,
because
the
disparity
still
exists
and
the
institutions
that
create
the
disparities
still
exist
right
and
that's
the
institutions
that
to
create
that
are
the
basis
of
the
underdevelopment
or
the
the
difference
in
development
among
blacks
and
whites
in
this
country,
and
so
we
still
living
in
a
part-time
state.
K
It's
just
different.
It's
a
new
form,
just
like
enslavement.
When
slayment
ended,
sharecropping
began
slay
them
by
another
name:
convict
Gleason
began
enslaving
by
another
name.
We
still
exist
in
the
apartheid
state
in
this
country.
K
Your
job
again
is
to
look
at
those
systems
and
sick
ways
in
which
you
can
illuminate
how
they
continue
and
then,
most
importantly,
determine
what
ways
you
can
you
can
use
to
put
an
end
to
them,
also
from
the
how
am
I
looking
on
time,
good,
okay,
also
from
the
world
comps
Against
Racism.
We
recognize
that
colonialism
from
the
German
declaration
program
of
action
that
came
out
of
the
World
Conference.
K
We
recognize
that
colonialism
has
Ledger
to
racism,
racial
discrimination,
xenophobia,
related
intolerance,
they're
preceding
paragraph
talks
about
apartheid
also,
so
this
also
States
for
apartheid.
We
recognize
that
apartheid
colonialism
has
led
to
races
and
racial
discrimination.
Xenophobia
related
intolerance
that
Africans
and
people
after
consent
and
people
of
Aging
to
sit
and
Indigenous
people
were
victims
of
part-time
and
colonialism
and
continue
to
be
victims
of
its
consequences,
meaning
that
it
continues.
K
Ended
it
continues
to
have
a
fact.
We
acknowledge
that
the
suffering
caused
by
these
actions
and
affirm
that
wherever
and
whenever
it
occurred,
must
be
condemned
this
reoccurrence
to
prevent
it.
We
further
regret
that
the
effects
and
consistence
of
those
structures
and
practices
have
been
among
the
factors
contributing
to
the
lasting
social
and
economic
inequalities
in.
M
G
M
K
Period
was
was
primarily
separate
development,
but
genocide
was
occurring
then,
as
it's
occurring
now,
and
you
look
at
the
life
expectancy,
difference
among
blacks
and
white
in
this
country.
That
difference
shows
that
conditions
are
such
that
lead
to
those
differences,
and
when
you
have
conditions
that
leads
to
early
death
or
the
deaf
in
the
community,
it
doesn't
have
to
be
you're
killing
them
outright.
But
if
you
have
conditions
that
lead
to
their
early
death,
that's
also
a
condition
of
genocide
under
the
Geneva
Convention.
K
When
you
have
infant
mortality
rates
higher
among
our
children
than
it
than
white
children,
that's
evidence
of
genocide,
that's
evidence
of
conditions
that
these
mothers
have
to
experience
and
the
children
experience
upon
birth
that
are
different
from
the
experiences
and
conditions
of
white
mothers,
maternal
mortality
rate,
the
same
that's
evidence
of
genocide.
The
mass
amount
of
murdering
that
happens
in
our
communities
among
black
youth
is
evidence
of
current
forms
of
genocide.
The
conditions,
the
historical
conditions
that
our
young
people
grow
up
in
it's
evidence
that
genocide
is
continuing
in
our
community.
K
K
Wiped
out
4
billion
in
Chicago
I,
don't
know
what
the
price
is
here
in
Asheville.
What
that
number
is
in
Nashville,
but
there's
still
plunder
from
our
community.
K
K
K
In
cobra,
where
I
talked
about
crimes,
we're
committed
injuries
exist
and
Cobra
initially
said
that
those
injury
areas
were
the
minimal
injury
areas
were
five
Economic
Development
criminal
justice
and
criminal
punishment,
Education
Health
and
people
which
deals
with
our
culture
and
the
ability
and
the
theft
of
our
not
only
our
culture,
our
language
and
and
things
of
that
nature,
but
our
sense
of
sovereignty.
K
K
D
K
Looked
at
housing,
education,
environmental
justice,
family
culture,
employment,
criminal
justice,
mental
physical
health
and
wealth,
Gap
and
and
in
my
updated
slide,
because
I've
dated
I
showed
that
your
task
force
or
your
commission
looked
at
Economic
Development
criminal
punishment,
Education,
Health
and
housing.
K
K
And
you
you're
charged
to
generate
that
report
and
I'm
and
it
went
out.
I
was
hearing
the
moderate,
Miss
Jones
speak
today
and
reading
the
mission
I'm
glad
in
there.
It
was
not
just
you
were
going
to
generate
this
report
and
make
recommendations,
but
that
you
also
going
to
develop
the
budgets
and
the
proposals
to
address
the
the
the
injuries
and
that's
what
your
data
is
going
to
direct
you
on.
How
much
needs
to
go
to
this?
How
much
needs
to
go
to
that
as
I'm
preparing
these
proposals.
K
This
is
more
of
the
language
and
durability,
with
the
view
of
closing
those
dark
chapters
in
history
and
as
a
matter
of
reconciliation
healing,
we
invite
the
International
Community
as
members
to
honor
the
memory
of
the
victims,
and
it
goes
out,
goes
on
to
listing
some
of
the
main
characteristics
of
repair
of
reparations.
Restoring
the
Dignity
of
the
of
the
victim,
that's
called
satisfaction
to
Halt
and
reverse
to
halt
the.
K
We
also
strongly
reaffirm,
as
a
pressing
requirement
of
justice,
that
victims
of
human
rights
violations
suffer
from
racism.
Racial
discrimination,
xenophobia
related
to
tolerances,
especially
in
light
of
their
vulnerable
situations
socially
and
culturally
and
economically,
should
be
assured
of
having
access
to
Justice
these
commissions,
including
legal
assistance
where
appropriate
and
effective
and
appropriate
protection
and
remedies,
including
the
right
to
see
just
inadequate
reparation
or
satisfaction
for
any
diamond
suffering.
K
K
It
was
said
that
reparations
must
quote,
wipe
out
all
consequences
of
the
harm.
That's
the
purpose
of
reparations.
It.
K
K
K
K
That's
the
First
Act
of
reparation,
so
another
slider
said:
halt
hot
hot
is
the
same
as
cessation
and
guarantees
a
non-repetition
guarantees
and
insurances
of
non-repetition.
The
second
area
for
reparations
is
restitution.
How
do
you
return
the
people
back
to
where
they
would
have
been
and
do
not
stole
all
the
housing
too
high?
You.
D
K
You're,
not
you
know,
destroyed
their
business
Community
when
you
ran
the
highway
through
their
Community.
What
would
they
be?
Had
you
not
underfunded
their
children's
education?
Had
you
not
removed
all
the
white
teachers,
all
the
black
teachers
out
of
their
school
matriculation?
Where
would
these
children
be?
They
certainly
wouldn't
be
in
these
jail
houses.
K
If
that
makes
any
sense,
because
we're
all
experiencing
the
same
things
all
around
the
country,
but
we
all
are
going
to
bring
our
own
creativity
and
vision
to
the
situation,
we're
going
to
create
something
totally
different
everywhere.
We
are
because
that's
who
we
are
as
a
people,
this
tremendously
creative
people
in
the
midst
of
all
of
the
harm
that
is
being
targeted
toward
us
as
a
people,
compensation
compensation
is
I,
say
conversation
is
anything,
that's
put
a
tick
on
your
asset
column
on
your
balance
sheet.
K
It
could
be
anything
that
builds
well.
It
could
be
a
grant
for
business.
It
can
be
some
type
of
tax
benefit
that
you
can.
You
have
more
to
spend
or
more
to
invest.
It
could
be
a
direct
check,
it
doesn't
have
to
be
a
direct
check
and
all
that's
the
that's
the
one
thing
when
you
talk
about
reparations
that
the
majority
of
white
people
are
going
to
say.
No,
that's
why
we
in
Kobe
we
never
lived
with
that.
We
never
shied
away
from
it,
but.
K
You
have
to
question
whether
or
not
their
civilization
on
reparations
right,
because
we
know
that
we
need
allies
to
move
this
forward
and
we
know
what's
going
to
turn
off
the
majority
of
the
people
who
don't
look
like
us,
why
would
we
leave
with
that?
We
don't
dismiss
it
because
it's
a
part
of
international
law
we're
not
going
to
leave
with
that.
It's
deserved
it's
owed
to
us.
You
are
obligated,
but
you
and
I
can
agree
on
restitution
that
was
a
pope
Democratic.
That
was
a
poll
by
Huffington
Post.
K
K
K
Keep
them
on
satisfaction
as
an
apology,
true
for
reconciliation,
museums,
monuments,
markers
curriculum
change,
telling
the
truth,
teaching
the
truth
right,
because
our
children
are
turned
off
by
this
BS
in
some
of
these
schools,
because
it's
just
that
it's
BS
teach
our
children
truth.
That's!
That
is
a
show
that
not
only
adults,
but
not
only
children,
but
adults
who
know
more
about
the
African
history
do
better
in
life
right.
We
know
we
have
the
data
to
prove
what
our
children
need
to
know
about
themselves,
to
have
better
students
and
better
young
people.
K
K
For
the
heart,
mind
and
spirit
damage
that
has
resulted
to
a
people
as
a
result
of
the
crimes
that
were
committed
against
them.
So
these
are
the
five
components.
An
international
law
are.
What
reparations
must
the
outcomes
of
any
reparations
policy
now
on
a
local
level?
You're
not
going
to
be
doing
everything
in
all
of
these
areas,
but
we
suggest
that
you
look
to
this
when
you're
crafting
your
proposal,
some
you
may
be
able
to
do
right
away.
You
can
get
a
street
naming
change
or
take
down
some.
K
You
know
some
things
of
that
nature
and
some
it's
going
to
be
a
little
bit
difficult
to
do,
but
you're
charged
to
do
it.
So
I
want
just
to
open
up
your
mind
to
that,
and
then
we
have
what
is
called
direct
benefits
and
Collective
benefits.
Direct
benefits
are
directly
to
the
individual
cash
payment.
K
Hey
education
grant
or
you.
K
Granted
or
something
like
that
or
a
business
grant
down
payment
assistance,
those
are
forms
of
compensation,
conversation.
K
Blacks
cannot
afford
the
down
payment
that
many
of
them
could
afford
a
housing
payment,
a
mortgage
payment,
but
they
couldn't
afford
a
down
payment
to
buy
a
home,
so
they
would
move
out
of
Evanston
and
buy
out
of
Evanston
and
so
to
object
to
account
for
that.
They
created
this
policy
that
if
you
were
in
Edison
doing
that
Jim
Crow
period.
K
And
that's
really
the
only
criteria
you
just
have
to
be
there
during
that
period
and
prove
that
you
were
there
during
that
period
of
housing
discrimination.
Then
you
can
apply
to
receive
compensation
in
the
form
of
a
grand
housing
Grant
either
to
he
was
as
a
down
payment.
He
was
to
pay
down
your
mortgage
or
to
repair
your
home,
so
compensation
so
I
say
that
so
we
just
don't
throw
compensation
out
the
window
because
we
got
four
million
dollars.
K
We
can't
divide
that
up
against
you,
know
20
million
or
20
000
people
and
think
we're
going
to
get.
You
know
any
type
of
repair
out
of
that
all
right,
that's
not
going
to
happen
so
I
would
suggest
that's
why
I
just
threw
that
out
there.
Compensation
does
not
have
to
be
directed
toward
the
entire
Community,
but
it
can
be
directed
toward
particular
injuries.
K
So
that's
a
form
of
direct
benefit,
Collective
benefits
is
benefits
and
it
affect
the
entire
Community,
for
instance
the
curriculum
change
or
something
in
that
nature.
Most
of
your
benefits,
quite
a
bit
of
benefits,
are
going
to
be
Collective
and
look
at
some
examples.
So
go
down
a
yellow
period.
I
did
this.
This
is
in
the
book,
so
I'll
just
go
from
the
book.
This
is
under
restitution,
so
in
Evanston
they
were
looking
at
business
grants
which
is
a
direct
benefit.
K
You
see
the
D
and
the
C
besides
that
yellow
column,
so
the
D
is
for
direct
benefits
to
C
is
for
Collective
benefits,
so
a
school.
They
wanted
a
black
school.
They
closed
a
black
school
some
20
years
ago.
So
that's
a
collective
benefit.
All
the
children
in
Madison
would
benefit
from
a
black
school
all
right.
So
that's
a
collective
benefit.
K
Housing.
There
was
that's
a
direct
benefit.
Thank
you.
Co-Ops
and
kitchens.
Workspace
is
a
direct
benefit
and.
K
Stuff,
which
are.
K
Collective,
the
compensation-
let's
see,
I'll
stick
with
Edison
and
the
yellow
people
wanted
them
to
write
a
check
if
they
decided
they
were
going
to
do
that,
but
getting
matching
funds
from
others
outside
of
the
city.
It
was
a
collective
benefit.
The
established
Community
Trust
Fund,
some
other
stuff,
so
you
just
want
to
be
as
creative.
Whatever
the
data
demonstrates
that
you
collect
it's
going
to
tell
you
it's
going
to
point
you
to
the
repair
of
initiatives
that
you're
going
to
have
to
create
and
for
a
piece
of
success.
Identifying
the
organic
demand.
K
You've
done
that
from
the
ground.
You
identified
that
this
was
something
that
needed
to
happen
in
Nashville,
you
had
a
sophisticated
legislator
and
brother
yeah
to
lead
the
process,
and
you
have
to
have
that
in
cities.
The
legislator
have
to
be
committed
to
the
process
for
all
stakeholder
representation.
You've
attempted
to
do
that
with
your
commission
selection,
and
this
last
piece
on
discipline
struggle
is
something
that
we're
seeing
not
seeing
at
all
on
the
California
level.
K
Acrimonious
without
being
disrespectful-
and
we
see
a
lot
of
that
at
the
California
level-
and
what
we
try
to
do
and
talking
locally-
is
to
warn
our
people
of
that
and
to
to
I'll
just
offer
some
principal
guidelines
for
how
we
engage
in
and
and
our
differences,
and
one
of
those
guidelines
is
that
we
always
want
to
have
what
is
called
a
reparations
united
front,
that
we
can
have
our
differences
individually
but
publicly
publicly
and
that's
the
thing
publicly
we're
going
to
stay
in
one
voice,
because
all
of
this
could
crumble
tomorrow
and
we
that's
that's
the
nature
of
White
America
right
I
mean
they
just
rated
a
one
of
an
old
revolutionary
group,
they're,
not
making
any
trouble
they're
still
talking
revolutionary
rhetoric,
but
they're,
not
you
know,
engaging
with
an
FBI
just
rated
their
their
house.
K
So
we
know
that
this
nation
can
come
and
come
heavily
against
anybody
anytime.
They
want
to
and
we
don't
want
to
get
them
any
reason
to
do
so
out
of
our
own
volition.
So
we
want
to
engage
in
principal
struggle.
We
want
all
of
our
debate
to
be
internal,
and
when
we
go
to
the
media,
when
we
broadcast
in
the
social
media,
we
want
to
have
a
a
United
principal
position.
That
repair
is
leading
the
way
right,
your
parents
leading
the
way,
and
so
with
that
I'm
going.
N
Questions
some
some
Mr
Howard,
you
mentioned
that
I
guess
part
of
this
is
that
everyone
benefits
I
said
so.
Everyone
benefits
is
one
thing
that
you
mentioned
as
far
as
the
products
I
know,
that's
part
of
like
the
process
of
what
we
will
get
to
do.
You
have
any
quick
strategics
that
you
would
share
to
help
us
get
our
allies
to
understand
that
everyone
benefits
from
process.
D
K
K
Millions
of
jobs
created
trillions
of
dollars
in
business
Revenue
the
trillions
as
billions
of
dollars
of
billions
of
dollars
saved
in
Social
social
programs
to
address
some
of
the
challenges
that
result
of
limited
resources
in
some
Community
communities,
crime,
violence?
That
type
of
thing.
K
K
In
Chicago
did
it
across
the
segregation
report
that
showed
how
much
the
city
lost
and
how
much
the
city
would
have
gained
if
they
didn't
have
this
segregated
policies.
I
would
suggest
this
segregation.
It's
not
a
bad
thing.
Aggregation
is
not
a
bad
thing,
but
the
resources
were
separate.
That's
the
part-time
piece,
so
it's
not
that
black
people
living
by
themselves,
because
we
prospered
at
one
time,
but
the
policy
that
that
challenged
that
determine
some
of
these
outcomes
is
to
spread
outcomes.
K
T
K
Can
look
at
those
type
of
reports
to
show
how
there's
a
cross-community
benefit
to
playing
Black
reparations?
K
K
Mcgee,
that's
that's
another
source
and
this
new
organization
that
I
found
in
preparation,
United
We,
are
looking
at
having
a
national
discussion
on
this
issue
and.
L
K
On
this
whole
issue
of
how
reparation
is
all
of
America
benefits
by
paying.
U
So,
thank
you
for
sharing
your
expertise.
I
really
appreciate
it.
Can
you
unpack
the
first
item?
That's
on
this
list
identifying
organic
demand,
but
also
incorporating
organic
demand
into
processes
like
these
as
well.
So.
K
K
So
one
of
the
things
that
we
looked
at
in
Evanston
early
on
when
I
was
mentoring,
the
sister
it
was
that
she
had
to
have
the
community
support
she
had
to
bring
the
community
in.
She
brought
the
community
in
on
a
large
scale.
By
having
these
public
these
public
hearings,
they
were
hearings
but
public
sessions.
K
Talking
about
reparations.
What
you
think
would
be
so
you
know
those
Gatherings,
the
community
had
a
voice,
but
when
it
came
to
the
nuts
and
bolts
of
moving
forward,
there
was
not
as
much
Community
Support
narrow,
tailored
Community
Support.
So
we
had
to
talk
to
her
about
building
what
we
call
the
stakeholders
group
within
the
community
to
help
lead
this,
to
be
those
voices
of
the
voices
and
so
now
that
there
is
a
reparations.
Commission
there's
also
a
evidence
of
reparation
Authority
stakeholder
Authority,
which
is
comprised
of
the
community
to
separate
from
the
city
commission.
K
K
The
injury
must
also
direct
where
the
resources
go.
So,
although
this
Commission
is
going
to
come
up
with
a
series
of
proposals
and
and
proclamations
and
all
that
the
community
has
to
have
tremendous
amount
of
input
of
what's
what's
selected,
what
is
priority
to
the
community
might
not
might
be
different
moving
forward
into
the
commission
right,
so
you
have
to
have
that
organic
thrust.
K
V
V
So
my
question
is
on:
in
November
we
have
a
40
million
dollar
initiative
on
the
in
the
on
the
ballot
for
a
housing
dollars
coming
from
the
Obama
County
commissions.
V
It
won't
be
just
as
strategic
as
possible
on
any
resource
allocations
that
we
have
that's
one
question:
how
should
we
focus
in
on
educating
folks
not
only
the
vote
for
that
Bond
who
look
like
us,
but
also
to
educate
the
county
commissions
about
how
those
resources
need
to
be
directed
into
a
Housing
Voucher
Program,
our
down
payment
program,
specifically
for
a
reparative,
Justice
and
I.
Have
another
question
too
and
I'm
going
to
see
once
we
do
that?
V
Also
looking
at
existing
programs
that
are
directed
towards
our
community
when
Dave
shows
us
that
they've
been
ineffective,
how
should
we?
What
strategy
should
we
use
besides
the
data,
to
redirect
those
resources
back
into
our
control
in
our
community,
because
there
are
a
lot
of
programs
that
are
given
to
ngos
and
other
organizations
that
are
not
led
by
black
people,
especially
Economic
Development
programs
such
as
business
loans
and
counseling,
and
all
of
that
and
housing
funds,
and
it
does
not
create
wealth
in
the
black
community.
That's
the
end
of
my
questions.
K
So
you
just
described
what
this
commission
must
do.
That's
the
goal
of
the
commission.
I
can't
speak
on
how
to
how
to
direct
resources
where
you
need
to
direct
resources.
That's
going
to
come
out
of
your
work.
It's
going
to
come
out
of
the
data
and
I
said
the
data
is
going
to
direct
what,
where
the
resources
are
going
to
go.
That's
40
million
dollars
in
housing,
you'll,
look
at
the
various
ways
in
which
blacks
are
not
being.
K
K
Ngos
right
so
yeah,
so
one
of
the
things
that
when
I
wrote
in
laying
a
foundation
local
operations
that
one
of
the
purposes
of
this
local
work
is
that
you
might
have
to
create
structures
that
receive
those
resources.
Whether
it's
out
of
this
commission
or
some
stakeholder
private.
Something
outside
of
that
because.
M
K
You
know
the
the
last
money
around
the
rental
assistance
people
who
couldn't
pay
their
rent
because
of
covet
all
that
money
was
followed
through
white
organizations
in
Chicago,
I,
don't
know
what
it
was
like
here,
but
it
wasn't
when
our
community,
so
that
has
to
be
a
that
has
to
be
a
primary
purpose
of
this
commission
going
forward
that
some
structure,
structure
or
structures
it
may
come
out
come
out
of
the
commission,
but
you
have
to
support
it
again.
If
it
grows
up
organically,
you
have
to
support
it.
K
We
have
to
be
the
ones
who
deliver
our
repair
to
our
people.
That's
right
right!
Yes,
that
if,
if
you
get
50
million
dollars
and
it's
all
going
through
white
hands,
that's
not
reparations,
it
could
be.
You
know
it
could
do
some
some
good
work,
but
it's
not
cessation
and
guarantees
and
non-repetition.
It's
not
hot,
stopping
that
illegal
administrating
of
our
community
that
Colonial
Administration
administration
of
our
communities,
just
like
as
the
colonial
government.
K
That's
definitely
not
right,
and
that
has
to
be
in
the
Forefront
of
our
minds
when
we're
engaging
in
local
reparations
we
have
to,
as
you
stated,
I'm
glad
you
brought
that
up.
You
have
to
be
purposeful
on
creating
structures
when
those
federal
dollars
come
down.
They're
gonna
come
down
to
somebody
right.
K
K
K
This
year
earlier,
I
was
trying
to
buy
some
bales
of
cotton,
so
we
can
do
this.
This
demonstration
at
the
White
House
so
keep
their
quiet.
No.
S
M
M
M
J
Given
your
extensive
travel
and
exposure
to
this
phenomena,
I'm
curious
what
you
think
of
the
Native
American
you
you
referenced.
Every
other
different
groups
within
the
United
States
have
been
allowed
to
have
state
within
a
state
and
given
that
the
Native
Americans
have
managed
to
to
get
reparations.
J
State
of
Alaska's
model,
specifically
with
the
creation
of
the
corporations
throughout
the
different
tribes.
What
do
you
think
about
their
model
and
even
think
that's
a
model
that
we
could
imitate?
Maybe
there's
some
positive
aspects
of
it
that
we
could
look
at
for
the
creation
of
the
distribution
of
of
funds,
assets,
resources
whatever
that
may
be
under
the
reparations
process.
Do
you
think
that
the
Native
American
specifically.
M
D
K
The
Native
American
model-
again
they
are
a
nation,
a
national
minority
as
well
as
Nation,
as
well
as
a
nation
or.
D
K
K
The
previous
one
of
the
previous
speakers
you
had
he
brought
up
that
whole
issue
with
Professor
Clyde's
book
National
minorities
I
think
it
was
a
social
contract,
anti-social
contract.
So
that's
a
whole
nother
fight
ing.
You
know.
D
K
K
W
G
Hi
Mr
Howard,
as
you
may
know,
in
writing.
Excuse
me
reparations
recommendations.
We've
talked
about
how
part
of
those
recommendations
will
include
documenting
the
harms
and
describing
what's
happened,
and
certainly
we
want
to
have
a
local
focus
on
how
the
harms
have
manifested
in
Asheville
and
Buncombe
County
I'm
wondering
how
can
we
utilize
your
and
others
work
who
have
already
documented
harms
across
this
nation
and
other
nations
so
that
we
can
utilize
that
material
not
reinvent
the
wheel
and
focus
our
efforts
on
the
proposals
as
well.
K
Sure
that's
great
the
commissioners
Mr.
K
The
state
of
black
Asheville
should
be
a
template
from
which
you
look
at
the
effects
of
genocide,
funding
apartheid,
the
California
commission
report.
Although
it's
a
state
report
it
looked
nationally
and
then
came
down
to
the
state
level.
I
think
that's
something
that
you
can
do
that
you
don't
have
to
go
on
an
event.
I
mean
I
would
take
the
historical
because
it
applies
to
America.
K
I
would
take
their
historical
word
for
word
and
say
you
know
we
borrowed
it
from
it's
given
credit
for
it,
and
that
part
you
don't
have
to
reinvent
there's
a
Urban
League
put
out
a
state
of
Black
America
report.
You
know
it
looks
at
Statewide
current
official
creature,
not
the
historical
I
mean
National
Nationwide,
so
you
can
look
at
education
on
the
national
level
from
their
report
and
break
it
down.
So.
K
Resources
available
that
you
don't
have
to
have
all
this
independent
research
done
on
every
level,
foreign.
A
Take
a
break
of
just
five
minutes
just
to
stretch
our
legs
and
but
one
more
question
questioning
no
paper
with
my
wife
seriously
yeah.
If
we
could
take
a
five
minute
break,
it's
a
very
short
break
and
come
back,
but
thank
you,
Mr
Howard
I
appreciate
it.
M
M
R
M
M
A
The
discussion
has
been
very
Lively
and
I
think
a
useful
for
us
all
not
just
to
from
our
esteem
speaker,
Mr
Howard,
but
also
discussing
with
ourselves,
informally
and
I,
would
like
to
seek
your
permission,
just
move
consent
and
push
the
ending
of
the
meeting
instead
of
at
eight
o'clock
to
push
it
to
8
15
in
order
to
accommodate
several
of
the
values.
Is
that
do
I?
Have
your
consent
with
that
your
objections.
B
We
have
been
getting
a
lot
of
great
information
here
from
a
lot
of
experts.
Well,.
B
At
this
point,
but
it's
been
amazing
information
that
is
really
helping
us
to
figure
out
exactly
how
to
move
this
work
forward.
I
know
everybody
ready
to
get
to
the
action
and
and
see
how
to
apply
the
things
that
we've
learned
over
these
commission
meetings,
and
so
I
want
to
open
up
this
time
for
reflections
on
the
presentations
that
we've
had
and
I
want
to
hear
for
everybody.
So
I'm
gonna
start
on
this
end
over
here,
Dwayne
being
the
first
and
I
want
everybody
to
take
a
second
and
just
give
some
Reflections
on
this.
B
B
Y
Z
Is
what
she
says
too,
with
all
the
information
and
stuff
that
has
been
given
to
us
also
as
moving
forward,
we
may
hear
what
is
going
on,
but
the
main
thing
is:
are
we
going
to
do
what.
Z
So
we
can
say
yeah,
no
think
about
it
and
one
of
the
things
that
just
really
is
you
know
we
always
say
we
go
to.
Let's
put
things
on
the
back
burner.
I
mean
every
time
you
put
things
on
the
background.
It
just
gets
further
and
further
back
instead
of
saying.
Let's
put
this
on
the
background,
why
can't
we
just
move
forward
with
it
finish
it
and
keep
on
going.
B
D
Think
my
biggest
impression
is
that
this
is
really
a
long-term
operation.
It's
not
something
that's
going
to
happen
quickly,
so
we
need
people
to
be
committed
to
it
and
come
up
with
good
ideas,
but
but
also
recognize
that
no
change
is
going
to
happen
overnight.
It's
going
to
take
a
while
take
a
while
to
happen.
Q
M
Q
I
AA
Thank
you,
I
haven't
seen
all
of
the
presentations,
but
what
I
have
seen
I
think
it's
time
to
take
some
of
the
initiatives
and
things
that
they've
done
in
some
other
areas,
and
we
have.
D
AB
Please
well
I
have
enjoyed
all
of
the
speakers
and
they
have
been
very
informative
and
something
that
every
one
of
them
have
said
to
us.
How
important
this
is
and,
and
that
us
being
a
part
of
this
reparations
internationally
or
nationally
is,
is
really
big.
So
that's
something
that
everyone
has
said
so
with
that.
AB
I
want
to
say
that,
like
Mr
Howard
mentioned
earlier
is
how
do
we
get
the
community
involved,
and
when
do
we
start
that
process
I
think
we
need
to
hear,
as
we
spoke
about
people
with
expertise
here
in
Asheville,
we
have
those
you
mentioned
Dr
Mullins
already
having
the
work
done.
Let's
start
bringing
that
to
the
table
and
bringing
the
community
to
the
table
and
and
hearing
what
they
have
to
say
and
what
they
want
from
us
as
well,
so
I'm
ready
to
get
that
piece
added
and
and
going.
AC
Both
of
the
presentations
were
very
engaging
and
very
instrumental.
They
gave
us
a
template
of
what
we
need
to
probably
go
forward
with
I,
like
the
fact
that
the
last
speakers
talked
about
that
we're
so
much
alike
nationally,
but
we're
so
different
and
with
Asheville
being
a
place
that
is
so
different
that
locally.
C
You
guys
are
so
bright
and
you've
said
everything
that
I
would
have
normally
said.
So
I
appreciate
you
being
before
me
the
one
thing
that
I
I
would
like
to
say.
We
expect
our
experts
to
come
and
give
us
good
information
and
the
type
of
information
that
validates
us
and
what
we
believe.
So
that's
been
good.
I'd
also
like
to
appreciate
I
think
it
was
the
revenue
of
the
need,
one
of
those
old
Southern
homes
that
wrote
that
history
book
for
us
and
what
I
really
really
appreciated
it
was
in
large
print.
D
S
Have
always
been
the
type
of
person
you
just
can't
hand
me
something
and
expect
me
to
accept
it.
I've
already
started
to
put
respiration
and
say
this
place
in
our
community
I'm
always
out
working
for
my
community.
I.
Don't
have
children,
but
I
have
all
of
my
mind
so
I
enjoyed
the
books
we
received,
I
couldn't
put
them
down,
I
read
them
on
my
lunch
hour.
It
was
a
good
read.
O
I
definitely
appreciate
the
the
presenters
that
we
had
over
the
past
month,
or
so
very
valuable
information
touched
on
the
subject
tonight
that
just
always
runs
through
like
so
while
we're
waiting
for
funding
to
be
approved,
I
mean
touched
on
policies
and
procedures
like
that,
doesn't
take
much
just
coming
to
the
table
and
just
deciding
what
to
do
right.
O
What's
right.
So
that's
just
one
of
my
things
of
what
can
I
do
now
and
like
Miss
May,
says
I'm
not
in
that
community.
So
for
those,
that's
not
tuning
in
to
those
that
don't
read
the
report
on
just
to
show
that
we're
making
progress
here
is
to
go
out
and
ask
them
their
thoughts
like
get
their
opinions
and
what
they
think
it
should
look
like,
because
there
are
ones
that
you
know
that
needs
to
hear
this
and
that'll
be
receiving
reparations.
O
So
I
think
that
thought
is
definitely
are
just
as
bad
boys
everybody's
at
the
table,
so
I
know
that
I
can
start
there.
So
I
just
hold
myself
accountable
to
do
that
part.
AB
J
J
J
I
said,
as
others
have
said
already,
the
list
of
speakers
that
we
have
had,
we
are
really
fortunate
to
to
have
them
come
in
and
to
share
the
knowledge
that
they
they
have
about
the
reparations
process
and
the
pursuit
of
it
and
as
as
Black
Folk
have
done
across
time.
We
once
again
have
an
opportunity
to
stand
on
the
shoulders
of
giants
and
do.
AD
Something
good
thank
you
all
right,
so
I've
enjoyed
all
the
speakers
so
far.
Actually,
my
personality
type
is
one
that
likes
to
jump
in
and
just
get
going
so
at
first
I
was
like
no
we're
gonna
get
started
with
the
action,
but
now
I
realized.
After
hearing
the
speakers
that
we
had
a
lot
of
information
that
we
need
to
learn
and
how
serious
you
know.
This
is
in
particular,
I
appreciate
the
speaker
today
when
he
spoke
on
data
and
looking
at
direct
policies
that
directly
hurt
our
people,
so
I'm
excited
to
get
started.
Yeah.
S
E
D
E
To
know
that
work
is
being
done,
Across,
the
Nation
is
phenomenal
and,
as
Chris
has
said,
it
is
also
enlightened
to
know
that
we're
getting
ready
to
dig
in
and
it's
for
the
Long
Haul.
It's
not
anything,
that's
going
to
take
an
overnight
fix,
but
it's
something
that's
going
to
require
work,
diligence
and
commitment
and
I'm
ready
to
do
it.
V
I
just
want
to
say
thank
you
to
the
city
and
Buncombe
County
for
putting
the
resources
here
to
bring
these
speakers
and
to
bring
the
consultant
who
brought
the
speakers
and
designed
this
module
that
we're
in
but
I,
think
Mr,
Howard's,
quotation,
I,
don't
know
if
he's
still
with
us
was
directly
from
Marianne
Williamson.
We
are
the
ones
we've
been
waiting
as
a
savings.
V
This
is
what
a
lot
of
us
have
been
saying
for
a
very
long
time.
I
also
want
to
talk
about
the
fact
that
we
need
to
also
be
mindful
that
there
are
these
budgets
that
these
governments
have
you'll
look
inside
them.
There
are
literally
hundreds
of
thousands
of
dollars
that
go
to
ngos
and
other
white
LED
organizations,
and
the
data
says
that
they
don't
do.
One
thing
for
us:
I
want
to
remind
all
elected
and
appointed
officials
from
both
governments
here
that
there
are
inspectors.
V
General
that
run
every
department,
and
there
is
a
thing
called
frog,
waste
and
abuse,
and
when
you
do
not
comply
with
producing
results
that
those
inspectors
generals
can
be
called
out,
and
if
you
look
at
the
things
that
have
been
done
to
the
black
community,
you
are
sufficiently
lacking
and
holding
these
ngos
accounted,
and
that
constitutes
fraud,
waste
and
abuse.
So
I
want
us
to
be
mindful
of
some
of
the
other
tools
that
we
have
at
our
disposal
to
compel
to
compel
resource
allocation.
Thank
you.
U
In
Buncombe,
County
put
their
word
out
about
their
efforts
or
their
willingness
to
prepare
the
harm
that
has
been
done
to
the
black
communities,
and
if
this
process
is
done,
the
right
way.
U
What
comes
of
it
will
not
only
address
past
Harms
but
also
kind
of
set.
The
stage
for
what
Asheville
and
Buncombe
County
looks
like
in
the
future,
and
I
also
believe
that
it'll
impact
how
the
rest
of
the
country
moves
forward
with
reparations
and
it
it
can
ultimately
change
how
the
entire
country
looks.
U
U
U
L
Speakers
that
we
we've
had
have
brought
forth
some
sort
of
diversity
of
thought
that
that
has
you
know
led
us
to
you,
know,
think
about
what
they're
talking
about
and
hopefully
be
able
to
put
that
forth
in
a
tangible
waiver
to
move
forward.
I
personally
am
eternally
grateful
for
Cam
and
him
being
able
to
lend
his
knowledge
to
this
process
early
on
before
anybody
was
around
this
table.
Cam
was
in
contact,
so
I'm
eternally
grateful
for
that.
M
L
My
grandkids
great
grandkids
have
to
be
able
to
benefit
from
this.
So
if
you're
thinking
about
this
as
a
snapshot
in
time
for
the
next
10
or
20
years,
you're
thinking
too
small,
my
grandkids
great
grandkids
have
to
be
able
to
benefit
from
this.
And
if,
if
what
we're?
Not
if
what
we're
talking
about,
doesn't
a
spouse
to
do
that,
then
you're
thinking
too
small,
so
I
just
hope
that
everybody
opens
up
their
minds
and
and
and
come
together
and
does
what
we
need
to
do
to
move
forward.
F
Thank
you
well
what
he
said:
I'm
grateful
just
to
be
a
part
of
this
process
and
to
see
how
it
unfolds,
but
also
to
see
the
unity
with
this
commission,
the
city,
the
county
and
the
community.
All
you
know
all
together.
Collectively,
the
speakers
are
phenomenal.
They
they've
been
prepared
their
questions,
the
things
that
we're
asking
them
they're,
giving
it
to
us,
along
with
links
and
follow-up
and
just
great
product
that
we
can,
you
know,
have
to
read
through
later
on.
F
So
just
for
me
to
sit
in
this
seat,
I'm,
honored
and
privileged
to
know
that,
just
as
what
he
said
is
bigger
than
me
than
us,
then
this
year,
then
this
decade,
it's
like
this
is
going
to
change
change
the
face
of
what
the
future
looks
like
for
our
children
in
our
world
in
this
society,
and
so
the
thing
that
concerns
me
is
what
Kim
mentioned
today.
F
As
far
as
discipline
struggle
so
being
able
to
have
our
difficult
conversations
behind
closed
doors
outside
of
these
meetings
to
me
is
going
to
be
really
important
for
us
to
be
productive,
but
also
for
us
to
have
that
trust
that
we
need
from
the
outside
as
they're
looking
in
so
I,
just
I,
hope
and
pray
that
we're
able
to
grow
them
together,
learn
from
one
another,
but
don't
just
stop
within
this
two-year
period,
but
that
we
see
it
bigger
and
the
investment
is
going
to
come.
So
thank.
W
I've
certainly
enjoyed
all
the
speakers
so
far
and
I
want
to
just
piggyback
off
of
something
Keith
said
about
long-term
years,
our
grandkids,
great
grandkids,
and
in
order
for
us
well
for
me,
I
feel
like
the
way
we
have
to
do
that
comes
from
this
book,
the
foundation.
We
have
to
build
a
strong
foundation
in
order
to
see
this
growth
in
the
future.
So
with
us
coming
together,
building
a
strong
Foundation.
P
For
me,
like
one
big
thing
stood
out
between
this
presentation
and
the
last
one
was
when
he
said:
the
reparations
must
why
I
got
all
the
harms
and
then
they
were
talking.
There
was
a
picture
shown
from
like
Asheville
in
in
the
60s
and
there's
black
people
all
over
downtown
just
walking
around
and
then
combined
with
what
would
the
city
look
like
if
they
had
left
us
alone?
P
P
N
Blessed
last
my
dance,
Nigerian
and
I
visited
Nigeria
a
couple
times
and
the
community.
There
is
so
different
here,
like
there's
a
lack
of.
Y
N
Inspired
by
this,
this
I
don't
know,
but
it's
it's
emotional
and,
as
people
have
said,
it's
not
a
quick
thing.
Patience
I
think
it's
one
thing
that
I've
that
I've
gotten
from
the
speakers
is
that
it's
it's
long
term.
It's
it's,
not
quick
and
but
we've
never
had
reparations
here
before
we've
had
conversations
about
it.
There's
been
a
lot
of
energy
about.
N
Things
to
address
this
and
and
they've
kind
of
deflated,
so
I
hope
that
we
will
keep
this
energy
and
we
will
achieve
something
great
but
blessed
I'll,
just
I'm
blessed
to
be
a
part
to
be
able
to
stay
here
with
others
to
achieve
what
we're
trying
to
achieve.
G
G
You
know.
One
thing
we
had
discussed
during
the
first
meeting
we
had
was
that
we
as
a
commission
would
be
able
to
offer
experts
and
people
we
wanted
to
hear
from,
and
several
of
you
sound
like
you
have
some
ideas
of
local
people.
That
would
be
great
to
talk
to
so
I
hope
that
we
will
do
that
and
have
the
full
commission
be
able
to
speak
to
who
we
hear
from
moving
forward.
I
also
appreciate
the
ideas
about
thinking,
big
and
I
would
say
thinking
appropriately.
G
One
billion
dollars
in
gross
domestic
product,
a
billion
dollars.
I
want
to
reiterate
what
people
said
about
hearing
from
all
black
community
members.
I
appreciate
this
commission
and
obviously
there's
lots
of
other
black
people
too.
We
want
to
hear
from
and
I
appreciate
that
many
of
us
are
in
communities
and
speaking
with
other
black
people,
cam.
S
G
About
reparations,
wiping
out
all
consequences
of
harms
and
crimes,
and
so
I
think
we
should
already
be
having
our
city
and
county
staff
sharing
with
us,
the
history
of
policies
and
procedures
and
actions
that
have
been
done.
So
we
have
that
information
already
and
some
more
groups
have
already
started
making
requests
for
information
for
that,
and
that
feels
like
something
that
we
should
already
have,
because
we
know
that
we
need
that.
That's
what
reparations
is
it's
repairing
past
harms
and
stopping
current
Harms.
B
Thank
you.
All
I
definitely
want
to
take
this
time
to
make
sure
that
we
have
time
to
hear
from
all
of
our
commission
that
we
don't
get
to
hear
from
all
the
time
and
so
I'm
glad
that
y'all
participated.
Everybody's
information,
everybody's
thoughts
on
where
we're
at
we're
so
valuable
to
how
we
move
forward
and
I
got
to
hear
from
everybody's
voice
today.
So
I'm
excited
I'm,
gonna
turn
it
over
to
Tara.
So
she
can.
B
B
B
Goodman
Jones
right
here:
okay,
Dwayne
McAfee
and
please
keep
in
mind.
You
have
three
minutes:
okay.
Now!
Yes,
yes,
sir.
AE
This
doesn't
work.
Okay,
sorry
glad
to
be
here.
There
are
a
couple
of
observations
that
I
think
is
important
that
we
make
here
as
we
move
forward
in
today's
time,
we
as
a
community
we're
under
attack.
AE
AE
AE
We
can't
know
that
there's
a
district
attorney
that
treats
us
different
from
other
people
and
all
we
do
is
talk
about
it
amongst
ourselves.
We
need
to
organize.
We
need
to
attack
and
I
use.
The
word
attack,
because
that's
exactly
how
I
feel
they
are
attacking
me:
they're
attacking
my
family
they're
attacking
my
grandchildren,
and
if
we
don't
rise
up
and
fight
back
people,
I
am
tired
of
having
to
defend
President
Biden.
AE
M
AE
AE
X
More
yeah,
all
right
so
I
wanted
to
touch
briefly
on
the
community
engagement
piece.
We've
been
doing
some
researching
Community
about
the
you
know
our
people
even
aware
of
a
reparations
process,
and
we
have
some
metrics
pertaining
to
that.
If
you
would
like
to
touch
briefly
hi.
T
Everyone,
my
name,
is
engagement
director
for
the
racial
Justice
Coalition.
We
currently
have
an
average
Campaign
which
involves
us
being
out
in
the
black
community
interviewing
black
community
members
about
what
they
want
to
see
and
the
different
Focus
areas
of
their
operations.
Commission,
we
do
have
metrics
I
figured
out.
We
didn't
want
to
speak.
T
We're
on
the
phone
with
me
and
I,
we
will
be
providing
the
commission
with
a
report
of
some
of
the
things
that
we
found
thus
far.
M
T
The
community
members
that
we
reached
out
to
so
I
can
just
provide
a
quick
overview
is
that
roughly
around
55
of
the
88
black
community
members,
we've
interviewed
have
said
that
they
did,
as
they
have
heard,
something
about
the
operations
process,
which
leaves
a
little
over
40
percent
that
have
not
at
all
so
just
something
to
keep
in
mind
as
we
try
to
get
into
Community
engagement
efforts.
X
And
to
top
off
what
she's
saying,
we've
also
been
attending
the
work
groups,
the
you
know,
the
smaller
meeting
spaces
for
the
reparations
commission,
and
you
know
I
just
wanted
to
speak
personally.
Some
of
the
issues
that
I
see
is
community
not
being
able
to
engage
Within
These
spaces
from
what
I
can
understand
that
policies
are
trying
to
be
implemented
to
where
there
is
no
public
input
or
public
or
public
comment
or
either
it's
at
the
end
of
the
meeting
of
the
work
group
and
a
lot
of
these
meetings.
X
You
have
people
in
the
room
that
are
knowledgeable
about
those
topics
and
subjects
at
hand,
and
we
can
identify
how
to
make
that
also
a
opportunity
for
the
community
to
get
into
the
process.
I
believe
it
would
be
helpful
and
beneficial.
What
I
did
here.
X
You
know
an
employee
of
the
city
state
was
that
it
was
the
commissioner's
responsibility
to
do
community
engagement
themselves
outside
the
commission
was
just
to
me
completely
unreasonable
and
unrealistic
I
noticing
how
everybody's
sitting
at
this
table
has
a
whole
life
and
are
not
being
compensated
enough
to
do
that.
X
Just
a
few
concerns
communities
is
not
really
currently
engaged
at
the
time.
I
want
to
say
time
before
that,
so
maybe
the
last
time
I
had
also
spoke
about
Community
engagement
and
being
able
to
do
it
on
a
bigger
scale,
with
the
city
and
Council
the
city
and
County's
capacity
at
the
same
time.
But
we
can't
do
that
unless
we
get,
we
can
go
ahead
from
you
all.
We
will
continue
what
it
is
that
we're
doing.
X
You
know:
we've
reached
85-90
individuals
in
a
very
short
amount
of
time
with
city
and
county
resources
and
we're
not
looking
for
their
funding,
we're
not
looking
for
the
money,
their
resources
in
the
form
of
people
and
the
staff
that
they
have
inside
of
this
interview
to
be
able
to
get
out
in
community
and
do
what
should
be
happening,
we
could
probably
reach
an
exponentially
larger
amount
of
individuals
but
yeah.
That's
probably
my
three
minutes
and
I
digress.
Y
B
You
thank
you
and
I
would
pretend.
H
So
we
are
technically
out
of
time.
These
old
business
items
will
shift
to
the
very
next
meeting.
I
do
want
to
highlight
that
we
are
still
working
on
this
two-day
meeting
for
the
commission,
the
the
one
that
you
all
have
been
asking
for
the
date.
Currently,
the
dates
currently
that
look
most
favorable
are
September
23rd
and
24th.
Those
have
not
been
finalized
just
yet,
but
you
all
will
be
hearing
very
shortly.
H
We've
just
had
to
do
some
additional
work
just
to
try
to
see
if
we
can
get
this
planned,
it
could
potentially
move
out
into
October,
but
we
will
let
you
all
know
very
very
shortly
about
that
really
wanted
to
give
a
give
Rachel
eapins
a
chance
to
do
the
Buncombe
County
County
budget
update,
but
I
think
we
are
going
to
have
to
hold
that
off
until
the
very
next
meeting
and
since
the
action
item
was
removed,
we
won't
go
over
that
work.
H
Group
update
I
do
want
to
just
quickly
say
that,
as
far
as
the
work
groups
there's
been
some
concerns
expressed
about
this
Global
work
group
global
topics,
work
for
you
and
just
want
to
to
just
reiterate
what
the
purpose
of
that
work
group
is,
and
it
is
to
take
on
topics
like
Community
engagement,
taking
that
deep
dive
and
presenting
recommendations
to
the
full
commission.
Another
topic
is
around
the
notion
of
having
an
independent
fund
once
again
and
and
doing
the
due
diligence
to
really
explore
that
and
to
bring
recommendations
to
the
commission.