On Friday, March 24, devastating storms unleashed strong straight-line winds and tornadoes across western Mississippi and Alabama, killing at least 25 people and damaging hundreds of buildings. On Sunday, President Joe Biden declared a state of emergency in Mississippi, providing federal assistance to some of the hardest-hit counties. Collected here are images from the small town of Rolling Fork, hit by a huge EF4 tornado, where residents are working to rebuild what they can.
OAKLAND, California. — The California Reparations Task Force is due to wrap up its first-in-the-nation work on Saturday, voting on recommendations for a formal apology for the state’s role in perpetuating the legacy of slavery and discrimination that has kept black residents from living free for decades.
The nine-member committee, first convened almost two years ago, is expected to finally approve an impressive list of ambitious proposals at a meeting in Oakland, which will then be put into the hands of state legislators.
Recommendations range from creating a new agency to provide services to the descendants of enslaved people, to individual calculations of what the state owes residents for decades of harm such as excessive policing and housing discrimination.
“An apology and admission of wrongdoing alone will not be satisfactory for redress,” said Chris Lodgson, organizer of the Coalition for a Just and Equitable California, a redress advocacy group.
The apology prepared by the Legislative Assembly should “include condemnation of the most heinous barbarities” committed in the name of the state, according to a draft recommendation to be voted on.
Such a list could include censorship by a former governor of California. Peter Hardeman Burnett, the state’s first elected leader and white supremacist who encouraged laws to exclude blacks from California
Although California entered the union as a free state, it has not enacted laws to provide such freedom, the bill says. Under the draft, the state Supreme Court enacted the federal Fugitive Slave Act, which permitted the capture and return of fugitive enslaved people until the official end of enslavement in 1865.
“By participating in these horrors, California has further perpetuated the harm that African Americans have experienced by instilling racial prejudice in society through segregation, state and private discrimination, and unequal distribution of state and federal funding,” the project says.
The task force can vote for the state to publicly apologize and admit responsibility for past mistakes in the presence of people whose ancestors were enslaved. The confession may be communicated by descendants recounting the injustices they have faced and include a promise that California will not repeat the same mistakes.
The statement would follow the state’s apology for placing Japanese Americans in internment camps during World War II and perpetuating the violence and mistreatment of Native Americans.
Saturday’s meeting marks a defining moment in a long struggle by local, state, and federal governments to offer compensation for policies that have resulted in over-control of black neighborhoods, housing discrimination, health disparities, and other harms. But the proposals are far from being implemented by the state.
“There is not the slightest chance that many of these recommendations will be accepted due to inflationary impact,” said Roy L. Brooks, a professor and indemnity specialist at the University of San Diego School of Law.
Papers outlining recommendations to a task force of economists have previously shown that the state could owe more than $800 billion, more than 2.5 times its annual budget, for excessive police, disproportionate imprisonment and housing discrimination against blacks.
The score dropped sharply in the latest draft report released by the task force, which did not respond to email and telephone requests for comment on the reduction.
Secretary of State Shirley Weber, a former Democratic Assemblyman, drafted legislation in 2020 to create a task force. The goal was to explore proposals for how California could offer compensation for harm done to the descendants of enslaved people under the bill. He did not recommend reparations in lieu of the federal government’s proposals.
The task force had previously voted to limit damages to descendants of enslaved or formerly enslaved blacks who were in the country by the end of the 19th century.
The California team’s work has received nationwide attention, and remedial efforts elsewhere have met with mixed results.
Evanston, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago, housing vouchers were offered to black residents, but few took advantage of the program. New York State’s latest bill to study reparations has been passed by the State Assembly, but the State Senate has yet to vote on the measure. A multi-year proposal to create a commission to study federal reparations for African Americans has stalled in Congress.
Mary Frances Berry, a professor of history at the University of Pennsylvania who wrote a book about a former slave girl’s struggle for redress, said the California task force’s efforts “should be encouraging.”
“The fact that California has gone so far as to give a yes to the reparations question should … have an impact on people in other parts of the country,” she said.
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Sophie Austin is a member of the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on hidden issues. Follow Austin on Twitter: @sophieadanna
New York is the first state to ban natural gas from most new buildings. Climate advocates praise the move as groundbreaking, but opponents criticize it as overbearing.
This is part of the state’s larger plan to achieve zero energy emissions by 2050. Supporters hope other states will join.
However, while most Empire State residents agree that reducing greenhouse gas emissions is the right thing to do, gas stove aficionados are reluctant to give up open flames. Critics say the plan would be too costly for needy consumers, could strain the state’s power grid and fail to address the severity of New York’s unusually cold winters.
Why did we write this
Does the responsibility lie in acting quickly to reduce natural gas emissions, or in being careful about the impact of energy mandates on consumers and the grid?
Natural gas is widely used to generate electricity here and throughout the country. It burns cleaner than fossil fuels such as coal and oil, but can pollute the environment just as badly as coal. depending on how much methane leaks from production to delivery. V new law instead calls for energy efficient heat pumps.
in 2021, slightly more than half According to the US Energy Information Administration, some of New York City’s electricity comes from environmentally friendly sources such as nuclear power and renewable energy sources such as wind, solar, hydropower, and geothermal pumps. The state’s goal is to generate 70% emission-free electricity by 2030 and 100% by 2040. In addition to helping to tackle climate change, supporters say that the growth of green energy will create jobs, improve indoor and outdoor air quality, and lower utility bills.
Policy implementation here will be closely monitored. In a number of cities from San Francisco to New York, gas in new construction has already been banned. Although some Republican-controlled states have laws prevention of local gas bansWashington state has a ban introduced by his unelected Building Code Board.
How will the law work?
By 2026, most new seven-story buildings will have to use electricity. heat pumps for air temperature control and for hot water. Larger buildings will need to comply by 2029. Some plants that require very high temperatures to operate are exempt from the requirement. The law does not apply to existing buildings.
Buildings produce more greenhouse gases than any other category in New York City. 32% emissions versus 29% for transportation – according to the State Department of Environmental Protection.
Will it reduce emissions?
Not initially, but it prevents new buildings from lifting them. Big savings will come when existing buildings are retrofitted and the sale of gas appliances is banned, part of the state’s plan to reach zero by 2050. These details are not settled and can be frustrated if, say, future governors have other priorities.
What will this mean for consumers?
Proponents say electric heat pumps are efficient and save consumers money over time. Critics warn of unintended consequences and call for a more measured approach.
“The ban on connecting natural gas in new buildings will lead to an increase in the cost of housing and utility bills for consumers. Without unnecessary detail and analysis [about the grid]this one-stop plan is unrealistic, unavailable, and unreliable,” Republican Sen. Patrick Gallivan wrote in an email.
It used to be thought that heat pumps couldn’t handle the chilling cold, but over the past decade they have improved dramatically and become quite efficient, says Robert Howarth, an earth systems specialist at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, and one of the 22 Council members. climate change states tasked with developing the state’s zero emissions plan.
However, many builders still have doubts.
Heat pumps are generally more efficient and less expensive to run than natural gas fired stoves. In new homes, this means electrification can make a lot of sense. But things are a little more complicated with older homes, in large part because of the initial renovation costs, says Melissa Lott, director of research at Columbia University’s Center for Global Energy Policy.
Ted Shaffry/AP/File
Spiral, a new building at 66 Hudson Boulevard, is under construction in the Hudson Yards neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City on February 1, 2022. By 2029, most new buildings in the state will be required to use electric heat pumps to control air and hot water temperatures.
Will the network be able to handle the high demand?
Supply will become a problem if the electrical grid and alternative energy sources are not improved and expanded, according to the New York independent system operator, which manages the flow of electricity through the grid. The state’s energy cushion could shrink starting in 2025 as some generators shut down and demand rises, said Kevin Lanahan, the company’s vice president of external affairs and corporate communications.
The New York State Energy Research and Development Authority says the state has enough projects to meet its 2030 and 2040 targets.
For some, this is not specific enough.
“Of course, in the future, technology will catch up and move forward with electricity, but we need proof. [that it’s happening on pace]. And they can’t answer that question,” says Michael Fazio, executive vice president of the New York State Builders Association, which works with homebuilders.
While network capacity is a concern, some major developers started switching from gas-powered homes to all-electric a few years ago, waiting for the government and utilities to supply, says Michael Allhausen, managing director of architecture at Hudson Companies, the developer. apartment buildings in New York and Westchester County, north of the city.
Builders of low-rise residential buildings like Mr. Fazio’s members support the move towards zero emissions, but fear that buyers will not want all-electric homes if smart gas homes exist, making it difficult for members to survive. .
Are there barriers to implementation?
In addition to the need to ensure the reliability of the network and alternative energy sources, legal problems can arise.
This spring, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in California overturned a Berkeley, California law that had the same purpose as New York State law but applied differently. Amy Turner, Senior Fellow, Columbia Center for Climate Change Law. Sabina, says she doesn’t expect New York’s 2nd District Court to do the same, but the gas industry has enough money to file a lawsuit.
How does the public feel about this?
Far more New Yorkers say climate change is a big problem than they don’t, study finds February Poll Siena College and the pro-natural gas New Yorkers for Affordable Energy, 77%, up from 22%. But climate change is far less important than day-to-day issues like the cost of living, housing affordability and crime.
“People are ambivalent thinkers,” says Donald Levy, director of the Siena College Research Institute, who conducted the survey. “Most are willing to pay something to help with climate change mitigation, but not much. They like the aggressive goals of the state, but there is a feeling that “if other states do not do this, why should I?”
Firefighters fight a huge fire at a Shell chemical plant in Deer Park, Texas that appears to have been caused by an explosion.
No deaths have been reported, but several employees are “undergoing medical examination as a precautionary measure” after “exposure to the product,” according to Deer Park’s Office of Emergency Management.
Shell said the cause of the fire is under investigation.