Across the country, cities are quietly reshaping how they reckon with America’s past. From small towns of barely a hundred residents to major metropolitan centers, reparations efforts are moving from theoretical debate into concrete policy. What started as a fringe conversation has become local governance, and the momentum is building even as legal challenges mount.
The work varies wildly by city. Some offer direct cash payments. Others focus on housing grants, business assistance, or investments in historically neglected neighborhoods. What they share is a recognition that reparations means different things to different communities, and that one-size-fits-all approaches won’t cut it.
Kristal Brent Zook, author of “Tulsa Speaks: A City Council, Reparations, and Race in America Today,” frames the concept differently than most people assume. “It’s a misunderstood word,” she told us in an exclusive interview. “People don’t understand, it can mean a lot of things, and it can mean things specifically to repair the damage that was done.”
Most conversations reduce reparations to cash payments, but the reality is messier and more textured. Some cities are using federal COVID relief funds. Others are redirecting cannabis tax revenue. A few have launched dedicated fundraising. The creativity speaks to a broader truth: when local officials actually have to face their community’s history head-on, many choose to move forward rather than retreat.
“That’s why reparations is having more success,” Zook added. “Because when people are forced to look each other in the eye and face up to whatever their town’s history is, they seem to be wanting to move forward and do the right thing in a lot of places.”

Evanston, Illinois: The Model Under Pressure
Evanston became a proving ground when it launched the nation’s first municipal reparations program in 2021. The city has distributed millions in housing grants—up to $25,000 per eligible Black resident—targeting the fallout from decades of discriminatory housing policies. For years, it was cited as the model, the proof of concept that reparations could actually happen at the local level.
That momentum has stalled. In June 2026, the U.S. Department of Justice joined an ongoing federal lawsuit, arguing that the program’s race-based eligibility requirements violate the Equal Protection Clause and the Fair Housing Act. The city is defending the initiative, but the legal pressure reflects a larger political shift.
Providence, Rhode Island: Creative Workarounds

Providence took a different approach. A $10 million reparations program launched using federal COVID-19 relief funds, focusing on small-business support, job training, and financial literacy. The catch: federal rules required the program to be “race neutral,” meaning eligibility is based on income and neighborhood rather than race alone. That allows some non-Black residents to qualify, a compromise that frustrated some advocates but satisfied federal requirements.
Rodney Davis, chair of Providence’s reparations commission, explained the logic. “The federal guidelines basically forced us to have to look at census tracts. And one of those impacted communities were those who were economically disadvantaged,” he said to ABC News.
Asheville, North Carolina: Halted Progress

Asheville established its Community Reparations Commission in 2022, building on a 2020 resolution endorsing reparative efforts. But federal scrutiny changed the trajectory. Following DOJ objections, the commission halted its work after June 30, 2024, ceasing to meet. The city’s momentum stalled before it could gather real speed.
Tulsa, Oklahoma: Confronting the Massacre

More than a century after the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, the city launched the Beyond Apology Commission to study reparations for survivors, descendants, and North Tulsa residents. The scope is sobering: a white mob destroyed the thriving Greenwood District—known as Black Wall Street—killing as many as 300 Black residents and leaving thousands homeless.
Mayor G.T. Bynum framed the effort as moving beyond symbolic apologies toward actionable recommendations, including potential housing programs aimed at building generational wealth. The findings will guide future city policy, turning historical reckoning into practical repair.
Detroit: A Comprehensive Blueprint

Detroit’s Reparations Task Force, established in 2021, delivered a report outlining concrete steps the city could take. The recommendations span cash payments, housing grants, business assistance, expanded African-centered education, police reforms, and an end to residential water shutoffs—a recognition that historical harm manifests in multiple systems.
Eligibility requirements would target descendants of enslaved Africans who are at least 21 and longtime Detroit residents. The report also proposes creating a dedicated city office to oversee programs and identifying new revenue sources. It’s ambitious and detailed, a map for what reparations could look like when cities commit to specificity rather than vague gestures.
Decatur, Georgia: Early Stages

Decatur established its reparations task force in May 2025 after a resolution passed the previous year. The 11-member group will investigate Black property loss and make policy recommendations, with three years to produce a final report. It’s part of a wave of Southern cities engaging with reparations conversations after decades of silence.
Tullahassee, Oklahoma: Small Town, Bold Vision

Population 115. That’s all Tullahassee has, but size hasn’t stopped the town from joining the national reparations movement. In 2021, leaders began advocating for descendants of enslaved people, with the mayor later joining Mayors Organized for Reparations and Equity, a coalition supporting restorative policies. It’s a reminder that momentum comes from commitment, not census numbers.
New York: Extended Timeline

Governor Kathy Hochul signed legislation in December 2023 creating New York’s reparations commission, born from the national reckoning following George Floyd’s 2020 killing. The original deadline has been pushed to 2029, reflecting shifting political winds around DEI initiatives and ongoing debates over how Black history gets taught in schools.
Still, the commission held a final public hearing on May 30, allowing residents, advocates, and scholars to shape recommendations on addressing slavery’s legacy and systemic discrimination. The extended timeline frustrates some, but state officials argue the scope demands careful review.
San Francisco: Good Intentions, No Money

Mayor Daniel Lurie signed an ordinance creating a reparations fund in January, but there’s a catch: no taxpayer money. The framework allows for future payments if private donations materialize, a compromise shaped by San Francisco’s budget crisis and competing demands for public safety and city services. It’s the kind of gesture that looks good on paper but leaves little for implementation.
Chicago: Task Force Assembly

Mayor Brandon Johnson announced a reparations task force ahead of the 2024 Juneteenth celebration, framing it as an effort to confront Chicago’s persistent inequality. He called it a commitment to “shape the future of our city” by addressing systemic disparities affecting Black residents. In April, applications opened for panel members, with the period closing in May. The real work begins now.
Boston: Research Phase

Boston’s Task Force on Reparations is nearing completion of two major reports examining the city’s role in the trans-Atlantic slave trade and systemic discrimination against Black residents in the 20th century. The findings will inform future policy recommendations, though delays have frustrated community members who see the process as lacking urgency. City officials counter that the historical scope demands careful work.
Baltimore: Cannabis Revenue and Conflict

Baltimore’s Community Reinvestment and Reparations Commission, created in 2024, is supposed to guide spending on impacted communities using over $35 million in cannabis tax revenue—money specifically intended to address harms from the War on Drugs. Instead, power struggles between City Hall and the commission have caused delays. Advocates remain undeterred, continuing to push for real distribution despite bureaucratic friction.
St. Paul, Minnesota: Building Generational Wealth

St. Paul is moving forward with its Recovery Act Community Reparations Commission, which will advise city leadership on policies addressing racial disparities tied to slavery and systemic racism. The focus includes building generational wealth through improvements in housing, education, healthcare, and economic opportunity for Black residents. It’s framed not as charity but as restoration.
What’s striking across these efforts is how they reflect local realities. Some cities have the political will and budget flexibility to move quickly. Others face legal challenges that slow progress. A few are caught between genuine commitment and bureaucratic constraints. All of them are learning in real time that reparations conversations force communities to reckon with specific harms in specific places—and that reckoning itself is often where real change begins.
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