A St. Paul city official has withdrawn her name for consideration as the person to staff the city’s new reparations commission.
She removed her name after Black leaders in the Minnesota capital pushed back, asserting that the role should be filled by a Black person.
Jennifer Lor, who currently serves as a policy aide for Council member Nelsie Yang, is Asian-American.
Related: ‘Right These Wrongs’: Guyana’s President Boldly Demands Reparations, Posthumous Charges for British Plantation Owner As Descendants Issue an Apology for Slavery
A group of leaders from the Black community assembled in front of Saint Paul’s City Hall to express their disapproval of the City Council’s choice to appoint a policy aide who is not of African-American descent to serve on the reparations commission.
The protesters were clear that this was not a personal attack against Lor but an important marker for the Black community.
“It’s not about the person. It’s just that we need somebody who has the lived experience, knowledge of reparations, knowledge of the racial wealth gap and how it impacts the descendants of slavery who reside in St. Paul,” said Trahern Crews, one of the leaders of St. Paul’s reparations movement.
President of the African American Leadership Council Tyrone Terrill said he considered the decision to hire Lor as “total disrespect for the Black community.”
“We’re not going to stand for it,” he declared at the protest.
Chauntyll Allen, leader of Black Lives Matter Twin Cities and a member of the St. Paul school board, joined the cry to have the City Council reevaluate the applicant pool. She emphasized that the council should consider capable Black candidates, proposing a reposting of the job listing and active recruitment of African-American applicants.
The job listing, posted in June, indicated that the person hired would divide their time between handling reparations policy and serving as the…
Read the full article here