The Obama administration announced a $1.25 billion settlement Thursday to resolve charges by thousands of black farmers who say that for decades the Agriculture Department discriminated against them in loan programs. Cabinet officials exhorted Congress to approve the deal by setting aside money for the farmers, who have fought through three administrations to secure a measure of justice. In the starkest cases, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said, farmers lost their property after local administrators slow-pedaled loan applications, leaving them unable to plant key crops. The agreement is part of a wider effort by Obama and senior officials to dispense with lawsuits stemming from America’s checkered civil rights legacy. In December, the Justice Department led efforts to settle a long-standing case with Native Americans who accuse the federal government of mismanaging royalty payments for natural resources mined on tribal lands. A settlement is awaiting congressional action. Vilsack and Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. took a personal interest in striking a deal with the black farmers, whose leaders have appeared regularly in the halls of Congress and in the White House. Vilsack predicted that Congress will approve the settlement. ‘I’m going to focus all my time and […]
Friday, February 19th, 2010
U.S. Approves Settlement For Black Farmers
Author: CARRIE JOHNSON
Source: The Washington Post
Publication Date: Friday, February 19, 2010
Link: U.S. Approves Settlement For Black Farmers
Source: The Washington Post
Publication Date: Friday, February 19, 2010
Link: U.S. Approves Settlement For Black Farmers
Stephan: This decision, a second step, represents the latest example of a trend of repair, a righting of ancient wrongs across decades of blatant prejudice. This one has a special importance to me.
I grew up in a rural Virginia Tidewater county. A black man, Pleasant Corbin, ran our farm, helped me to grow up, and formed a friendship with my physician father that both of them obviously valued -- men of similar age both veterans of WWII. They understood and worked within the world as it was, leaning gently in the direction they wanted it to go. Through this connection I came to know something of what black farmers faced, and several times saw my father help. It was a world of such manifest unfairness that it led me into civil rights.