Relates to acknowledging the fundamental injustice, cruelty, brutality, and inhumanity of slavery in the city of New York and the state of New York; establishing the commission to study reparations for African-Americans and to recommend remedies to examine the institution of slavery, subsequently de jure and de facto racial and economic discrimination against African-Americans, the impact of these forces on living African-Americans and to make recommendations on appropriate remedies; makes an appropriation therefor; and provides for the repeal of such provisions.
NEW YORK STATE ASSEMBLY MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF LEGISLATION submitted in accordance with Assembly Rule III, Sec 1(f)
 
BILL NUMBER: A7274A
SPONSOR: Barron
 
TITLE OF BILL: An act to acknowledge the fundamental injustice,
cruelty, brutality and inhumanity of slavery in the city of New York and
the state of New York; to establish the Commission to Study Reparations
for African-Americans and to Recommend Remedies, to examine the institu-
tion of slavery, subsequently de jure and de facto racial and economic
discrimination against African-Americans, and the impact of these forces
on living African-Americans and to make recommendations on appropriate
remedies; making an appropriation therefor; and providing for the repeal
of such provisions upon expiration thereof
 
PURPOSE OR GENERAL IDEA OF BILL:
This bill establishes the Commission to Study Reparations for Afri-
can:kmericans and to Recommend. Remedies; makes an appropriation of
$250,000
 
SUMMARY OF PROVISIONS:
Section 1. This act shall be known and may he cited. as the 'Reparations
commission on slavery in New York state; a study and call remedies act".
§ 2. Legislative intent. Contrary to what many people believe, slavery
was net just a southern institution. Prior to the American Revolution,
there were r=e enslaved Africans in New York City than in any other city
except Charleston, South Carolina. During this period, slaves accounted
for 20% of lie population of New York end approximately 40% of colonial
New York's households owned slaves. These slaves were an integral part
of the population which settled and developed What we now know as the
state of New York.
The first enslaves arrived in New Amsterdam, a Dutch settlement estab-
lished at the southern tip of Manhattan Island, around 1627. These
enslaved Africans Old not belong to individuals, but worked for the
Dutch West India Company. The Dutch East India Company had established
fort Amsterdam, a fortification located on the southern tip of the
island of Manhattan, for the purpose of defending the company's fur
trade operations in the North River, now known as the Hudson River. In
1624, New Amsterdam became a provincial extension pf the Dutch Republic
and it was designated the capital of the province in 1625.
These first enslaved Africans cleared forests, prepared land for agri-
culture and built an infrastructure of roads, buildings and walls of
timber and earthwork, including the wall that gives Wall Street its
name. During the following years, more and more enslaved Africans were
brought to the New World for the purpose of expanding the settlement.
New Amsterdam came under English control in 1664 and was renamed New
York in honor of the then Duke of York, in whose name the English had
captured it. Three years later, the Dutch gave up their claim to the
town and the rest of the colony, in exchange for control of certain
trade routes and areas.
The change of control of the city did not deter slavery; it was an enor-
mously profitable enterprise and it continued under the English. New
York businesses engaged directly in slave trade and also in the
production of supplies used in the slave trade. They supplied food,
tools and grain to slave plantations in North America and in the West
Indies. Slave labor built and maintained ships used for trade between
North America, Europe, the Caribbean and Africa. Slaves produced goods
for, sale and worked in private homes. Even newspapers benefited from
slavery; advertisements of slaves for purchase were a major source of
revenue for the papers during the eighteenth century.
Life was repressive for slaves in New York. The New York City Common
Council passed a number of restrictive laws designed at curtailing the
rights and freedom of slaves. Slaves were barred from owning significant
property and from bequeathing what they did own to their children. The
number of people of African descent who could gather in one place was
limited. Restrictions on movement included requiring slaves to carry
lanterns after dark and to remain in certain geographic areas. Penalties
for breaking these and other laws were severe. Beatings, mutilations and
executions were common.
Enslaved Africans refused to submit to the slave existence. The condi-
tions of their lives gave rise to rebellions and the development in the
city of a network of the Underground Railroad.
Not all citizens of New York agreed with slavery. A powerful abolition-
ist movement developed, but the end of slavery in New York did not come
easily or quickly., Those who profited from the slave economy fought to
maintain the system.
In 1799 the New York state legislature passed "An Act for the Gradual
Abolition of Slavery". This legislation was a first step in the direc-
tion of emancipation, but did not have an immediate effect or affect all
slaves. Rather, it provided for gradual manumission. All children born
to slave women after July 4, 1799 would be freed, but only after their
most productive years: age 28 for men and age 25 for women. Slaves
already in servitude before July 4, 1799 were reclassified' as "inden-
tured servants", but in reality, remained slaves for the duration of
their lives.
In 1817, the Legislature enacted a statute that gave freedom. to New
York slaves who had been born before July 4, 1799. This statute did not
become effective until July 4, 1827, however.
Despite these laws, there were exceptions under which certain persons
could still own slaves. Non-residents could enter New York with slaves
for up to nine months, and allowing part-time residents to bring their
slaves into the state temporarily. The nine-months exception remained
law until its repeal in 141, when the North was re-defining itself as
the "free" region in advance of the civil war.
In 1991, a huge African burial ground was discovered in the heart of New
York's financial district during construction of a skyscraper. The
excavations that followed the termination of the construction project
yielded the skeletal remains of 419 Africans, many of whom were women
and children.
The slavery that flourished in the New York state constituted an immoral
and inhumane deprivation of Africans' life, liberty, African citizenship
rights, and cultural heritage, and denied them the fruits of their own
labor. Sufficient inquiry has not been made into the effects of the
institution of slavery on living African-Americans and society in New
York.
§3. Establishment, purpose and duties of the commission. A. Establish-
ment. There is hereby established the Commission to Study Reparations
for African-Americans and to Recommend Remedies (hereinafter referred to
as the "commission").
b. Duties. The commission shall perform the following duties:
(1) Examine the institution of slavery which existed within the state of
New York and in the city of New York. The commission's examination shall
include an examination of:
(A) the capture and procurement of Africans;
(B) the transport of Africans to the United States and the colonies that
became the United States for the purpose of enslavement, including their
treatment during transport;
(C) the sale and acquisition of Africans as chattel property in inter-
state and intrastate commerce; and
(D) the treatment of African slaves in the city of New York and the
state of New York, including the deprivation of their freedom; exploita-
tion of their labor, and destruction of their culture, language, reli-
gion, and families.
(2) Examine the extent to which the federal and state governments of the
'United States supported the institution of slavery in constitutional
and statutory provisions, including the extent to which such governments
prevented, opposed, or restricted efforts of freed African slaves to
repatriate to their homeland.
(3) Examine federal and state laws that discriminated against freed
African slaves and their descendants during the period between the end
of the Civil War and the present.
(4) Examine other forms of discrimination in the public and private
sectors against freed African slaves and their descendants during the
period between the end of the Civil War and the present.
(5) Examine the lingering negative effects of the institution of slavery
and the matters described in paragraphs (1), (2), (3), and (4) of this
subdivision on living African-Americans and on society in the United
States.
(6) Recommend appropriate ways to educate the American public of the
commission's findings.
(7) Recommend appropriate remedies in consideration of the commission's
findings on the matters described in paragraphs (1), (2), (3), and (4)
of this subdivision. In making such recommendations, the commission
shall address among other issues, the following questions:
(A) whether the New York state legislature should offer a formal apology
on behalf of the people of the United States for the perpetration of
gross human rights violations on African slaves and their descendants;
(B) whether African-Americans still suffer from the lingering effects of
the matters described in paragraphs (1), (2), (3), and (4) of this
subdivision;
(C) whether, in consideration of the commission's findings, any form of
compensation to the descendants of African slaves is warranted; and
(D) if the commission finds that such compensation is warranted, what
should be the amount of compensation, what form of compensation should
be awarded, and who should be eligible for such compensation.
c. Report to the legislature. The commission shall submit a written
report of its findings and recommendations to the temporary president of
the senate, the speaker of the assembly, the minority leaders of the
senate and the assembly and the governor not later than the date which
is one year after the date of the first meeting of the commission held
pursuant to subdivision c of section four of this act. §4. Membership.
a. The commission shall be composed of eleven members who shall be
appointed within 90 days after the effective date of this act, as
follows:
(1) one member shall be appointed by the governor;
(2) one member shall be appointed by the speaker of the assembly;
(3) one member shall be appointed by the temporary president of the
senate;
(4) one member shall be appointed by the minority leader of the assem-
bly;
(5) one member shall be appointed by the minority leader of the senate;
(6) two members shall be appointed by the National Coalition of Blacks
for Reparations in America (N.C.O.B.R.A.);
(7) two members shall be appointed by the December 12th Movement; and
(8) two members shall be appointed by Dr. Ron Daniels of the Institute
of the Black World.
b. All members of the commission shall be persons who are especially
Qualified to serve on the commission by virtue of their education,
training, or experience, particularly in the field of African-American
studies.
c. First meeting. The chair shall call the first meeting of the commis-
sion within 120 days after the effective date of this act or within 30
days after the date on which legislation is enacted making appropri-
ations to carry out this act, whichever date is later.
d. Quorum. Eight members of the commission shall constitute a quorum,
but a lesser number may hold hearings.
e. Chair and vice chair. The commission shall elect a Chair and Vice
Chair from among its members. The term of office for each shall be for
one year.
f. Compensation. The members of the commission shall receive no compen-
sation for their services as members, but shall be reimbursed for their
actual And necessary expenses incurred-in-the performance of their
duties.
§5. Powers of the commission. a. Hearings and sessions. The commission
may, for the purpose of carrying out the provisions of this act, hold
such hearings and sit and act at such times and at such places in the
United States, and request the attendance and testimony of such
witnesses and the production of such books, records, correspondence,
memoranda, papers, and documents, as the commission considers appropri-
ate.
b. Powers of subcommittees and members. Any subcommittee or member of
the commission may, if authorized by the commission, take any action
which the commission is authorized to take by this section.
c. Obtaining official data. The commission may acquire directly from the
head of any department, agency, or instrumentality of the executive
branch of the government, available information which the commission
considers useful in the discharge of its duties. All departments, agen-
cies and instrumentalities of the executive branch of the government
shall cooperate. with the commission with respect to such information
and shall furnish all information requested by the commission to the
extent permitted by law.
§6. Administrative provisions. a. Experts and consultants. The commis-
sion may procure through a competitive process the services of experts
and consultants.
b. Administrative support services. The commission may enter into agree-
ments with the commissioner of general services for procurement of
financial and administrative services necessary for the discharge of the
duties of the commission. Payment for such services shall be made by
reimbursement from funds of the commission in such amounts as may be
agreed upon by the chair of the commission and the commissioner of
general services.
c. Contracts. The commission may:
(1) procure supplies, services, and property by contract in accordance
with applicable laws and regulations and to the extent or in such
amounts as are provided in appropriations acts; and
(2) enter into contracts with departments, agencies, and instrumentali-
ties of the federal government, state agencies, and private firms,
institutions, and agencies, for the conduct of research or surveys, •
the-preparation of reports, and other activities necessary for the
discharge of the duties of the commission, to the extent or in such
amounts as are provided in appropriations acts.
§7.Termination. The commission shall terminate 90 days after the date on
which the commission submits its report to the temporary president of
the senate, the speaker of the assembly, the minority leaders of the
senate and the assembly and the governor as provided in subdivision c of
Section three of this act.
§ 8. The performance of the commission's duties, purposes and objectives
shall be executed within amounts made available by appropriation there-
for.
§9. The sum of two hundred fifty thousand dollars ($250,000), or so much
thereof as may be necessary, is hereby appropriated to the Commission to
Study Reparations for African-Americans and to Recommend Remedies from
any moneys in the state treasury in the general fund, not otherwise
appropriated, for the purposes of carrying out the provisions of this
act. Such sum shall be payable on the audit and warrant of the state
chair of the Commission to Study Reparations for African-Americans and
to Recommend Remedies, or his or her duly designated representative in
the manner provided by law.
§10. This act shall take effect immediately and shall expire and be
deemed repealed 30 days after the Commission to Study Reparations for
African-Americans and to Recommend Remedies submits its report to the
temporary president of the senate, the speaker of the assembly, the
minority leaders of the senate and the assembly and the governor as
provided in subdivision c of section three of this act; provided that,
the chair of the Commission to Study Reparations for African-Americans
and to Recommend Remedies shall notify the legislative bill drafting
commission upon the submission of its report as provided in subdivision
c of section three of this act in order that the commission may maintain
an accurate and timely effective data base of the official text of the
laws of the state of New York furtherance of effecting the provisions of
section 44 of the legislative law and section 70b or the public officers
law.
 
DIFFERENCE BETWEEN ORIGINAL AND AMENDED VERSION (IF APPLICABLE):
§ 4. Membership. a. The commission shall be composed of eleven members
who shall be appointed within 90 days after the effective date of this
act, as follows:
(6) two members shall be appointed by the National Coalition of Blacks
for Reparations in America (N.C.O.B.R.A.);
(7) two members shall be appointed by the December 12th Movement; and
(8) two members shall be appointed by Dr. Ron Daniels of the Institute
of the Black World
 
JUSTIFICATION:
To acknowledge the fundamental injustice, cruelty, brutality and inhu-
manity of slavery in the City of New York and the State of New York.
 
PRIOR LEGISLATIVE HISTORY:
None
 
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS FOR STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS:
 
EFFECTIVE DATE:
This act shall take effect immediately and shall expire and be deemed
repealed 30 days after the Commission to Study Reparations for African-
Americans and to Recommend Remedies submits its report to the temporary
president of the senate, the speaker of the assembly, the minority lead-
ers of the senate and the assembly and the governor as provided in
subdivision c of section three of this act; provided that, the chair of
the Commission to Study Reparations for African-Americans and to Recom-
mend Remedies shall notify the legislative bill drafting commission upon
the submission of its report as provided in subdivision c of section
three of this act in order that the commission may maintain an accurate
and timely effective data base of the official text of the laws of the
state.of New York furtherance of effecting the provisions of section 44
of the legislative law and section 70-b or the public officers law.
STATE OF NEW YORK
________________________________________________________________________
7274--A
2017-2018 Regular Sessions
IN ASSEMBLY
April 17, 2017
___________
Introduced by M. of A. BARRON, HARRIS, PRETLOW, WRIGHT, SEPULVEDA, DICK-
ENS, AUBRY, WALKER, BLAKE, WILLIAMS, RICHARDSON, CRESPO, SOLAGES,
PICHARDO, ARROYO, RODRIGUEZ, MOSLEY, PEOPLES-STOKES, COOK, RIVERA,
DE LA ROSA, PERRY, VANEL, TITUS, HYNDMAN, HOOPER, CAHILL, GANTT,
JEAN-PIERRE -- Multi-Sponsored by -- M. of A. FARRELL -- read once and
referred to the Committee on Governmental Operations -- reported and
referred to the Committee on Ways and Means -- committee discharged,
bill amended, ordered reprinted as amended and recommitted to said
committee
AN ACT to acknowledge the fundamental injustice, cruelty, brutality and
inhumanity of slavery in the city of New York and the state of New
York; to establish the Commission to Study Reparations for African-Am-
ericans and to Recommend Remedies, to examine the institution of slav-
ery, subsequently de jure and de facto racial and economic discrimi-
nation against African-Americans, and the impact of these forces on
living African-Americans and to make recommendations on appropriate
remedies; making an appropriation therefor; and providing for the
repeal of such provisions upon expiration thereof
The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-bly, do enact as follows:
1 Section 1. This act shall be known and may be cited as the "Repara-
2 tions commission on slavery in New York state; a study and call for
3 remedies act".
4 § 2. Legislative intent. Contrary to what many people believe, slav-
5 ery was not just a southern institution. Prior to the American Revo-
6 lution, there were more enslaved Africans in New York City than in any
7 other city except Charleston, South Carolina. During this period, slaves
8 accounted for 20% of the population of New York and approximately 40% of
9 colonial New York's households owned slaves. These slaves were an inte-
10 gral part of the population which settled and developed what we now know
11 as the state of New York.
EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
[] is old law to be omitted.
LBD09600-03-7
A. 7274--A 2
1 The first slaves arrived in New Amsterdam, a Dutch settlement estab-
2 lished at the southern tip of Manhattan Island, around 1627. These
3 enslaved Africans did not belong to individuals, but worked for the
4 Dutch West India Company. The Dutch East India Company had established
5 Fort Amsterdam, a fortification located on the southern tip of the
6 island of Manhattan, for the purpose of defending the company's fur
7 trade operations in the North River, now known as the Hudson River. In
8 1624, New Amsterdam became a provincial extension of the Dutch Republic
9 and it was designated the capital of the province in 1625.
10 These first enslaved Africans cleared forests, prepared land for agri-
11 culture and built an infrastructure of roads, buildings and walls of
12 timber and earthwork, including the wall that gives Wall Street its
13 name. During the following years, more and more enslaved Africans were
14 brought to the New World for the purpose of expanding the settlement.
15 New Amsterdam came under English control in 1664 and was renamed New
16 York in honor of the then Duke of York, in whose name the English had
17 captured it. Three years later, the Dutch gave up their claim to the
18 town and the rest of the colony, in exchange for control of certain
19 trade routes and areas.
20 The change of control of the city did not deter slavery; it was an
21 enormously profitable enterprise and it continued under the English. New
22 York businesses engaged directly in slave trade and also in the
23 production of supplies used in the slave trade. They supplied food,
24 tools and grain to slave plantations in North America and in the West
25 Indies. Slave labor built and maintained ships used for trade between
26 North America, Europe, the Caribbean and Africa. Slaves produced goods
27 for sale and worked in private homes. Even newspapers benefited from
28 slavery: advertisements of slaves for purchase were a major source of
29 revenue for the papers during the eighteenth century.
30 Life was repressive for slaves in New York. The New York City Common
31 Council passed a number of restrictive laws designed at curtailing the
32 rights and freedoms of slaves. Slaves were barred from owning signif-
33 icant property and from bequeathing what they did own to their children.
34 The number of people of African descent who could gather in one place
35 was limited. Restrictions on movement included requiring slaves to carry
36 lanterns after dark and to remain in certain geographic areas.
37 Penalties for breaking these and other laws were severe. Beatings,
38 mutilations and executions were common.
39 Enslaved Africans refused to submit to the slave existence. The condi-
40 tions of their lives gave rise to rebellions and the development in the
41 city of a network of the Underground Railroad.
42 Not all citizens of New York agreed with slavery. A powerful aboli-
43 tionist movement developed, but the end of slavery in New York did not
44 come easily or quickly. Those who profited from the slave economy fought
45 to maintain the system.
46 In 1799 the New York state legislature passed "An Act for the Gradual
47 Abolition of Slavery". This legislation was a first step in the direc-
48 tion of emancipation, but did not have an immediate effect or affect all
49 slaves. Rather, it provided for gradual manumission. All children born
50 to slave women after July 4, 1799 would be freed, but only after their
51 most productive years: age 28 for men and age 25 for women. Slaves
52 already in servitude before July 4, 1799 were reclassified as "inden-
53 tured servants", but in reality, remained slaves for the duration of
54 their lives.
A. 7274--A 3
1 In 1817, the Legislature enacted a statute that gave freedom to New
2 York slaves who had been born before July 4, 1799. This statute did not
3 become effective until July 4, 1827, however.
4 Despite these laws, there were exceptions under which certain persons
5 could still own slaves. Non-residents could enter New York with slaves
6 for up to nine months, and allowing part-time residents to bring their
7 slaves into the state temporarily. The nine-months exception remained
8 law until its repeal in 1841, when the North was re-defining itself as
9 the "free" region in advance of the civil war.
10 In 1991, a huge African burial ground was discovered in the heart of
11 New York's financial district during construction of a skyscraper. The
12 excavations that followed the termination of the construction project
13 yielded the skeletal remains of 419 Africans, many of whom were women
14 and children.
15 The slavery that flourished in the New York state constituted an
16 immoral and inhumane deprivation of Africans' life, liberty, African
17 citizenship rights, and cultural heritage, and denied them the fruits of
18 their own labor. Sufficient inquiry has not been made into the effects
19 of the institution of slavery on living African-Americans and society in
20 New York.
21 § 3. Establishment, purpose and duties of the commission. a. Estab-
22 lishment. There is hereby established the Commission to Study Repara-
23 tions for African-Americans and to Recommend Remedies (hereinafter
24 referred to as the "commission").
25 b. Duties. The commission shall perform the following duties:
26 (1) Examine the institution of slavery which existed within the state
27 of New York and in the city of New York. The commission's examination
28 shall include an examination of:
29 (A) the capture and procurement of Africans;
30 (B) the transport of Africans to the United States and the colonies
31 that became the United States for the purpose of enslavement, including
32 their treatment during transport;
33 (C) the sale and acquisition of Africans as chattel property in inter-
34 state and intrastate commerce; and
35 (D) the treatment of African slaves in the city of New York and the
36 state of New York, including the deprivation of their freedom, exploita-
37 tion of their labor, and destruction of their culture, language, reli-
38 gion, and families.
39 (2) Examine the extent to which the federal and state governments of
40 the United States supported the institution of slavery in constitutional
41 and statutory provisions, including the extent to which such governments
42 prevented, opposed, or restricted efforts of freed African slaves to
43 repatriate to their homeland.
44 (3) Examine federal and state laws that discriminated against freed
45 African slaves and their descendants during the period between the end
46 of the Civil War and the present.
47 (4) Examine other forms of discrimination in the public and private
48 sectors against freed African slaves and their descendants during the
49 period between the end of the Civil War and the present.
50 (5) Examine the lingering negative effects of the institution of slav-
51 ery and the matters described in paragraphs (1), (2), (3), and (4) of
52 this subdivision on living African-Americans and on society in the
53 United States.
54 (6) Recommend appropriate ways to educate the American public of the
55 commission's findings.
A. 7274--A 4
1 (7) Recommend appropriate remedies in consideration of the commis-
2 sion's findings on the matters described in paragraphs (1), (2), (3),
3 and (4) of this subdivision. In making such recommendations, the commis-
4 sion shall address among other issues, the following questions:
5 (A) whether the New York state legislature should offer a formal apol-
6 ogy on behalf of the people of the United States for the perpetration of
7 gross human rights violations on African slaves and their descendants;
8 (B) whether African-Americans still suffer from the lingering effects
9 of the matters described in paragraphs (1), (2), (3), and (4) of this
10 subdivision;
11 (C) whether, in consideration of the commission's findings, any form
12 of compensation to the descendants of African slaves is warranted; and
13 (D) if the commission finds that such compensation is warranted, what
14 should be the amount of compensation, what form of compensation should
15 be awarded, and who should be eligible for such compensation.
16 c. Report to the legislature. The commission shall submit a written
17 report of its findings and recommendations to the temporary president of
18 the senate, the speaker of the assembly, the minority leaders of the
19 senate and the assembly and the governor not later than the date which
20 is one year after the date of the first meeting of the commission held
21 pursuant to subdivision c of section four of this act.
22 § 4. Membership. a. The commission shall be composed of eleven members
23 who shall be appointed within 90 days after the effective date of this
24 act, as follows:
25 (1) one member shall be appointed by the governor;
26 (2) one member shall be appointed by the speaker of the assembly;
27 (3) one member shall be appointed by the temporary president of the
28 senate;
29 (4) one member shall be appointed by the minority leader of the assem-
30 bly;
31 (5) one member shall be appointed by the minority leader of the
32 senate;
33 (6) two members shall be appointed by the National Coalition of Blacks
34 for Reparations in America (N.C.O.B.R.A.);
35 (7) two members shall be appointed by the December 12th Movement; and
36 (8) two members shall be appointed by Dr. Ron Daniels of the Institute
37 of the Black World.
38 b. All members of the commission shall be persons who are especially
39 qualified to serve on the commission by virtue of their education,
40 training, or experience, particularly in the field of African-American
41 studies.
42 c. First meeting. The chair shall call the first meeting of the
43 commission within 120 days after the effective date of this act or with-
44 in 30 days after the date on which legislation is enacted making appro-
45 priations to carry out this act, whichever date is later.
46 d. Quorum. Eight members of the commission shall constitute a quorum,
47 but a lesser number may hold hearings.
48 e. Chair and vice chair. The commission shall elect a Chair and Vice
49 Chair from among its members. The term of office for each shall be for
50 one year.
51 f. Compensation. The members of the commission shall receive no
52 compensation for their services as members, but shall be reimbursed for
53 their actual and necessary expenses incurred in the performance of their
54 duties.
55 § 5. Powers of the commission. a. Hearings and sessions. The commis-
56 sion may, for the purpose of carrying out the provisions of this act,
A. 7274--A 5
1 hold such hearings and sit and act at such times and at such places in
2 the United States, and request the attendance and testimony of such
3 witnesses and the production of such books, records, correspondence,
4 memoranda, papers, and documents, as the commission considers appropri-
5 ate.
6 b. Powers of subcommittees and members. Any subcommittee or member of
7 the commission may, if authorized by the commission, take any action
8 which the commission is authorized to take by this section.
9 c. Obtaining official data. The commission may acquire directly from
10 the head of any department, agency, or instrumentality of the executive
11 branch of the government, available information which the commission
12 considers useful in the discharge of its duties. All departments, agen-
13 cies, and instrumentalities of the executive branch of the government
14 shall cooperate with the commission with respect to such information and
15 shall furnish all information requested by the commission to the extent
16 permitted by law.
17 § 6. Administrative provisions. a. Experts and consultants. The
18 commission may procure through a competitive process the services of
19 experts and consultants.
20 b. Administrative support services. The commission may enter into
21 agreements with the commissioner of general services for procurement of
22 financial and administrative services necessary for the discharge of the
23 duties of the commission. Payment for such services shall be made by
24 reimbursement from funds of the commission in such amounts as may be
25 agreed upon by the chair of the commission and the commissioner of
26 general services.
27 c. Contracts. The commission may:
28 (1) procure supplies, services, and property by contract in accordance
29 with applicable laws and regulations and to the extent or in such
30 amounts as are provided in appropriations acts; and
31 (2) enter into contracts with departments, agencies, and instrumental-
32 ities of the federal government, state agencies, and private firms,
33 institutions, and agencies, for the conduct of research or surveys, the
34 preparation of reports, and other activities necessary for the discharge
35 of the duties of the commission, to the extent or in such amounts as are
36 provided in appropriations acts.
37 § 7. Termination. The commission shall terminate 90 days after the
38 date on which the commission submits its report to the temporary presi-
39 dent of the senate, the speaker of the assembly, the minority leaders of
40 the senate and the assembly and the governor as provided in subdivision
41 c of section three of this act.
42 § 8. The performance of the commission's duties, purposes and objec-
43 tives shall be executed within amounts made available by appropriation
44 therefor.
45 § 9. The sum of two hundred fifty thousand dollars ($250,000), or so
46 much thereof as may be necessary, is hereby appropriated to the Commis-
47 sion to Study Reparations for African-Americans and to Recommend Reme-
48 dies from any moneys in the state treasury in the general fund, not
49 otherwise appropriated, for the purposes of carrying out the provisions
50 of this act. Such sum shall be payable on the audit and warrant of the
51 state chair of the Commission to Study Reparations for African-Americans
52 and to Recommend Remedies, or his or her duly designated representative
53 in the manner provided by law.
54 § 10. This act shall take effect immediately and shall expire and be
55 deemed repealed 30 days after the Commission to Study Reparations for
56 African-Americans and to Recommend Remedies submits its report to the
A. 7274--A 6
1 temporary president of the senate, the speaker of the assembly, the
2 minority leaders of the senate and the assembly and the governor as
3 provided in subdivision c of section three of this act; provided that,
4 the chair of the Commission to Study Reparations for African-Americans
5 and to Recommend Remedies shall notify the legislative bill drafting
6 commission upon the submission of its report as provided in subdivision
7 c of section three of this act in order that the commission may maintain
8 an accurate and timely effective data base of the official text of the
9 laws of the state of New York in furtherance of effecting the provisions
10 of section 44 of the legislative law and section 70-b of the public
11 officers law.