Posted inCourts, Economic Development, Eminent Domain, History, Politics & Policy, Rural Issues

Georgia Is Letting a Railroad Seize Land a Black Family Has Owned For 100 Years

SPARTA, Ga. — In 1850, Andrew Benjamin Tarbutton enslaved 25 people in central Georgia. A year later, he purchased more than a dozen additional people off the docks in Savannah and marched them toward his home, setting the foundation for his family’s generational wealth. Four generations later, a railroad company owned by one of his […]

Posted inHistory, Politics & Policy

Philadelphia Wins Court Fight Over Slavery Exhibit Removal

After a weekslong battle, Black Philadelphians and their allies have notched a victory: A federal judge has ordered the Trump administration to temporarily restore a slavery exhibit at the President’s House Site in the city. Without warning, National Park Service workers in January removed panels about slavery from the President’s House Site, where George Washington […]

Posted inCulture, History, Politics & Policy

Remembering the Rev. Jesse Jackson’s Impact and Civil Rights Leadership

The Rev. Jesse Jackson — a grandfather, husband, and storied civil rights icon — has passed away. Jackson died peacefully Tuesday morning, surrounded by family, according to a statement issued by the Rainbow People United to Save Humanity (PUSH) Coalition. Last fall, Jackson was hospitalized at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago, where he received “good […]

Posted inElections, Politics & Policy, Voting

‘Jim Crow 2.0’: Civil Rights Leaders Sound Alarm on SAVE America Act

House Republicans have pushed through legislation that civil rights organizations warn could disenfranchise millions of Americans — and disproportionately burden Black Americans — by erecting new barriers to the ballot box. That bill, called the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) America Act, now heads to the Senate, where it faces steep odds. Still, advocates are […]

Posted inHistory, Politics & Policy

100 Years After a Black Family Was Forced Out, a Descendant Sues a California City

Sidney and Iréne Dearing, along with their two small children, faced lynching and bomb threats after they settled in a “sundown town” in California in 1924.  As the first Black homeowners in Piedmont, a wealthy white suburb of Oakland, they endured a racial terror campaign that included a mob of 500 people showing up on […]

Posted inFederal Overhaul, Politics & Policy

Black Diplomats Say Trump’s Moves Are Pushing People Out of Public Service

Federal Overhaul is a multipart series that explores the impact of the Trump administration’s restructuring of the federal government on Black communities. Pamela L. Spratlen knows all too well how elusive diversity has long been within the U.S. Foreign Service. Her father, as a young man, applied to join the Foreign Service. But this was […]

Posted inEconomy, Employment, Food Access, Health, Politics & Policy

Partial Government Shutdown Looms as Battle Over DHS Funding Persists

Large swaths of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security are poised to shut down on Saturday, as Democrats and the White House remain locked in a standoff over the Trump administration’s immigration measures. Some 13% of the federal civilian workforce would be affected by a shutdown, according to the Washington Post. Operations would be disrupted […]

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