Kate Washington | Special To The OBSERVER
What could reparations for Black Sacramentans look like?
History graduate students at UC Davis are trying to answer that question by investigating past discrimination against the Black community in Sacramento during the 1950s and beyond.
A partnership among Professor Gregory Downs, the City of Sacramento and the Greater Sacramento Urban League is leading the effort to make things right.
Downs, a scholar of the 19th century American South, and his students are examining postwar redevelopment efforts โ then called โslum clearanceโ โ in Sacramento that forced a thriving Black community out of the cityโs old West End, the neighborhood that now encompasses the Capitol Mall and Old Sacramento.
They delved into the archives of a civil rights lawyer, court cases, newspapers, and more, reporting their findings to Kelly Fong Rivas, senior advisor to Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg; and Troy Williams, chief impact officer at the Greater Sacramento Urban League.

The research project grew out of a chance connection born of Downsโ commitment to engaging his undergraduate students. When he arrived at UC Davis in 2015, Downs realized that the students in his introductory courses didnโt see the connection between the Civil War era he specializes in and their home region.
โStudents were familiar with things like the Gold Rush, which I think is somewhat of an oversimplified founding myth, or the Oregon Trail,โ he said. โWith the help of colleagues who are great scholars of the West, I started to embed more information about how California was central to the Civil War, which led to a transformation of Black rights. A lot of those things really hit home with students.โ
One of those undergraduates happened to have an internship with Sacramentoโs mayoral office, Downs said. โOne day he contacted me and said, โCan I put you in touch with my boss?โ He had been in a meeting where Kelly Fong Rivas was discussing a goal to make a rigorous, serious effort at municipal reparations rooted in a clear study of history.โ
That chance connection led to a successful application for grant funding from the UC Davis Public Impact Research Initiative and kicked off a cooperative effort that hopes to transform Sacramentoโs historically marginalized communities.
Toward Reparations And Mending Trust
Rivas, previously chief of staff, became the mayorโs racial equity advisor following the reckoning after George Floydโs murder in 2020. At the time, then-Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti formed a coalition to push cities to make reparations to marginalized communities. โOur commitment to develop municipal reparations started with Mayors Organized for Reparations and Equity,โ Rivas said. โThat focused on Black communities and finding an area within the control of local government.โ
Models for municipal reparations already existed, notably in Evanston, Illinois, where a city resolution established a reparations fund in 2019; in 2021, the city began payments to redress past housing discrimination. As of August 2023, the program had disbursed more than $1 million.
Rivas attended a summit in Evanston and โlearned some promising practices,โ she said. โThey had done deep research through newspaper files, any data available, and also interviews with elders in the community, to craft what they ultimately passed.โ
The Evanston model underscored the need for solidly researched footing for community repair, but it also pointed toward arenas such as housing discrimination. โWhen we started to look at the city of Sacramentoโs history, natural places to look were areas of redevelopment,โ Rivas said. โWe became interested in the West End because thereโs such a rich history there, as well as documentation thanks to Nathaniel Colley.โ
Colley, Sacramentoโs first African American lawyer, brought civil rights suits against the city, and his papers became a trove for researchers.
Finding an issue solely within local government control was key to shaping the research project. The city redeveloped the West End on its own; other redevelopment efforts โ such as those for building interstates โ also caused significant harms, but involving other government agencies would cloud questions of responsibility.

Though the scope might seem modest, Downs noted a clear focus gives the project a better chance of success.
โItโs important that local governments show that you can do something thatโs not just symbolic,โ Downs said. โWe need models that work.โ
As crucial as moving toward reparations, Rivas added, is building trust with marginalized communities. โIn understanding how to create a reparative process, we canโt just look at an end product,โ said Rivas, who added that โreparationsโ can be a loaded term. โEverybody jumps to compensation. How much? It creates a distraction. [Payments] are a piece of it, but this work is that of empowering community and centering community that was harmed.โ
Voices Of The People
Community involvement has come through the crucial role of Troy Williams, who has a doctorate in human ecology and trained in community-based participatory research. He became part of the project in an unusual way: as an external reviewer for UC Davis grant funding.
โWhen I was reviewing proposals, I came across Dr. Greg Downsโ proposal and it just jumped off the pages,โ Williams said. โI was amazed at what he and his graduate students had already accomplished. I thought, โWe have to figure out how to work with this gentleman,โ because he wasnโt asking for much money.โ
Under Williamsโ auspices, the Urban League offered to co-fund the proposal, which turned the project into a coalition with Rivas, Williams and Downs. โItโs extremely important for a rights organization to ensure that the voices that need to be at the table are present,โ Williams said.
Additional funding also offered a chance to expand the research to the underserved North Sacramento neighborhood of Del Paso Heights, where the Urban League is headquartered and where many displaced West Enders resettled, only to suffer further discrimination.
โA lot of those families still live in these communities,โ Williams said. โIf we can assist these folks and correct the damage of displacement and losing generational wealth, that would be a great thing to be part of, as well as being part of the larger reparations conversation in California.โ
Both the initial grants and continued funding have been invaluable at these preliminary stages of the project, which is a mayoral initiative, not a formal mandate. โIโm the only staff member officially [on this initiative], and I was kind of shocked to get funding out of the city budget for racial equity,โ Rivas said. โIโve been trying to be frugal and scrappy and let the community decide what most of that funding should go toward. So the grant with Greg and being able to work with the student [researchers] has been amazing.โ
Rivas, Williams and Downs said they hope the project leads to a formal reparations initiative, but agree that building relationships is worth the time. โWeโve learned to move at the speed of trust with the community,โ Rivas said.
Added Williams: โWhatโs so encouraging about the work is that they are really trying to get at systems-induced trauma. One thing that I love about working with historians, they really want to get the facts.โ
Research Nuts And Bolts
Initially, graduate students used Colleyโs papers to investigate the impact of West End redevelopment, presenting their findings to Rivas, Williams and Downs regularly through meetings and formal reports.
Even with a big archival cache, tracing direct historical impacts wasnโt easy, said Taylor Black, a fifth-year graduate student who worked on the projectโs first phase. โSurprisingly, there werenโt a lot of specific stories referenced in the sources, which is part of the struggle. Itโs striking how many of the actual physical buildings where these businesses were no longer exist because they were physically destroyed,โ Black said. โThe sources are scant.โ
Colleyโs papers, for instance, reference 32 clients he was representing in lawsuits related to redevelopment but donโt name the individuals. Seeking them in court records, stored on 1,000-page microfiches, led to another roadblock: court staff who didnโt have time to comb through hundreds of pages of files.
Such challenges are part of historical work, Downs said. โIn an ideal world, you could really have a story that explodes across the map and into the present day,โ he said. โBut some of those records can be challenging to trace, including things like figuring out where a business owner or property owner wentโ โ especially if they had a relatively common name.

As the grant has been renewed and work has continued, the scope of research has grown. Students Chantal Walker, Omari Averette-Phillips and Sareena Crawford have looked at the neighborhood of Del Paso Heights, reflecting both the inclusion of community voices and the complex and contingent harms the Black community experienced.
In Williamsโ community, this history is very much alive: โWhen I have spoken to some of my colleagues or community members about some of the findings, theyโll say, โOh, my gosh, I know him. Thatโs my uncle,โโ Williams said. โI spoke to our former senior director of partnerships and mentioned a name [from] the research, and he said, โOh, I know him well. He was a member of my church.โโ
The historical research is already having an impact. Walkerโs research, for instance, helped demonstrate institutional inequity in Del Paso Heights, long a banking desert. โThe research that Chantal put into place absolutely assisted us,โ Williams said. โNot only have we included it in our impact report, but we are speaking with congresspeople and potential investors for developing that area.โ
Students also benefit, gaining experience in archival research and public history. โThe Urban League, the mayorโs office and Dr. Downs are all super open and receptive to what we want to do as researchers,โ Crawford said. โI feel incredibly grateful to be part of this project. I am a Black woman and I am from Utah, and even the concept of the mayorโs office considering reparations is huge.โ
Black, who specializes in race, religion and imperialism in 19th-century America, agreed. โThis project is in line with that. Public history matters a lot.โ
An Uncertain But Promising Future
Downs said he imagines many possible outcomes for this project, including making this history publicly available. โI would love to think about how you could make a digital history site where people could look at the overlay of the map of the old West End and be able to click and see whoโs there, and then flip to the map post-redevelopment,โ he said.
Although continued research is funded for summer 2024, the cityโs future role is uncertain. A new mayor, to be elected in November, takes office in December, and whether to move toward reparations will be at the new administrationโs discretion. Rivas leaves her position with the outgoing mayor.
Regardless of what form future initiatives take, Rivas sees the research partnership with UC Davis and the Urban League as a resounding success. Grant funding โhas been incredibly meaningful,โ she said. โCreating that space for community and coalition building was a big piece of the work, and weโve done that front-end research thatโs needed historically.
โThis is really deep, hard, systems-level change of unwinding generational trauma. It wonโt be done with a single piece of legislation or a single program or a single ribbon-cutting. It will take many years for repair to take hold, and it starts with this type of relationship building.โ
EDITORโS NOTE: This story was produced by UC Davis Magazine and offered exclusively to The OBSERVER.
