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Updated:   2026-02-23

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                <ns0:Id>20250ACR_013499INT</ns0:Id>
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                <ns0:History>
                        <ns0:Action>
                                <ns0:ActionText>INTRODUCED</ns0:ActionText>
                                <ns0:ActionDate>2026-02-12</ns0:ActionDate>
                        </ns0:Action>
                        <ns0:Action>
                                <ns0:ActionText>CORRECTED</ns0:ActionText>
                                <ns0:ActionDate>2026-02-18</ns0:ActionDate>
                        </ns0:Action>
                        <ns0:Action>
                                <ns0:ActionText>REVISED</ns0:ActionText>
                                <ns0:ActionDate>2026-02-17</ns0:ActionDate>
                        </ns0:Action>
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                        <ns0:SessionYear>2025</ns0:SessionYear>
                        <ns0:SessionNum>0</ns0:SessionNum>
                        <ns0:MeasureType>ACR</ns0:MeasureType>
                        <ns0:MeasureNum>134</ns0:MeasureNum>
                        <ns0:MeasureState>INT</ns0:MeasureState>
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                <ns0:AuthorText authorType="LEAD_AUTHOR">Introduced by Assembly Members Bryan, Bonta, Elhawary, Gipson, Jackson, McKinnor, Ransom, Sharp-Collins, and Wilson</ns0:AuthorText>
                <ns0:AuthorText authorType="PRINCIPAL_COAUTHOR_OPPOSITE">(Principal coauthors: Senators Richardson, Smallwood-Cuevas, and Weber Pierson)</ns0:AuthorText>
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                        <ns0:Legislator>
                                <ns0:Contribution>LEAD_AUTHOR</ns0:Contribution>
                                <ns0:House>ASSEMBLY</ns0:House>
                                <ns0:Name>Bryan</ns0:Name>
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                        <ns0:Legislator>
                                <ns0:Contribution>LEAD_AUTHOR</ns0:Contribution>
                                <ns0:House>ASSEMBLY</ns0:House>
                                <ns0:Name>Bonta</ns0:Name>
                        </ns0:Legislator>
                        <ns0:Legislator>
                                <ns0:Contribution>LEAD_AUTHOR</ns0:Contribution>
                                <ns0:House>ASSEMBLY</ns0:House>
                                <ns0:Name>Elhawary</ns0:Name>
                        </ns0:Legislator>
                        <ns0:Legislator>
                                <ns0:Contribution>LEAD_AUTHOR</ns0:Contribution>
                                <ns0:House>ASSEMBLY</ns0:House>
                                <ns0:Name>Gipson</ns0:Name>
                        </ns0:Legislator>
                        <ns0:Legislator>
                                <ns0:Contribution>LEAD_AUTHOR</ns0:Contribution>
                                <ns0:House>ASSEMBLY</ns0:House>
                                <ns0:Name>Jackson</ns0:Name>
                        </ns0:Legislator>
                        <ns0:Legislator>
                                <ns0:Contribution>LEAD_AUTHOR</ns0:Contribution>
                                <ns0:House>ASSEMBLY</ns0:House>
                                <ns0:Name>McKinnor</ns0:Name>
                        </ns0:Legislator>
                        <ns0:Legislator>
                                <ns0:Contribution>LEAD_AUTHOR</ns0:Contribution>
                                <ns0:House>ASSEMBLY</ns0:House>
                                <ns0:Name>Ransom</ns0:Name>
                        </ns0:Legislator>
                        <ns0:Legislator>
                                <ns0:Contribution>LEAD_AUTHOR</ns0:Contribution>
                                <ns0:House>ASSEMBLY</ns0:House>
                                <ns0:Name>Sharp-Collins</ns0:Name>
                        </ns0:Legislator>
                        <ns0:Legislator>
                                <ns0:Contribution>LEAD_AUTHOR</ns0:Contribution>
                                <ns0:House>ASSEMBLY</ns0:House>
                                <ns0:Name>Wilson</ns0:Name>
                        </ns0:Legislator>
                        <ns0:Legislator>
                                <ns0:Contribution>PRINCIPAL_COAUTHOR</ns0:Contribution>
                                <ns0:House>SENATE</ns0:House>
                                <ns0:Name>Richardson</ns0:Name>
                        </ns0:Legislator>
                        <ns0:Legislator>
                                <ns0:Contribution>PRINCIPAL_COAUTHOR</ns0:Contribution>
                                <ns0:House>SENATE</ns0:House>
                                <ns0:Name>Smallwood-Cuevas</ns0:Name>
                        </ns0:Legislator>
                        <ns0:Legislator>
                                <ns0:Contribution>PRINCIPAL_COAUTHOR</ns0:Contribution>
                                <ns0:House>SENATE</ns0:House>
                                <ns0:Name>Weber Pierson</ns0:Name>
                        </ns0:Legislator>
                </ns0:Authors>
                <ns0:Title> Relative to Black History Month. </ns0:Title>
                <ns0:RelatingClause>Black History Month</ns0:RelatingClause>
                <ns0:GeneralSubject>
                        <ns0:Subject>Black History Month.</ns0:Subject>
                </ns0:GeneralSubject>
                <ns0:DigestText>
                        <html:p>This measure would recognize February 2026 as the centennial anniversary of Black History Month, urge all citizens to join in celebrating the accomplishments of African Americans during Black History Month, and encourage the people of California to recognize the many talents of African Americans and the achievements and contributions they make to their communities to create equity and equality for education, economics, and social justice. The measure would recognize the significance in protecting the fundamental human rights enshrined in the United States Constitution and its Amendments, the United States Bill of Rights, and the California Constitution, as specified. The measure would also affirm the commitment of the Legislature all people are equal and shall be treated with respect and dignity and shall enjoy the equal application of the law for which the Legislature has been
                entrusted.</html:p>
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                <ns0:DigestKey>
                        <ns0:FiscalCommittee>NO</ns0:FiscalCommittee>
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        </ns0:Description>
        <ns0:Resolution id="resolution">
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_57CF86E8-82AA-4AB1-873B-BBB648CBE258">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, The history of the United States is rich with inspirational stories of great individuals whose actions, words, and achievements have united Americans and contributed to the success and prosperity of the United States; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_0954D20C-A3D5-4229-8951-A9248C9F35E4">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, Among those Americans who have enriched our society are the members of the African American community, individuals whose accomplishments have contributed to every endeavor throughout the history of our nation and who have been steadfast in their commitment to promoting brotherhood, equality, and justice for all; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_96014A4D-860C-4EF4-9593-BC7671FC65E8">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, One hundred years ago, Dr. Carter Godwin Woodson, the distinguished African American author, editor, publisher, and historian who is known as the “Father of Black History,” founded Negro History Week in 1926, which became Black History Month in 1976, with the intent to encourage further research and publications regarding the untold stories of African American heritage; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_17F3624C-95A1-4425-BD73-2355FA4F0DB5">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, August 2019 marked 400 years since the first arrival of Africans to present-day America, and the United States Congress established the 400 Years of African-American History Commission to commemorate the historic heritage and contributions that Americans of African descent have made to help shape the cultural, academic, social, economic, and moral attributes of this nation; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_380E1F7A-2D4E-49B5-B826-A833B0629B0F">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, In August 1619, the first documented Africans arrived in the English colony of Virginia. The group, recorded upon arrival as “20 and odd Negroes,” was part of a larger group of West Africans enslaved by Portuguese slave traders. They were on their way to Veracruz aboard a Portuguese ship when they were captured off the coast of Mexico by an English warship and transported to Virginia, where they were put ashore at what is now Hampton, Virginia, and sold as involuntary laborers or indentured servants; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_F2D1FAC3-816E-4D18-9199-EC1D0E2645BA">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, Slavery had not yet been institutionalized, so the Africans were informed they would work under contract for a certain period of time before being granted freedom and the rights afforded other settlers. However, while European indentured servants were listed along with their year of expected freedom, no such information accompanied the names of the African indentured servants; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_8E06CFC0-335F-43CF-82B6-12AF44FB4962">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, The historic arrival of the group of “20 and odd Negroes” marked the beginning of the trend in colonial America where people of Africa were taken unwillingly from their homeland and transplanted to a foreign land, condemned to a lifetime of slavery and racial discrimination, and endured atrocities and conditions mostly undreamt of up until that time; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_E9DDFFF3-64CA-454E-90C8-E5A0E108199B">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, During the course of the slave trade, an estimated 50,000,000 African men, women, and children were lost to their native continent. Of those, the majority—about 35,000,000—lost their lives on African soil or along the Guinea coast, or finally in holds on the ships during the dreaded Middle Passage across the Atlantic Ocean; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_663BC1E1-07BF-4EF4-BCF1-630C2B67B6D4">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, In spite of the African slave trade, Africans and African Americans continued to move forward in society. During the Reconstruction period, 2 African Americans served in the United States Senate and 14 sat in the House of Representatives; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_39A1734C-1A7F-4590-AED4-F395D5F224FB">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, From the earliest days of the United States, the course of its history has been greatly influenced by African American heroes and pioneers in many diverse areas, including science, medicine, business, education, government, industry, and social leadership; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_28969D3E-1E1D-490A-BED0-D2AC913C88BD">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, Africans and African Americans have been great inventors, inventing and improving on innovations such as the air-conditioning unit, almanac, automatic gearshift, blood plasma bag, clothes dryer, doorknob, doorstop, electric lamp bulb, elevator, fire escape ladder, fountain pen, gas mask, golf tee, horseshoe, lantern, lawnmower, lawn sprinkler, lock, lubricating cup, refrigerating apparatus, spark plug, stethoscope, telephone transmitter, thermostat control, traffic signal, and typewriter; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_57358B1D-2871-4AE7-9747-6F6DD91C1073">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, Before the passage of the federal Voting Rights Act of 1965, voters faced disenfranchisement through poll taxes, literacy tests, and other tactics intended to keep African Americans from the polls on Election Day; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_880C0F8D-9677-41A0-880F-AFA21C3FFDEE">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, The Civil Rights Movement helped change public policy from segregation to integration, resulting in the repeal of the post-Reconstruction era state laws mandating racial segregation in the South, known as the “Jim Crow Laws,” thereby leading to the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Voting Rights Act of 1965, and other antidiscrimination laws aimed at ending economic, legal, and social segregation in America; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_E6EA39E2-F0ED-474E-9139-F4827829CCDD">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, The year 2020 marked the sesquicentennial anniversary of the ratification of the Fifteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and 55 years since the passage of the federal Voting Rights Act of 1965; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_AA2E5979-F109-4167-A78C-225A7D7C5B1B">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, Just 50 years ago in 1976, the United States government officially recognized Black History Month, calling upon the public to “seize the opportunity to honor the too often neglected accomplishments of Black Americans in every area of endeavor throughout our history”; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_004615A8-B787-4971-9F2C-FA1EE0DE16AF">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, In 1966, the Honorable Yvonne Brathwaite Burke of the City of Los Angeles was elected the first African American woman to the California State Legislature; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_850F58E3-8CAD-4E3F-8449-D1F3A1B6C36C">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, In 1970, Wilson C. Riles became the first African American elected to statewide office, when he began a 12-year tenure as Superintendent of Public Instruction; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_9D947D96-E767-4E43-A58F-2ACA098812F2">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, In January of 1980, the Honorable Willie L. Brown, Jr. became the first African American in the country to be elected Speaker of the Legislature upon being selected for the post in the California Assembly. Speaker Brown held the role until 1995 when he was elected Mayor of the City of San Francisco; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_8E5234BD-0AD7-40AB-AB0D-224ECD7EE10F">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, In January of 1992, E. Dotson Wilson was appointed Chief Clerk and Parliamentarian of the California Assembly; becoming the first African American in the role; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_CAE35914-6BCB-429F-AF0D-375775346BF0">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, In 2001, United States Army General Colin L. Powell was appointed United States Secretary of State, making him the first African American to serve as America’s top diplomat, followed by the 2004 appointment of Condoleezza Rice Secretary of State, becoming the first African American woman to serve in the role; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_BB75E47F-499A-471A-B0AD-C67A495E1ABB">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, In 2008, Barack H. Obama was elected to serve as the first African American President of the United States; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_FF1A6C3D-052D-488C-AD3F-4042200FC48D">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, In 2008, Karen Bass was elected to serve as the 67th Speaker of the California Assembly, becoming the first African American woman in United States history to serve as a Speaker of a state legislative body; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_9E597C59-DEE0-439C-B111-DA0A1D54194D">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, In 2009, Susan Rice became the first Black woman to become United States Ambassador to the United Nations; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_44557A16-063C-4F8F-AFC7-E0E38C6C02E9">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, In 2009, Eric H. Holder, Jr. became the first African American to serve as United States Attorney General, later heading President Obama’s initiative to review prison sentences of nonviolent drug offenders; and </html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_67D3F346-7689-4690-830C-16AC70C254D2">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, In 2012, President Barack H. Obama was reelected to a second consecutive term as President of the United States; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_54DF055F-223F-4457-AA34-28770D32E7CE">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, In 2012, California historically elected the most African Americans to serve in the Legislature, totaling 12 members; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_4950E74F-985F-47C8-A14A-C93B6D7F04C9">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, In 2013, the hashtag #BlackLivesMatter first appeared on Twitter on July 13, 2013, and spread widely as high-profile cases involving the deaths of Black civilians, such as the murder of Trayvon Martin, provoked renewed outrage. A series of deaths of Black Americans, some at the hands of police officers, continued to spark outrage and protests, including Eric Garner in New York City, New York, Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, Tamir Rice in Cleveland, Ohio, and Freddie Gray in Baltimore, Maryland; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_5D944DFC-78FF-458D-A3EB-06D1873E729D">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, In 1997, Jackie Robinson became the first professional athlete in any major American sport to have his jersey number, 42, universally retired across an entire league; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_9DE6EC85-296D-4954-B14D-66FB58F3950D">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, In 2013, Gymnast Simone Biles became the first African American world all-around champion; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_7F77D970-46AC-400D-9017-6D9D09D156AD">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, In November of 2014, former Assembly Member Autumn Burke was elected as the representative of the 62nd Assembly District. Her mother, former Los Angeles County Supervisor, Assembly Member Yvonne Brathwaite Burke, was the first African American woman elected to the California Assembly, the first African American woman elected to Congress from California, and a founding member of the California Legislative Black Caucus. The election in 2014 marked the first time a mother and daughter have both served in the Assembly; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_EFDEC72F-B3DA-4B82-987E-3765DF7AF6CE">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, In 2015, Loretta Lynch was sworn in as the first African American woman Attorney General; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_7B4EEBC0-0EF4-4542-94A0-B70769BC3F39">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, On September 24, 2016, the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture (NMAAHC) opened. NMAAHC is the only national museum devoted exclusively to the documentation of African American life, history, and culture. An act of Congress established the museum in 2003, following decades of efforts to promote and highlight the contributions of African Americans. To date, the museum has collected more than 40,000 artifacts and nearly 100,000 individuals have become members; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_26D92ECC-EDA3-4B8A-BFFC-661047CCB9AB">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, The Black Lives Matter movement gained renewed attention on September 25, 2016, when San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick and players Eric Reid and Eli Harold kneeled during the national anthem before the game against the Seattle Seahawks to draw attention to recent acts of police brutality and excessive force; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_441D23A4-6691-4966-86E6-4F52CE5BE7B9">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, In 2016, Kamala D. Harris was elected as a United States Senator for California, the second African American woman and first South Asian American senator in history; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_188167D1-2DA3-4C4C-8F03-921BD10EEC45">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, In 2019, Governor Gavin Newsom appointed Dr. Nadine Burke Harris, a leading expert on the health effects of childhood trauma and development, to serve as California’s first Surgeon General; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_B5DF06ED-F044-45CB-AA76-965D6655F8B2">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, The year 2020 marked the centennial of the Nineteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution and the culmination of the women’s suffrage movement; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_0483AEBF-3804-4E05-9E0B-D418706F4F6F">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, In 2020, Kamala D. Harris was elected Vice President of the United States on the Democratic ticket with President-elect Joseph R. Biden. Harris is the first female Vice President in United States history, the first Asian American, first African American Vice President in United States history, and first African American President of the United States Senate; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_9685BC29-DA81-4F98-8FDE-9C9BA01AF7EB">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, In 2020, Shirley Nash Weber, Ph.D. was nominated to serve as Secretary of State by Governor Gavin Newsom on December 22, 2020, and sworn into office on January 29, 2021. She is California’s first Black Secretary of State and only the fifth African American to serve as a state constitutional officer in California’s 170-year history; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_50CAB5C4-7A88-4A58-8D73-898183CE7CFD">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, In 2021, Senator Steven Bradford and Assembly Member Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer, Sr. made history as the first two African American leaders to be appointed to serve as chairs of their respective Public Safety Committees in the California State Legislature; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_2EBD417B-E22C-48D8-BDB0-7ECA2340DF56">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, On January 6, 2021, Democrat Raphael Warnock won the Georgia Special Election and became the first African American senator from Georgia. At the time he assumed office, Warnock was only the 11th African American to serve in the history of the United States Senate, a group that includes former United States President Barack H. Obama, who served as a United States Senator from Illinois, and Vice President Kamala D. Harris, who served as a United States Senator from California; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_4064FBFF-CA67-4A5B-B1C1-E9CD27A93D4D">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, On January 20, 2021, Democratic President-elect Joseph R. Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala D. Harris were sworn into office; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_FED10355-E6A9-40D1-B0D4-9ED8D59DCD96">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, In 2020, Governor Gavin Newsom signed Assembly Bill 3121 (Chapter 319 of the Statutes of 2020), authored by then-Assembly Member Dr. Shirley N. Weber, Ph.D., and sponsored by the California Legislative Black Caucus, thereby establishing the Task Force to Study and Develop Reparation Proposals for African Americans, with Special Consideration for African Americans who are Descendants of Persons Enslaved in the United States, making California the first state in the nation to establish a state-level advisory body to investigate, compile, and synthesize the corpus of evidentiary documentation of the institution of slavery that existed within the United States; and </html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_EC73A7CB-07BA-405B-871A-3AD186A0C8E7">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, On June 29, 2023, with the assistance of Attorney General Rob Bonta and staff at the Department of Justice, the Task Force to Study and Develop Reparation Proposals for African Americans issued its final report to the Legislature, the ongoing and compounding harms experienced by African Americans as a result of slavery and its lingering effects on American society today, and proposes a comprehensive reparations plan in satisfaction of the direction set forth by the Legislature; and </html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_F1AF6629-BBF0-41AE-8AD9-1CEDE4B29180">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, On September 26, 2024, Governor Gavin Newsom signed Assembly Bill 3089 (Chapter 624 of the Statutes of 2024), the Apology Act for the Perpetration of Gross Human Rights Violations and Crimes Against Humanity, with special consideration for African Slaves and their Descendants, authored by former Assembly Member Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer, Sr. and sponsored by the California Legislative Black Caucus, thereby offering recognition and acceptance of responsibility for harms and atrocities committed by the state and entities under its jurisdiction who promoted, facilitated, enforced, and permitted the institution of chattel slavery and the enduring legacy of ongoing badges and incidents from which the systemic structures of discrimination have come to exist, providing an official apology on behalf of the State of California for perpetration thereof; and ordering the construction of a
                  plaque memorializing the state’s apology for these atrocities to be displayed in perpetuity in the State Capitol Building; and </html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_18093CCB-0158-417A-855E-E8A11D05B7A1">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, On October 10, 2025, Governor Gavin Newsom signed Senate Bill 518 (Chapter 586 of the Statutes of 2025), authored by Senator Dr. Akilah Weber Pierson, M.D., and sponsored by the California Legislative Black Caucus, establishing the Bureau for Descendants of American Slavery, the nation’s first state-level agency charged with assisting in the facilitating the recognition and well-being of Californians who are confirmed descendants of persons enslaved in the United States; and </html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_D9EFCDB8-FF62-4E7C-90F9-69D59F81E16F">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, The year 2021 marked the 100th Anniversary of the Tulsa Race Massacre, one of the worst outbreaks of state-sponsored racial terrorism in the United States’ history; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_297C42AD-12F2-4F7E-B069-3A12F8220DE6">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, On June 1, 2021, President Joseph R. Biden became the first United States President to formally memorialize the Tulsa Race Massacre, a century after the vibrant African American community of Greenwood in Tulsa, Oklahoma, was destroyed; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_3B9179DA-086A-4D6B-AD15-0CEE62A7CF85">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, On June 18, 2021, President Joseph R. Biden made a formal proclamation recognizing Juneteenth, also known as Emancipation Day, as a United States federal holiday; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_27C1D7A2-1FA7-491C-BDDA-72A9F6D6279F">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, In 2022, Assembly Member Chris Holden was appointed as Chair of the California State Assembly Committee on Appropriations and was the first African American to lead the committee in 27 years, since former Speaker Willie L. Brown, Jr. chaired the Ways and Means Committee from 1971 to 1974, and in 1995, this committee was split into two committees: Appropriations and Budget; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_11C31941-8F78-46E9-AC2F-D5D5E6F364E4">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, In 2022, the United States Treasury minted coins featuring poet and activist Maya Angelou on the United States 25-cent coin, making Ms. Angelou the first African American woman ever featured on a United States legal tender, commemorating her many accomplishments, including being the first African American woman to recite a poem at a presidential inauguration; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_DDC4BF2E-9503-47C3-9646-FBD3A2D0782C">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, On June 30, 2022, Ketanji Brown Jackson was sworn in as the 116th Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, making her the first Black woman and first former public defender to serve on the court; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_EEC62694-9BF1-4ECF-9F27-F558ABFD005A">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, On January 7, 2023, Congressman Hakeem Jeffries made history as the first Black lawmaker to lead a party in Congress; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_F17CB021-C592-4997-84A0-FA3B6540B859">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, On October 3, 2023, the Honorable Laphonza Butler became the first Black openly LGBTQ individual to be sworn in to the United States Senate; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_01A845B3-1C2B-4B37-A4F3-72520C3F6940">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, Despite decades of progress, African Americans continue to face racial and social injustices, voter suppression, economic stagnation, and voting barriers in jurisdictions with a history of discrimination; and</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Whereas id="id_428C97D9-E607-4880-A0C7-E0B69D8359D5">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>WHEREAS, To build a stronger and more cohesive state and nation, we must continue to help advance the cause of voter equality and equal access to the political process for all people in order to protect the rights of every American; now, therefore, be it</html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Whereas>
                <ns0:Resolved id="id_75A80C05-808F-4819-8035-3892CF5B1221">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>
                                        <html:i>Resolved by the Assembly of the State of California, the Senate thereof concurring,</html:i>
                                         That the Legislature takes great pleasure in recognizing February 2026 as the centennial anniversary of Black History Month, urges all citizens to join in celebrating the accomplishments of African Americans during Black History Month, and encourages the people of California to recognize the many talents of African Americans and the achievements and contributions they make to their communities to create equity and equality for education, economics, and social justice; and be it further
                                </html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Resolved>
                <ns0:Resolved id="id_DA144B7F-C22D-44BD-A7A5-2D9A797CC255">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>
                                        <html:i>Resolved,</html:i>
                                         That the Legislature recognizes the significance in protecting the fundamental human rights enshrined in the Constitution of the United States and its Amendments, the United States Bill of Rights, and the California Constitution, specifically and especially the freedoms of religion, speech, assembly, and the expression thereof; freedom to be secure in one’s person and prohibition on unreasonable search or seizure, the rights of all citizens to participate in the civil society free of discrimination; and be it further
                                </html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Resolved>
                <ns0:Resolved id="id_623B6400-8A25-4459-AABD-F08B104279FF">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>
                                        <html:i>Resolved,</html:i>
                                         That the Legislature affirms its commitment that all people are equal and shall be treated with respect and dignity, and shall enjoy the equal application of the law for which the Legislature has been entrusted; and be it further
                                </html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Resolved>
                <ns0:Resolved id="id_66126599-4646-4083-9F65-E2B5EBBB9BA4">
                        <ns0:Content>
                                <html:p>
                                        <html:i>Resolved,</html:i>
                                         That the Chief Clerk of the Assembly transmit copies of this resolution to the author for appropriate distribution.
                                </html:p>
                        </ns0:Content>
                </ns0:Resolved>
                <ns0:Correction>
         CORRECTIONS:</ns0:Correction>
                <ns0:Correction>
         Heading—Lines 3 and 4. </ns0:Correction>
                <ns0:Correction>
         REVISIONS:</ns0:Correction>
                <ns0:Correction>
         Heading—Line 3.</ns0:Correction>
        </ns0:Resolution>
</ns0:MeasureDoc>