- Summary
- Actions
- Committee Votes
- Floor Votes
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A07691 Summary:
BILL NO | A07691 |
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SAME AS | SAME AS S01163-A |
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SPONSOR | Solages |
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COSPNSR | Darling, Peoples-Stokes, Jean-Pierre, Fall, Dickens, Taylor, Gibbs, Aubry, Cunningham, Zinerman, Anderson, Tapia, Reyes, Burgos, Rosenthal L, Bronson, Clark, Epstein, Glick, Gonzalez-Rojas, Hyndman, Jackson, Bichotte Hermelyn, Burdick, Kelles, Levenberg, Lee, Simon, Otis, Forrest, Meeks, Raga |
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MLTSPNSR | |
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Relates to acknowledging the fundamental injustice, cruelty, brutality and inhumanity of slavery in the city of New York and the state of New York; establishes the New York state community commission on reparations 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; provides for the repeal of such provisions. |
A07691 Actions:
BILL NO | A07691 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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06/05/2023 | referred to ways and means | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
06/08/2023 | reported referred to rules | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
06/08/2023 | reported | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
06/08/2023 | rules report cal.744 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
06/08/2023 | ordered to third reading rules cal.744 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
06/08/2023 | passed assembly | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
06/08/2023 | delivered to senate | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
06/08/2023 | REFERRED TO RULES | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
06/08/2023 | SUBSTITUTED FOR S1163A | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
06/08/2023 | 3RD READING CAL.1731 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
06/08/2023 | PASSED SENATE | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
06/08/2023 | RETURNED TO ASSEMBLY | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
12/19/2023 | delivered to governor | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
12/19/2023 | signed chap.729 |
A07691 Committee Votes:
Weinstein | Aye | Ra | Nay | ||||||
Glick | Aye | Fitzpatrick | Nay | ||||||
Pretlow | Aye | Hawley | Nay | ||||||
Colton | Aye | Blankenbush | Nay | ||||||
Cook | Aye | Norris | Nay | ||||||
Aubry | Aye | Brabenec | Excused | ||||||
Benedetto | Aye | Palmesano | Nay | ||||||
Weprin | Aye | Walsh | Nay | ||||||
Ramos | Aye | DeStefano | Nay | ||||||
Braunstein | Aye | Manktelow | Nay | ||||||
McDonald | Aye | Smullen | Nay | ||||||
Rozic | Aye | ||||||||
Dinowitz | Aye | ||||||||
Joyner | Aye | ||||||||
Magnarelli | Aye | ||||||||
Zebrowski | Aye | ||||||||
Bronson | Aye | ||||||||
Dilan | Aye | ||||||||
Seawright | Aye | ||||||||
Hyndman | Aye | ||||||||
Walker | Aye | ||||||||
Bichotte Hermel | Aye | ||||||||
Simon | Aye | ||||||||
Cruz | Aye | ||||||||
Heastie | Excused | Barclay | Nay | ||||||
Weinstein | Aye | Hawley | Nay | ||||||
Pretlow | Aye | Giglio | Nay | ||||||
Cook | Aye | Blankenbush | Nay | ||||||
Glick | Aye | Norris | Nay | ||||||
Aubry | Aye | Ra | Nay | ||||||
Dinowitz | Aye | Brabenec | Excused | ||||||
Colton | Aye | Palmesano | Nay | ||||||
Magnarelli | Aye | Reilly | Nay | ||||||
Paulin | Aye | ||||||||
Peoples-Stokes | Aye | ||||||||
Benedetto | Aye | ||||||||
Lavine | Aye | ||||||||
Lupardo | Aye | ||||||||
Zebrowski | Aye | ||||||||
Thiele | Aye | ||||||||
Braunstein | Aye | ||||||||
Dickens | Aye | ||||||||
Davila | Excused | ||||||||
Hyndman | Aye | ||||||||
Rozic | Aye | ||||||||
Bronson | Aye | ||||||||
Go to top
A07691 Floor Votes:
Yes
Alvarez
Yes
Carroll
Yes
Flood
Yes
Kim
No
Palmesano
No
Simpson
Yes
Anderson
Yes
Chandler-Waterm
Yes
Forrest
Yes
Lavine
Yes
Paulin
No
Slater
No
Angelino
No
Chang
No
Friend
Yes
Lee
Yes
Peoples-Stokes
No
Smith
Yes
Ardila
Yes
Clark
Yes
Gallagher
No
Lemondes
Yes
Pheffer Amato
No
Smullen
Yes
Aubry
Yes
Colton
No
Gallahan
Yes
Levenberg
No
Pirozzolo
Yes
Solages
No
Barclay
Yes
Conrad
No ‡
Gandolfo
Yes
Lucas
Yes
Pretlow
Yes
Steck
Yes
Barrett
Yes
Cook
Yes
Gibbs
Yes
Lunsford
No
Ra
Yes
Stern
No
Beephan
Yes
Cruz
Yes
Giglio JA
Yes
Lupardo
Yes
Raga
Yes
Stirpe
No
Bendett
Yes
Cunningham
No
Giglio JM
Yes
Magnarelli
Yes
Rajkumar
No
Tague
Yes
Benedetto
No
Curran
Yes
Glick
Yes
Maher
Yes
Ramos
No
Tannousis
Yes
Bichotte Hermel
Yes
Darling
Yes
Gonzalez-Rojas
Yes
Mamdani
No
Reilly
Yes
Tapia
No
Blankenbush
Yes
Davila
No
Goodell
No
Manktelow
Yes
Reyes
Yes
Taylor
No
Blumencranz
Yes
De Los Santos
No
Gray
Yes
McDonald
Yes
Rivera
Yes
Thiele
Yes
Bores
No
DeStefano
Yes
Gunther
No ‡
McDonough
Yes
Rosenthal D
Yes
Vanel
No
Brabenec
Yes
Dickens
No
Hawley
No
McGowan
Yes
Rosenthal L
Yes
Walker
Yes
Braunstein
Yes
Dilan
ER
Hevesi
Yes
McMahon
Yes
Rozic
Yes
Wallace
Yes
Bronson
Yes
Dinowitz
Yes
Hunter
Yes
Meeks
Yes
Santabarbara
No
Walsh
No
Brook-Krasny
No
DiPietro
Yes
Hyndman
No
Mikulin
No
Sayegh
Yes
Weinstein
No
Brown E
No
Durso
Yes
Jackson
No
Miller
Yes
Seawright
Yes
Weprin
ER
Brown K
Yes
Eachus
Yes
Jacobson
Yes
Mitaynes
Yes
Septimo
Yes
Williams
Yes
Burdick
Yes
Eichenstein
Yes
Jean-Pierre
Yes
Morinello
Yes
Shimsky
Yes
Woerner
Yes
Burgos
Yes
Epstein
No
Jensen
No
Norris
Yes
Shrestha
Yes
Zaccaro
Yes
Burke
Yes
Fahy
Yes
Jones
Yes
Novakhov
Yes
Sillitti
Yes
Zebrowski
Yes
Buttenschon
Yes
Fall
Yes
Joyner
ER
O'Donnell
Yes
Simon
Yes
Zinerman
No
Byrnes
Yes
Fitzpatrick
Yes
Kelles
Yes
Otis
Yes
Simone
Yes
Mr. Speaker
‡ Indicates voting via videoconference
A07691 Text:
Go to top STATE OF NEW YORK ________________________________________________________________________ 7691 2023-2024 Regular Sessions IN ASSEMBLY June 5, 2023 ___________ Introduced by M. of A. SOLAGES, LUCAS -- read once and referred to the Committee on Ways and Means 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 New York State community commission on repara- tions remedies, to examine the institution of slavery, subsequently de jure and de facto racial and economic discrimination against people of African descent, and the impact of these forces on living people of African descent and to make determinations regarding compensation; 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 "New York 2 State community commission on reparations remedies". 3 § 2. Legislative intent. Contrary to what many believe, slavery was 4 not just a Southern institution. Prior to the American Revolution, there 5 were more enslaved Africans in New York City than in any other city 6 except Charleston, South Carolina. During this period, enslaved Africans 7 accounted for 20% of the population of New York and approximately 40% of 8 colonial New York's households owned enslaved Africans. These enslaved 9 Africans were an integral part of the population which settled and 10 developed what we now know as the State of New York. 11 The first enslaved Africans arrived in New Amsterdam, a Dutch settle- 12 ment established at the southern tip of Manhattan Island, around 1627. 13 These enslaved Africans did not belong to individuals, but worked for 14 the Dutch West India Company. The Dutch West India Company had estab- 15 lished Fort Amsterdam, a fortification located on the southern tip of 16 the Island of Manhattan, for the purpose of defending the company's fur 17 trade operations on the North River, now known as the Hudson River. In 18 1624, New Amsterdam became a provincial extension of the Dutch Republic 19 and it was designated the capital of the province in 1625. EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets [] is old law to be omitted. LBD00148-10-3A. 7691 2 1 These first enslaved Africans cleared forests, prepared land for agri- 2 culture and built an infrastructure of roads, buildings and walls of 3 timber and earthwork, including the wall that gives Wall Street its 4 name. During the following years, more enslaved Africans were brought to 5 the New World for the purpose of expanding the settlement. 6 New Amsterdam came under English control in 1664 and was renamed New 7 York in honor of the then Duke of York, in whose name the English had 8 captured it. Three years later, the Dutch gave up their claim of the 9 city and the rest of the colony, in exchange for control of certain 10 trade routes and areas. 11 The change of control of the city did not hinder the system of slav- 12 ery; it was an enormously profitable enterprise and it continued under 13 English control. In fact, the English enacted new slave codes aimed at 14 keeping this population repressed. Further, a new class of pro-slavery 15 business owners also emerged seeking to, directly and indirectly, bene- 16 fit from the slave trade. They supplied food, tools and grain to slave 17 plantations in North America and in the West Indies. Slave labor built 18 and maintained ships used for trade between North America, Europe, the 19 Caribbean and Africa. Enslaved Africans produced goods for sale and 20 worked in private homes. Even newspapers benefited from slavery: adver- 21 tisements of enslaved Africans for purchase were a major source of 22 revenue for the papers during the eighteenth century. With these econom- 23 ic relationships in place, the pro-slavery forces in New York jealously 24 guarded what they viewed as their financial interests. 25 Life was repressive for enslaved Africans in New York. The New York 26 City Common Council passed a number of restrictive laws designed at 27 curtailing the rights and freedoms of enslaved Africans. Enslaved Afri- 28 cans were barred from owning significant property and from bequeathing 29 what they did own to their children. The number of people of African 30 descent who could gather in one place was limited. Restrictions on move- 31 ment included requiring enslaved Africans to carry lanterns after dark 32 and to remain in certain geographic areas. 33 Penalties for breaking these and other laws were severe. Beatings, 34 mutilations and executions were common. 35 Enslaved Africans refused to submit to the slave existence. The condi- 36 tions of their lives gave rise to rebellions and the development of a 37 network known as the Underground Railroad. 38 Moreover, a powerful abolitionist movement developed. Nonetheless, the 39 end of slavery in New York did not come easily or quickly. Those who 40 profited from the slave economy fought to maintain the system. 41 In 1799, the New York State Legislature, at a time when sixteen 42 sitting New York State Senators personally owned dozens of enslaved 43 Africans, passed "An Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery." This 44 legislation was a first step in the direction of emancipation, but it 45 provided little relief in the short-term. Rather, it provided for only a 46 gradual manumission. All children born to enslaved women after July 4, 47 1799 would be freed, but only after their most productive years: age 28 48 for men and age 25 for women. Enslaved Africans already in servitude 49 before July 4, 1799 were reclassified as "indentured servants," but in 50 reality, remained enslaved Africans for the duration of their lives. 51 In 1817, the New York State Legislature enacted a statute that gave 52 freedom to New York enslaved Africans who had been born before July 4, 53 1799. However, this statute did not become effective until July 4, 1827. 54 Despite these laws, there were exceptions under which certain persons 55 could still own enslaved Africans. Non-residents could enter New York 56 with enslaved Africans for up to nine months, and the law allowed part-A. 7691 3 1 time residents to bring their enslaved Africans into the state temporar- 2 ily. The nine-month exception remained law until its repeal in 1841, 3 when the North was redefining itself as the "free" region in advance of 4 the Civil War. 5 Nevertheless, many formerly enslaved Africans fleeing slavery and 6 arriving in New York were forced back into slavery following the Fugi- 7 tive Slave Law of 1850. Moreover, even as the laws regarding slavery 8 were loosened, both public and private discrimination continued to main- 9 tain similar social relationships and racial hierarchies. 10 During the Civil War, sentiments in New York regarding the war were 11 divided and tense. New York's finance and local institutions were still 12 deeply entangled in the slave trade in the South and the Caribbean, and 13 New York profited tremendously from the trade in Southern cotton. By 14 some estimates, New York received 40% of U.S. cotton revenue through its 15 financial firms, shipping businesses, and insurance companies. 16 Near the start of the war, in January 1861, New York City Mayor 17 Fernando Wood actually suggested to the New York City Council that New 18 York secede and declare itself a "free city" in order to continue its 19 profitable cotton trade with the Confederacy. These same pro-slavery 20 forces erupted into violence when the national Conscription Act was 21 enacted on July 11, 1863. Pro-slavery forces engaged in "draft riots" in 22 New York City, violently targeting Black Americans. Before the riots 23 were finally stopped by federal troops four days later, over 119 New 24 Yorkers, mostly Black Americans, had been killed. After the end of the 25 Civil War, Congress passed the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments to offi- 26 cially end slavery, make Black people citizens, and enable Black men to 27 enjoy all rights of citizenship including the right to vote. Although 28 New York had given Black men the right to vote in 1827, it retained 29 property requirements, and included new restrictions on the right to 30 vote for those accused of committing crimes, to continuously maintain a 31 system of disenfranchisement. On April 14, 1869, New York ratified the 32 15th Amendment in a party-line vote. In 1870, however, control of the 33 Senate changed to those who were sympathetic to the recently defeated 34 South, with State Senator William "Boss" Tweed leading a charge for New 35 York to rescind its ratification of the 15th amendment (i.e., the right 36 to vote). New York legislators at the time claimed that allowing Black 37 New Yorkers to vote "would introduce ignorance to the ballot box and the 38 suffrage would be cheapened and degraded". Along another party-line 39 vote, New York rescinded its ratification. Fortunately, however, this 40 rescission did not prevent the 15th Amendment from being ratified. 41 Following the Civil War, conditions for Black Americans in New York 42 remained poor. Newly emancipated enslaved people and their families 43 needed to contend with both public and private discrimination in the 44 State of New York. Although civil rights legislation was passed in the 45 years following the Civil War, in an attempt to guard against acts of 46 discrimination, Associate Justice Joseph P. Bradley, of New York State, 47 wrote a majority (8-1) decision for the United States Supreme Court, 48 striking down these civil rights laws. The case related to an 1879 inci- 49 dent, where a Black New Yorker had been turned away from the Grand Opera 50 House located on West 23rd Street and 8th Avenue; even though this man 51 had paid for a ticket, he was turned away, and a local policeman forci- 52 bly removed him from the premises. Although the following lawsuit was 53 brought under the civil rights act, Justice Bradley rejected the claims, 54 stating: "Can the act of a mere individual, the owner of the inn, the 55 public conveyance or place of amusement, refusing the accommodation, be 56 justly regarded as imposing any badge of slavery or servitude upon theA. 7691 4 1 applicant...? After giving to these questions all the consideration 2 which their importance demands, we are forced to the conclusion that 3 such an act of refusal has nothing to do with slavery or involuntary 4 servitude." With this ruling, private citizens were once again permitted 5 to lawfully discriminate against their fellow New Yorkers, with no legal 6 recourse. A subsequent New York Times editorial, however, stated that it 7 did not foresee any substantial changes in daily life because the civil 8 rights legislation to protect Black New Yorkers "has never been 9 enforced" in any meaningful way. 10 With this legal precedent, expanding even more broadly when the 1896 11 case of Plessy v. Ferguson explicitly permitted segregated railroads and 12 street cars, Jim Crow laws, along with various forms of private discrim- 13 ination, spread across the country and New York State. Segregation 14 became particularly common in both education and housing. In 1883, when 15 a Black resident of Kings County sought to enroll her daughter in a 16 school for white children, her child was denied admission. In the subse- 17 quent lawsuit of People, ex. Rel King v. Gallagher, the Court ruled in a 18 4-2 decision that "[t]he system of authorizing the education of the two 19 races separately has been for many years the settled policy of all 20 departments of the State government, and it is believed obtains very 21 generally in the States of the Union." The New York Court of Appeals 22 upheld the segregation of schools in Kings County. Although the laws 23 have changed in the years since this decision, research has shown that 24 up to the present day of this writing, New York still is the most segre- 25 gated state for Black students. 26 Discrimination in housing has also been a persistent and constant 27 issue in New York since the Civil War. In addition to the housing 28 inequality that came with wealth inequality, landlords have engaged in 29 discriminatory housing practices. Black Americans of all backgrounds 30 typically paid disproportionately higher rents, and were forced into 31 dilapidated tenement conditions, with the support of public officials. 32 This pattern of geographic isolation would continue to impact Black 33 Americans in New York continuously throughout the years, including 34 through the state-sanctioned discriminatory "redlining" practices in the 35 1930s, and in the segregationist urban planning implemented by individ- 36 uals like Robert Moses in later decades. Importantly, the Federal Hous- 37 ing Administration (FHA), an institution that refused to insure mort- 38 gages in or near African American neighborhoods, subsidized builders who 39 were creating subdivisions and developments in the suburbs, with the 40 proviso that none of the homes be sold to African Americans. For exam- 41 ple, in Levittown, New York, the FHA guaranteed bank loans for 42 construction and development to Levittown on the condition that no homes 43 be sold to African-Americans, and that every home have a clause in its 44 deed prohibiting resale to African-Americans. 45 The consequences of these past practices are still with us today. In 46 1991, a massive African burial ground was discovered in the heart of New 47 York's financial district during the construction of a skyscraper. The 48 excavations that followed the termination of the construction project 49 yielded the skeletal remains of 419 Africans, many of whom were women 50 and children. 51 The consequences of slavery in New York State is not an echo of the 52 past, but can still be observed in daily life. Systemic racism has 53 cemented a legacy of generational poverty, and we still see today 54 instances of voter suppression, housing discrimination, biased policing, 55 food apartheid, and disproportionate rates of incarceration. Currently, 56 in the United States, the imprisonment rate of Black Americans for drugA. 7691 5 1 charges is almost six times that of white Americans, despite the rate of 2 drug usage being similar among both groups. Likewise, the use of the 3 "Stop and Frisk" tactic by the New York City Police Department has had 4 disparate impacts: at the policy's peak in 2011, an estimated 685,724 5 people were stopped, with fifty-three percent of those being Black, even 6 though only twenty-six percent of New York City's population was Black. 7 These policies have also led to the tragic deaths of Black Americans 8 here in New York, such as Daniel Prude, who was unarmed and facing a 9 mental health crisis when he was forcibly restrained by Rochester 10 police, and ultimately died due to complications of asphyxia resulting 11 from his restraint. 12 New York State's status as an economic and cultural hub of the world 13 has been built and shaped by slavery. The contributions of enslaved 14 Africans has provided the resources upon which trade and commerce in New 15 York was built. Some of our most prestigious institutions and infras- 16 tructure were built with these contributions. However, New York State 17 also has the largest income disparity in the country, and that large 18 disparity is in large part the legacy of our slave system. 19 This legislation is necessary because the slavery that flourished in 20 New York State constituted an immoral and inhumane deprivation of Afri- 21 cans' life, liberty, citizenship rights, cultural heritage, and denied 22 them the fruits of their own labor. A sufficient inquiry has not been 23 made into the effects of the institution of slavery on present day soci- 24 ety in New York. 25 § 3. Establishment, purpose and duties of the commission. a. Estab- 26 lishment. There is hereby established the New York State community 27 commission on reparations remedies (hereinafter referred to as the 28 "commission"). 29 b. Duties. The commission shall perform the following duties: 30 (1) Examine the institution of slavery which existed within the State 31 of New York and in the City of New York. The commission's examination 32 shall include, but not be limited to, an examination of: 33 (A) the capture and procurement of Africans; 34 (B) the transport of Africans to what is now known as New York City 35 and New York State for the purpose of enslavement, including their 36 treatment during transport; 37 (C) the sale and acquisition of Africans as chattel property in inter- 38 state and intrastate commerce, including the direct and indirect bene- 39 fits that New York received from these economic relationships; 40 (D) the treatment of enslaved Africans in the City of New York and the 41 State of New York, including the deprivation of their freedom, exploita- 42 tion of their labor, and destruction of their culture, language, reli- 43 gion, and families; and 44 (E) the treatment of formerly enslaved Africans and their descendants 45 in the City of New York and the State of New York during the period 46 between the end of the Civil War and the present. 47 (2) Examine the extent to which the federal government, as well as the 48 state and local governments of New York, supported the institution of 49 slavery, including the extent to which such governments prevented, 50 opposed, or restricted efforts of freed enslaved Africans to repatriate 51 to their homeland. 52 (3) Examine how New York State engaged in the interstate transfer of 53 enslaved Africans, and carried out federal policies in the furtherance 54 of slavery. 55 (4) Examine the de jure and de facto discrimination against freed 56 enslaved Africans, their descendants, and people of African descent,A. 7691 6 1 generally, at both the state and federal levels of government, during 2 the period between the end of the Civil War and the present, including, 3 but not limited to, economic, political, educational, and social 4 discrimination. 5 (5) Examine the lingering negative effects of the institution of slav- 6 ery and discrimination on living people of African descent and on socie- 7 ty in the State of New York. 8 (6) Examine the current condition of living people of African descent 9 in the State of New York, to the extent practicable, including, but not 10 limited to, economic, political, educational, and social conditions. 11 (7) Recommend appropriate ways to educate the public of the commis- 12 sion's findings. 13 (8) Recommend appropriate remedies and reparations in consideration of 14 the commission's findings on the matters described in paragraphs 1, 2, 15 3, 4, 5, and 6 of this subdivision to determine how the state of New 16 York may provide for appropriate laws, policies, programs, projects, and 17 other recommendations in order to reverse such injuries. Such remedies 18 may include compensation, including but not limited to the amount of 19 compensation and who should be eligible for such compensation. 20 (9) Examine the feasibility for the creation of a bureau to assist in 21 the distribution and administration of remedies and reparations as 22 recommended by the commission pursuant to paragraph 8 of this subdivi- 23 sion. 24 c. Report to the legislature. The commission shall submit a written 25 report of its findings and recommendations to the temporary president of 26 the senate, the speaker of the assembly, the minority leaders of the 27 senate and the assembly and the governor not later than one year after 28 the date of the first meeting of the commission held pursuant to subdi- 29 vision c of section four of this act. 30 § 4. Membership. a. Appointment of members. The commission shall be 31 composed of nine members who shall be appointed within 90 days after the 32 effective date of this act, as follows: 33 (1) three members shall be appointed by the governor; 34 (2) three members shall be appointed by the speaker of the assembly; 35 (3) three members shall be appointed by the temporary president of the 36 senate. 37 b. Qualification of members. All members appointed to the commission 38 shall be persons who are especially qualified to serve on the commission 39 by virtue of their expertise, education, training, or lived experience, 40 in the fields of African or American studies, the criminal legal system, 41 human rights, civil rights, law, economics, psychology, civil society 42 and reparations organizations that have historically championed the 43 cause of reparatory justice, clergy, and/or the history of slavery in 44 New York, and, to the extent possible, represent geographically diverse 45 areas of the state. 46 c. First meeting. The first meeting of the commission shall take place 47 within 180 days after the effective date of this act. 48 d. Quorum. Five members of the commission shall constitute a quorum, 49 but a lesser number may hold hearings. 50 e. Chair and Vice Chair. The commission shall elect a Chair and Vice 51 Chair from among its members no later than the first meeting. 52 f. Compensation. The members of the commission shall receive no 53 compensation for their services as members, but shall be reimbursed for 54 their actual and necessary expenses incurred in the performance of their 55 duties.A. 7691 7 1 § 5. Powers of the commission. a. Hearings and sessions. The commis- 2 sion shall, for the purpose of carrying out the provisions of this act, 3 solicit public input from stakeholders and interested parties, and shall 4 hold such public hearings as the commission considers appropriate. 5 b. Powers of subcommittees and members. Any subcommittee or member of 6 the commission may, if authorized by the commission, take any action 7 which the commission is authorized to take by this section. 8 c. Obtaining official data. The commission may acquire directly from 9 the head of any department, agency, or instrumentality of the state, 10 available information which the commission considers useful in the 11 discharge of its duties. All departments, agencies, and instrumentali- 12 ties of the state shall cooperate with the commission with respect to 13 such information and shall furnish all information requested by the 14 commission to the extent permitted by law. The commission may also 15 coordinate with historically black colleges and universities and 16 research centers to conduct research and acquire additional information 17 which the commission considers useful in the discharge of its duties 18 pursuant to this act. 19 § 6. Termination. The commission shall terminate 90 days after the 20 date on which the commission submits its report to the temporary presi- 21 dent of the senate, the speaker of the assembly, the minority leaders of 22 the senate and the assembly and the governor as provided in subdivision 23 c of section three of this act. 24 § 7. This act shall take effect immediately and shall expire and be 25 deemed repealed 90 days after the New York State community commission to 26 study reparations remedies submits its report to the temporary president 27 of the senate, the speaker of the assembly, the minority leaders of the 28 senate and the assembly and the governor as provided in subdivision c of 29 section three of this act; provided that, the chair of the New York 30 State community commission to study reparations remedies shall notify 31 the legislative bill drafting commission upon the submission of its 32 report as provided in subdivision c of section three of this act in 33 order that the commission may maintain an accurate and timely effective 34 data base of the official text of the laws of the State of New York in 35 furtherance of effecting the provisions of section 44 of the legislative 36 law and section 70-b of the public officers law.