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Oakland school district vowed reparations for Black students, yet outcomes appear stagnant after 5 years

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Five years after the Oakland Unified School District (OUSD) pledged sweeping reparations for Black students, critics say the landmark initiative has failed to achieve its goals, leaving students to face the same dismal academic outcomes that prompted the effort in the first place.

The school board passed its “Reparations for Black Students” resolution in March 2021, creating a 24-member Black Thriving Task Force. The group was charged with developing a five-year plan to eliminate the Black student opportunity gap by 2026.

However, former task force members reveal that the original group stopped meeting after roughly a year due to intense internal conflict and abrupt changes in district leadership.

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“It was as if we all got together and wasted our collective breath for a whole year,” former task force member Kevin Hill told The Mercury News. “One of the harsh realities I learned in this process is that the district can just wait people out.”

According to reporting from the outlet, interviews with former members show the initial effort fractured over bitter disagreements regarding school closures and the exact role district officials should play in the reparations work.

The initial resolution was sweeping. It aimed to establish a “Black Thriving Fund” to pour resources into recruiting Black educators, expanding a Black-centered curriculum, mandating anti-racism training for staff, and boosting outreach to struggling families.

The resolution was explicitly drafted to combat historic disparities in the district. In the 2018–19 school year, district data showed that while Black students represented 22% of OUSD enrollment, they accounted for 57% of all student suspensions. Furthermore, Black students with Special Education Individualized Education Plans (IEPs) were nine times more likely to be suspended than their peers.

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“We kept looking at these data points — chronic absenteeism, literacy, mathematics — it was just dismal,” Lawanda Wesley, the former director of the task force, told reporters.

Five years after that data was compiled, student performance remains largely unchanged. By 2025, district testing revealed that Black students still had OUSD’s lowest proficiency rates in both math and English. Additionally, about 46% of Black students were chronically absent, and nearly 10% had faced suspensions.

The initial momentum has completely shifted. The district’s official reparations webpage has not been updated since 2021, public meetings have ceased, and Black student enrollment in OUSD has dipped below 20%—down from nearly half two decades ago as Black families continue to leave Oakland.

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Following a grievance process led by the local teachers‘ union, the district quietly revived a smaller version of the task force in 2023. 

The updated initiative pivots away from the grander systemic promises of 2021, focusing instead on targeted family engagement and expanding support systems at 11 designated “Black Thriving Schools”—campuses where at least 40% of the student body is Black.

While some local educators claim pieces of the original promise continue quietly via a handful of newly created “Teacher on Special Assignment” roles, others argue the district completely abandoned its public commitments.

District officials did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

However, OUSD spokesperson John Sasaki defended the current state of the initiative in a statement to The Mercury News, asserting that the task force “is currently active and moving forward under strong leadership, with a clear focus on supporting Black student achievement and well-being.”

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