Federal Court Approves Settlement in Case Over Black-Only Relief Fund – By Karl Salzmann (Free Beacon) / June 29 2021
Oregon fund only dispersed money to black-owned businesses
A federal court last week approved a settlement in a case challenging an Oregon fund that gave COVID-19 relief money only to black-owned businesses.
The state of Oregon set aside $62 million of federal relief money for the “Oregon Cares Fund for Black Relief and Resiliency.” The fund would only disperse payments to black Oregonians and black-owned businesses and nonprofits in the state. Great Northern Resources, a family-owned logging business in eastern Oregon, sued the state last October, arguing the fund violated the 14th Amendment and federal anti-discrimination laws. Because the owner of Great Northern is white, the business was ineligible to receive the aid money.
Great Northern and the state reached a settlement in March, under which Oregon will release $5.3 million from the fund to black-owned businesses while allocating a separate $3.5 million for non-black relief applicants. According to the Project for Fair Representation, a legal nonprofit that aided Great Northern, 1,155 additional applicants will receive payments because of the settlement.
“Sadly, the vast bulk of the $62 million had already been distributed before the district court enjoined the program,” the nonprofit wrote in an email to supporters reviewed by the Washington Free Beacon. “Nevertheless, it is gratifying that some of these funds will be distributed to qualifying businesses without regard to the owner’s race or ethnicity.”
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