A Bush Foundation-funded effort will issue $50 million to the descendants of slaves living in Minnesota and the Dakotas over eight years in the hopes of building Black wealth, reversing systemic injustices and positively impacting communities.
The foundation and Nexus Community Partners, the St. Paul group administering the program, believe the Open Road Fund is the first of its kind in Minnesota and one of the first large-scale programs nationwide that ties grants to the descendants of slavery.
Nexus will begin taking grant applications on June 19, which is Juneteenth, the federal holiday that commemorates the end of slavery in the United States.
"When we have access to an abundance of resources, we can cultivate healing, safety, care and liberation on our own terms," said Nexus CEO Repa Mekha.
Grants up to $50,000 will be issued to 800 descendants of slavery by 2031. At least half of the grants are expected to land in Minnesota, which has a larger Black population than either of the Dakotas.
Nexus and the Bush Foundation say the program is not a reparations effort because it is not extensive enough. But community leaders ranked the wealth-building program with only a few others looking to address slavery's generational effects in any meaningful way.
Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., for example, issues scholarships to modern-day descendants of the 272 slaves the school sold in 1838. The school also has proposed spending $400,000 a year on school, health and other community efforts to atone for its slave history.
The state of California has created a task force calling for apologies and financial reparations to descendants of slavery who suffered land theft and other injustices. That California program would amount to billions of dollars in spending if approved.