Close Menu
TheHub.news

    Jasmine Crockett Has “No Idea” If She’ll Support Talarico’s Texas Senate Campaign

    By TheHub.news Staff

    Dear Oprah, We Remember Whitney Houston’s Voice, Not Your Version of Her Pain

    By Dr. Stacey Patton

    Boomer Esiason Exemplifies the Need for More Black Sports Radio Voices

    By FirstandPen

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    TheHub.news
    Support Our Work
    • Home
    • Our Story
      • News & Views
        • Politics
        • Injustice
        • HBCUs
        • Watch
      • Food
        • Cuisine Noir
        • soulPhoodie
      • Passport Heavy
      • Travel
      • Diaspora
      • This Day
      • Entertainment
      • History
      • Art
      • Music
    • Health
    • Money
      1. Copper2Cotton
      2. View All

      How to Fight Inflation and Win

      December 9, 2025

      August 2018 Net Worth Update

      December 9, 2025

      Dividend Update: August 2018

      December 9, 2025
      Passive Income

      Be Passive About Your $

      November 17, 2025

      You Must Be an Owner to Win 

      June 23, 2026

      Economic Empowerment Has Always Been a Part of Black History

      February 12, 2026

      August 2018 Net Worth Update

      December 9, 2025

      More Blacks Needed On Corporate Boards

      December 9, 2025
    • Books
    • Business
    • Sports
      1. First and Pen
      2. View All

      Boomer Esiason Exemplifies the Need for More Black Sports Radio Voices

      June 26, 2026

      Kendrick Perkins Adding GM, Jackson St. Men’s Basketball to Resume

      June 24, 2026

      The Knicks United Us, Which Is Why They Don’t Need to Visit Tr**p

      June 23, 2026

      James Green Never Wanted to Wrestle, But He Was Meant to

      June 22, 2026

      Boomer Esiason Exemplifies the Need for More Black Sports Radio Voices

      June 26, 2026

      Kendrick Perkins Adding GM, Jackson St. Men’s Basketball to Resume

      June 24, 2026

      The Knicks United Us, Which Is Why They Don’t Need to Visit Tr**p

      June 23, 2026

      James Green Never Wanted to Wrestle, But He Was Meant to

      June 22, 2026
    • Tech
    • Podcasts
      1. Karen Hunter is Awesome
      2. Lurie Breaks it Down
      3. Human(ing) Well with Amber Cabral
      4. Financially Speaking
      5. In Class with Carr
      6. View All

      Jasmine Crockett Has “No Idea” If She’ll Support Talarico’s Texas Senate Campaign

      June 26, 2026

      Dear Oprah, We Remember Whitney Houston’s Voice, Not Your Version of Her Pain

      June 26, 2026

      Boomer Esiason Exemplifies the Need for More Black Sports Radio Voices

      June 26, 2026

      Afro Nation Portugal’s Food Scene is a Headliner of Its Own

      June 26, 2026

      Jasmine Crockett Has “No Idea” If She’ll Support Talarico’s Texas Senate Campaign

      June 26, 2026

      Dear Oprah, We Remember Whitney Houston’s Voice, Not Your Version of Her Pain

      June 26, 2026

      Boomer Esiason Exemplifies the Need for More Black Sports Radio Voices

      June 26, 2026

      Afro Nation Portugal’s Food Scene is a Headliner of Its Own

      June 26, 2026

      Jasmine Crockett Has “No Idea” If She’ll Support Talarico’s Texas Senate Campaign

      June 26, 2026

      Dear Oprah, We Remember Whitney Houston’s Voice, Not Your Version of Her Pain

      June 26, 2026

      Boomer Esiason Exemplifies the Need for More Black Sports Radio Voices

      June 26, 2026

      Afro Nation Portugal’s Food Scene is a Headliner of Its Own

      June 26, 2026

      Jasmine Crockett Has “No Idea” If She’ll Support Talarico’s Texas Senate Campaign

      June 26, 2026

      Dear Oprah, We Remember Whitney Houston’s Voice, Not Your Version of Her Pain

      June 26, 2026

      Boomer Esiason Exemplifies the Need for More Black Sports Radio Voices

      June 26, 2026

      Afro Nation Portugal’s Food Scene is a Headliner of Its Own

      June 26, 2026

      Jasmine Crockett Has “No Idea” If She’ll Support Talarico’s Texas Senate Campaign

      June 26, 2026

      Dear Oprah, We Remember Whitney Houston’s Voice, Not Your Version of Her Pain

      June 26, 2026

      Boomer Esiason Exemplifies the Need for More Black Sports Radio Voices

      June 26, 2026

      Afro Nation Portugal’s Food Scene is a Headliner of Its Own

      June 26, 2026

      In Class with Carr: Juneteenth and the Unyielding Work of Liberation

      June 19, 2026

      In Class with Carr: We Are All Greenwood

      June 1, 2026

      In Class with Carr: Everything Ends: White Nationalism vs a Third US Reconstruction

      May 11, 2026

      In Class with Carr: “Last Whiteness Standing”

      May 5, 2026
    TheHub.news
    Injustice

    Cincinnati’s $5m Reparations Plan Targets a Century of Housing Discrimination

    By Veronika LleshiMarch 2, 20263 Mins Read
    Share Email Copy Link
    Image Credit: ShutterStock
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Copy Link Threads

    Cincinnati’s vice mayor announced plans for reparations to address local laws that prevented a number of Black people from owning property. 

    First reported by the Cincinnati Enquirer, the proposal is part of the Cincinnati Real Property Reparations Program. Through the program, the city would help residents from 15 out of the 52 local neighborhoods. Although no specific list was given, amongst the neighborhoods that could be selected for the program are English Woods, Millvale, Queensgate, Lower Price Hill, Roselawn, Avondale and the Villages at Roll Hill.

    majority of these neighborhoods are predominantly Black.

    The plan would specifically provide financial assistance to lower and moderate-income citizens and any person or family member of a person who was not allowed to purchase a home due to “discriminatory practices.”

    No approximate number was given for how much would be provided. The reparations program, however, will address totals needed for property taxes, down payments and emergency repairs. 

    The measure was initially introduced on Feb. 19th and is cosponsored by Vice Mayor Jan-Michele Leon Kearney and Councilman Scotty Johnson. The proposal is expected to be heard by the City Council on Wednesday. Approximately $5 million will be devoted to the Reparations Program if approved.

    “We move that the administration establish the Cincinnati Real Property Reparations Program in order to create the opportunity for Cincinnati’s residents to build wealth by having the means to own and preserve ownership in real property,” wrote the sponsors in the official motion document.

    Although Kearney has confirmed the program will not be race-based, it is set to address a number of discriminatory practices that were aimed at keeping Black residents from owning property. Along with current mortgage disparities and discrimination in GI Bill housing benefits, the program will look as far back as policies from the 1920s.

    According to the Center for Community Resilience, in the 1920s, the Cincinnati Real Estate Board was required by the government to prevent Black residents from purchasing homes in majority-white neighborhoods. As the city’s Black population continued to grow, residents were forced into specific neighborhoods with as many as 94 people living in 12-room tenements. 

    By the 1930s, Cincinnati’s government continued to discriminate, enforcing redlining practices that kept Black residents within the West End. Amongst the ways they enforced this was by making loans difficult for Black residents to obtain, alongside zoning laws. 

    When public housing projects eventually developed, residents were segregated, keeping Black citizens in the West End. 

    The effects of the discriminatory policies are still visible today. Per the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, just 34% of Black residents in Cincinnati own a home. This is a stark disparity from the 74% of white residents who own their homes. Black residents are also twice as likely to be denied a home loan, comprising just 15% of mortgage applicants.

    “When Black communities lose access to lending and when loans in Black neighborhoods are granted mainly to white buyers, patterns of gentrification intensify,” said HOME’s policy and research coordinator, Clementine Deck, per a press release. “This erodes generational wealth and disproportionately impacts historic Black neighborhoods.”

    • Cincinnati Black Music Walk of Fame Announces New Inductees for 2023
    • Black Tech Week to Be Held in Cincinnati This Year
    • This Day in History, August 31: Baseball Icon Frank Robinson Was Born
    • Knubia Locker Room: ‘O’-Mission
    • Former Cincinnati Stars Nick Van Exel, Sauce Gardner Are Graduating
    Cincinnati Reparations Thehub.news
    Veronika Lleshi

    Veronika Lleshi is an aspiring journalist. She currently writes for Hunter College's school newspaper, Hunter News Now. In her free time, she enjoys reading, writing and making music. Lleshi is an Athena scholar who enjoys getting involved in her community.

    Related Stories

    What 150 Years of Policy Did to Black Communities in Illinois

    March 5, 2026

    Karen Hunter Confronts the Reality of Trump-era ICE Raids: ‘What’s the Recourse?’

    January 9, 2026

    SF Creates Reparations Fund While Warning It Has No Money to Contribute

    January 5, 2026

    Dear Henrico Doctors’ Hospital: An Open Letter to Those in the Know Who Sat Idly by As Atrocities Unfolded

    March 13, 2025

    Detroit Woman Sues Cops After Facial Recognition Tech Triggers Wrongful Arrest

    March 4, 2025

    Palm Springs Commits $5.9m in Reparations to Section 14 Survivors and Their Descendants

    November 22, 2024
    Recent Posts
    • Jasmine Crockett Has “No Idea” If She’ll Support Talarico’s Texas Senate Campaign
    • Dear Oprah, We Remember Whitney Houston’s Voice, Not Your Version of Her Pain
    • Boomer Esiason Exemplifies the Need for More Black Sports Radio Voices
    • Afro Nation Portugal’s Food Scene is a Headliner of Its Own
    • This Day in History: June 26th

    Jasmine Crockett Has “No Idea” If She’ll Support Talarico’s Texas Senate Campaign

    By TheHub.news Staff

    Dear Oprah, We Remember Whitney Houston’s Voice, Not Your Version of Her Pain

    By Dr. Stacey Patton

    Boomer Esiason Exemplifies the Need for More Black Sports Radio Voices

    By FirstandPen

    Afro Nation Portugal’s Food Scene is a Headliner of Its Own

    By Cuisine Noir

    Subscribe to Updates

    A free newsletter delivering stories that matter straight to your inbox.

    About
    About

    TheHub.news is a storytelling and news platform committed to telling our stories through our lens. With facts at the center, we document the lived reality of our experience globally—our progress, our challenges, and our impact—without distortion, dilution, or apology.

    X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube

    Jasmine Crockett Has “No Idea” If She’ll Support Talarico’s Texas Senate Campaign

    By TheHub.news Staff

    Dear Oprah, We Remember Whitney Houston’s Voice, Not Your Version of Her Pain

    By Dr. Stacey Patton

    Boomer Esiason Exemplifies the Need for More Black Sports Radio Voices

    By FirstandPen

    Afro Nation Portugal’s Food Scene is a Headliner of Its Own

    By Cuisine Noir

    Subscribe to Updates

    A free newsletter delivering stories that matter straight to your inbox.

    © 2026 TheHub.news A 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organization.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.