
Source: Michael Winter / USA Today
After months of partisan wrangling, the Senate has approved $1.15 billion to settle discrimination claims brought by black farmers against the Agriculture Department and $3.4 billion for American Indians who said the Interior Department had swindled them out of royalties since the 19th century.
The legislation, approved by unanimous consent, also includes a one-year extension of the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program and several American Indian water rights settlements sought by Sen. Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.), the Associated Press says.
To pay for the entire measure, money would be diverted from a surplus in nutrition programs for women and children and by extending customs user fees.
“The passage of this bill is long overdue,” said John Boyd, head of the National Black Farmers Association. “Twenty-six years justice is in sight for our nation’s black farmers.”
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