{"id":70399,"date":"2024-08-14T14:55:00","date_gmt":"2024-08-14T21:55:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.kentreporter.com\/home2\/renton-city-council-approves-motion-to-research-houston-family-land-issue\/"},"modified":"2024-08-14T14:55:00","modified_gmt":"2024-08-14T21:55:00","slug":"renton-city-council-approves-motion-to-research-houston-family-land-issue","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.kentreporter.com\/northwest\/renton-city-council-approves-motion-to-research-houston-family-land-issue\/","title":{"rendered":"Renton City Council approves motion to research Houston family land issue"},"content":{"rendered":"
A few months after a Cascade PBS documentary<\/a> debuted about reparations for Black families in King County and over a year of sharing his story at every Renton School Board meeting, John Houston, 71, brought the story of his family and their fight for reparations<\/a> to the Renton City Council for the first time.<\/p>\n Houston was the first to give public comment during the Aug. 5 council meeting, pleading his case to Mayor Armondo Pavone, Council President Ed Prince and Councilmembers Ruth Pérez, Kim-Khánh Văn, James Alberson Jr., Valerie O’Halloran and Ryan McIrvin. Councilmember Carmen Rivera attended the meeting remotely.<\/p>\n “I’m here to discuss with you my parents’ land that they were forced to sell to the Renton School District for supposedly a new school. It was 10 acres of land. The school was never built. We had two houses burned down, a bomb set off on our front porch while the Renton School District still pursued that land. They had already taken two other Black families’ land and that’s all the land that they took from up there,” Houston said, referring to the Renton Highlands.<\/p>\n Houston said that he did not blame the councilmembers or the city, but that the City of Renton “has made lots of income off the 200 homes that are built on that land,” adding that his family was not allowed to build generational wealth due to being forced to sell their land in the 1960s.<\/p>\n “I don’t know what you can do. I don’t know if it’s a policy or something that you can write that’s soon so it doesn’t happen to anybody else, it won’t happen to another Black family because the Renton School District made sure there’s no large Black land owners,” Houston said, who was joined in public comment by Alice Lockridge on the matter of his family. “There’s families that live on that land right now who own the homes that are prepared to pass those homes onto their kids and their grandkids.”<\/p>\n He then called on councilmembers to take action.<\/p>\n “I ask you guys to do something. I can go down the list, every one of you people here in this audience stand on somebody else’s shoulders. Not that you’re this great person that just made it to the Renton City Council on your own. You all stand on somebody’s shoulders — don’t get it twisted. So let’s keep on lifting people up,” said Houston, adding that little progress has been made toward reparations for his family.<\/p>\n “It’s a sad day every time I have to repeat this story because nobody does anything. Silence. They’re silent. There’s people that look just like me that are silent. It’s not an honor to us to turn your back on people. That’s not an honor. There’s people that don’t look like me that think it’s funny,” he said.<\/p>\n When his time was up, Houston ended his public comment with the following: “I still hurt. I still hurt but I don’t hate this city, I don’t hate [the Council]. I still do volunteer work in the Renton School District that took my parents’ land. I love this place. My parents love this place. It’s time that they’re loved back.”<\/p>\n