Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass (D) has joined the mayoral program funded by George Soros, and signed a resolution appointing the city's first chief equity officer and acknowledging that recognition. brought in an Illinois consulting company led by. His city's land was stolen from Native Americans by “white colonies” to aid in the recovery process after the fire.
Hagerty Consulting, a emergency management company founded by former Illinois Evanston, was chosen by Mayor Steve Hagerty (D) to help “community resilience, infrastructure repair and environmental mitigation.” . announcement Friday.
Hagerty, who held the mayoral office from 2017 to 2021, led several Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) initiatives in the city. Creation The Stocks and Empowerment Committee, led by impartial executives I worked on it “Train and strengthen staff through a racial equity framework.”
He also signed law It recognizes that the city of Evanston sits on a land that “originally belonged to the Potawatomi tribe until their powerful and violent migration at the hands of white colonists.”
The resolution also apologised for “white hegemony” and committed “to participate in racial equity training” to city councillors.
In 2018, Hagerty joined “Mayors Supporting Mayors.” program In Puerto Rico, the Grant Making Network was founded by billionaire Democrat George Soros after Hurricane Maria denounced the island with an open society foundation.
Evanston also Compensation FundABC7 Chicago reported, ABC7 Chicago used tax revenue from recreational marijuana to send a $25,000 payment to black households for repairs.
In addition to supporting La Fires, Hagerty Consulting is contract City officials say in Asheville, North Carolina, we will “provide assistance through the recovery process” from the disastrous Hurricane Helen.
It's a Bass fire, but it's still not clear how much external companies will pay. “Recovery CZAR” They earn a total of $500,000 over 90 days to accelerate the rebuilding process. Los Angeles Times It has been reported.
It is also unclear whether Los Angeles residents have any say in bringing in their Illinois companies.





