An Administrative Agency
An administrative agency is a governmental organization that is officially recognized, and it is empowered with authority to supervise and control the implementation of legislative acts. The U.S. Congress, the federal constitution, local law-making bodies, and the state legislature are responsible for creating the administrative agency. The executive rules are internal, technical, interpretive, or legislative. Legislative rules are the most crucial because they have the force o law and impact constitutional law. Governmental agencies manage crises, address critical social challenges, and oversee complex matters beyond the expertise of legislators. Administrative agencies are well structured to implement laws that address critical issues affecting society.
The American Descendants of Slavery (ADOS) pursue reparations from the suffering of their progenitors. Awful and unfair systems that existed earlier in the United States are responsible for the abuse and injury(Graff, 256). Americans harmed by the repercussion of the government-sanctioned slavery and its intergenerational adverse effects will only heal after establishing the targeted social economy toward black ADOS families.
A racial wealth gap exists with an undesirable socio-economic projection toward the ADOS and families. The collective net wealth of African Americans to be at zero by the year 2053 (Rhinehart, 2019). The wealth disparity between the whites and black Americas is the impact of their financial circumstances. In 2016, there was a mean difference of an estimate of $800,000 between the average African American and white people regarding households. For instance, a black American with a college degree has the two thirds net worth of a median white person who has only managed to complete high school education.
During periods of national disaster, the ADOS community is heavily impacted. During the period of the COVID-19 pandemic, African Americans suffer horrible rates of infection deaths. It s evident to the world that ADOS groups struggle in areas such as health care, education, housing gap, food insecurity, banking and finance, and indignities. African American adults have adopted efforts to curb the infection of COVID-19 in activities such as washing their hands and wearing face masks(Alsan & Marcella 2 ). However, in proactive measures that require finances such as buying hand sanitizers and stockpile foods, African Americans fall behind compared to other groups.
Academically, the ADOS group falls behind other groups. Black families operate at the bottom of wealth and political power in society due to digital dived. Poverty makes it hard for African Americans to afford computers and the internet, which is a crucial requirement in modern education (Walker, Danie, et al. 604). Reparation for ADOS families can narrow the digital divide by providing easy access to resources that will aid in applied technology literacy and equal education quality.
Unemployment is a significant drawback for the ADOS group. The unemployment rate in African American families is twice as high as the white unemployment rate (Fairlie, Robert, at el. 308). The rate of unemployment rate African Americans with a college degree often exceeds the rate of joblessness for whites without a college degree or never finished high school. Currently, COVID-19’s depression level is has impacted the American economy that may lead to black people losing their jobs. Nevertheless, the less unfortunate black Americans are working in conditions that put them at risk of contracting the COVID-19 virus.
Formation of the ADOS Reparation Administration is a big step towards the compensation for African Americans who are descendants of slavery.