Boston is now officially a

hole.
Two high school students, Damani Williams and Denilson Fanfan, as well as University of Massachusetts student Carrie Mays, 22, will serve on Boston's reparations task force.
www.dailymail.co.uk
High school juniors Damani Williams and Denilson Fanfan, as well as University of Massachusetts student and Black Lives Matter organizer Carrie Mays, will serve on the city's reparations task force, Mayor Michelle Wu announced on Tuesday.
Boston's reparations task force will be chaired by attorney Joseph Fester Jr, a former president of the NAACP Boston branch and a current member of the city's Black Men and Boys Commission.
Others on the panel include L'Mercie Frazier, a public historian, visual activist and the executive director of creative and strategic partnerships for SPOKE Arts and Na'tisha Mills, the program director at Embrace Boston.
Along with Dr. Kerri Greenidge, Assistant Professor of Studies in Race, Colonialism, and Diaspora at Tufts University and George 'Chip' Greenidge Jr, Founder and Director of Greatest MINDS.
Rounding out the task force are Dr. David Harris, the past managing director of the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice, and Dorothea Jones, a longtime civic organizer.