Bristol Post

You the jury Citizens’ panels could decide on contested street names

- Tristan CORK tristan.cork@reachplc.com

APANEL of randomlyse­lected Bristolian­s could be summoned to serve on citizens’ juries to decide on issues like whether streets named in honour of people linked to the slave trade should be renamed.

That’s the latest idea from the city’s ‘We Are Bristol’ History Commission, as a way of bringing together people from across Bristol.

The initial recommenda­tions from the commission over what to do with the toppled statue of 18th century slave trader Edward Colston and its now-empty plinth were passed this week by the city council’s cabinet, which also heard ideas from the commission’s members about potential next steps in their remit to consider and evaluate the city’s story and look at any contested or contentiou­s parts.

The cabinet backed the commission’s recommenda­tions that the statue be kept in a museum, as part of an exhibition about Bristol’s role in the transatlan­tic slave trade.

In a survey of more than 13,000 people, around 80 per cent of people from Bristol told the commission that they wanted to see the statue in a museum for educationa­l purposes.

The question of what happens to the empty plinth is now under considerat­ion by council chiefs, with a recommenda­tion that it be left empty for long periods of time, but at other times be the setting for temporary artworks.

A recommenda­tion that a second plaque explained the empty plinth, the history of the statue and what happened to it was also passed by council chiefs.

But the We Are Bristol History Commission member Dr Jo BurchBrown said the commission was also coming up with ideas to go further than just the initial question of what should happen to the Colston statue and the plinth.

She said citizens’ juries were one idea that could bring the city together and come to conclusion­s about some of the more difficult questions.

She said: “In the same way you put together a jury for a criminal trial, you could call people to serve on a citizen jury to look at some of these questions.

“They could hear arguments on one side and the other, from people with different views, and this would mean you could get voices from different parts of the city coming together to talk these questions through and deliberate on them.”

One of the issues involves roads named in honour of Colston and other people who made their fortunes from the slave trade.

Already, residents in Colston Avenue and Colston Street, close to where the statue was, have petitioned the city council’s cabinet to ask to have their street names changed back to the names they had before the Victorian city leaders renamed them after Colston.

Dr Burch-Brown said while the make-up of the citizens’ juries would be completely random, they would make sure that all different age groups were represente­d equally.

She said this was important because there was a real difference in the way younger and older Bristolian­s thought about the toppling of the statue of Edward Colston.

She said older people were much more likely to feel negatively towards the toppling of the statue in June 2020.

She said the results of the survey last year at the Colston statue exhibition in the M Shed showed no real difference in attitudes towards the statue’s toppling from richer or poorer areas of Bristol, different ethnic background­s or between men and women. Age was the only marked factor that threw up very different attitudes.

She said: “There’s a real need in the city for opportunit­ies for young and older people to come together and share experience­s – not argue or debate but talk to each other and share how they feel and come to understand­ings of each other’s positions.

“The key thing that the council have been keen for is that the conversati­on doesn’t stop, that this is a starting point to talk about these things more.

“When we look at these kinds of things, they always become polarised, but I really don’t think they have to be.

“The citizens’ juries is a process I’ve thought most about, but we haven’t made a formal recommenda­tion as yet about this. It’s an idea.

“The question of street names is very symbolic and what we do with them matters. Having a citizens’ jury to hear representa­tives from both sides of the argument, they make a recommenda­tion and the people living on that street have the ultimate vote, but do so on the basis of having heard what the people across the city think about it.”

 ?? Photo: Matthew Horwood/ Getty Images ?? The Colston Street sign in central Bristol
Photo: Matthew Horwood/ Getty Images The Colston Street sign in central Bristol

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