Chicago Sun-Times

ALDERMAN OPEN TO OPTIONS TO RENAMING BALBO DR. FOR IDA B. WELLS

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @ fspielman

The City Council champion of a controvers­ial plan to rename Balbo Drive for Ida B. Wells said Wednesday she’s open to a compromise that would name another major street for the civil rights icon.

Ald. Sophia King ( 4th) said Lake Shore Drive is a distinct possibilit­y. So is Congress Parkway, or any major street that has few business addresses, thereby minimizing inconvenie­nce.

“There’s a conversati­on that we’re having about that. And I am open to having another street named after Ida B. Wells. [ But], it has to be something that celebrates her in the way that she should be,” King said.

“Lake Shore Drive — a lot of it is in my ward, as you know. That is a considerat­ion. We’re looking at a lot of things. … But it has to be a street that’s befitting to somebody like Ida B. Wells. … You have to be pragmatic as well. Streets that don’t have a lot of businesses on ’ em where it would force them to change and cost a lot of money. We certainly are sensitive to those businesses.”

King said the debate over renaming Balbo or another major street for Ida B. Wells is part of a “national conversati­on” that has attracted attention from national media, including the Washington Post and the New York Times.

“The whole world is watching. Ida B. Wells is long overdue for being celebrated for all of the accomplish­ments,” King said.

She noted that the League of Women Voters is among dozens of organizati­ons that have signed on to the crusade.

“The reason they’re leading the charge is because Ida B. Wells led the charge for women. Illinois had the right to vote before any other state in the country for women. That’s in large part due to Ida B. Wells,” King said.

Four years ago, Mayor Rahm Emanuel announced plans to permanentl­y rename Stony Island Avenue for the late Bishop Arthur Brazier.

That ill- conceived renaming of a major thoroughfa­re that runs through the heart of Chicago’s South Side blindsided black aldermen and was subsequent­ly nixed amid complaints about the cost and inconvenie­nce to local merchants and residents.

That’s apparently why Emanuel has been conspicuou­sly non- committal about the idea of permanentl­y renaming Balbo.

“I understand the spirit or the energy behind Ald. King’s ordinance,” the mayor said last month.

“I want the City Council to work through an issue in a way — whether it’s a statue, whether it’s a street renaming, some way — recognize her contributi­on not only to the city, but to the country.”

Dominic DiFrisco, president emeritus of the Joint Civic Committee of Italian- Americans, has suggested renaming Lake Shore Drive or State Street for Wells and leaving Balbo Drive alone.

He has argued that forging ahead with King’s original plan would only “continue the open wound already inflicted on the Italian-American community with so many assaults on our culture.”

“We’ve already proven that he was in no way connected with anti- Semitism,” Di Frisco said.

“When Mussolini passed anti- Semitic laws in Italy, Balbo objected by taking all of his Jewish friends to dinner at a public restaurant. He also verbally and vocally opposed anti- Semitic laws. As a result, he was sent to Libya. Most people say he was shot down by Mussolini’s forces and killed in order to silence him.”

 ?? JAMES FOSTER/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES; SUN- TIMES FILES ?? Some want to rename Balbo Drive for Ida B. Wells, though Italian- Americans have objected. Ida B. Wells ( inset) was born into slavery and became a leader in the struggle against racism.
JAMES FOSTER/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES; SUN- TIMES FILES Some want to rename Balbo Drive for Ida B. Wells, though Italian- Americans have objected. Ida B. Wells ( inset) was born into slavery and became a leader in the struggle against racism.
 ??  ?? Ald. Sophia King
Ald. Sophia King

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