Los Angeles Times

Northernmo­st town, but what’s its name?

Barrow, Alaska, is now Utqiagvik — but it may change back.

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ANCHORAGE — On paper, the new Inupiat Eskimo name of the nation’s northernmo­st town is now official. But the reality is not so simple.

The town was known as Barrow until Thursday, when the new name, Utqiagvik (oot-GHAR-vik), became effective, less than two months after the town approved the change at the polls, by a margin of a mere 6 votes.

But the name is being challenged. A local Native corporatio­n filed a civil lawsuit Wednesday that claims city officials rushed the process with insufficie­nt outreach to the public.

Plaintiffs also maintain the new name isn’t even the area’s traditiona­l place name, and note the name change would come at a steep cost to the city in public expenditur­es to change signs, contracts and other documents to reflect the new name.

And on Tuesday, Mayor Fannie Suvlu introduced an ordinance to consider asking voters if the change should be repealed.

The City Council will address the proposal in January. Suvlu said Friday the ordinance was prompted by several factors, including the tight vote and claims by “more than a handful of community members” in the town of 5,000 that there had been no due process before the October vote.

The 381-375 vote happened before Suvlu came into office.

“I feel that whether I am in the city of Barrow or I am in the city of Utqiagvik, I am here to serve the community members,” Suvlu said. “It was the community members that voted me in.”

The lawsuit was filed by the Ukpeagvik Inupiat Corp., which also was seeking a temporary restrainin­g order and preliminar­y injunction to prevent the city from changing the name.

A state judge, however, denied that motion on Thursday, ruling that the city did not receive notice of it until that morning and that the plaintiffs also did not show how the city would be “immediatel­y and irreparabl­y injured” by the cost of changing the name. The judge also noted that Lt. Gov. Byron Mallott certified the name change more than a month ago.

In court documents, plaintiffs say the lack of input from the public led to a f lawed law being passed, one that didn’t even use the correct traditiona­l name for the city. They claim the correct word is Ukpeagvik, which means “the place where we hunt snowy owls.”

City Council member Qaiyaan Harcharek, who is Inupiat on his mother’s side, introduced a local ordinance in August that began the process ratified by voters. After the October vote, however, he said Utqiagvik essentiall­y means “a place for gathering potatoes.”

“We are now in an era where the reclamatio­n of tradition is critical to the perpetuati­on of identity as Iñupiat,” he wrote in an October email to the Associated Press. “The people of Utqiagvik voted to regain our traditiona­l name. Hopefully, it signifies the beginning of a decolonizi­ng revolution.”

 ?? Gregory Bull Associated Press ?? VOTERS decided this fall to give Barrow an Inupiat name, but a Native corporatio­n says in a lawsuit that the process was rushed and the name isn’t even correct.
Gregory Bull Associated Press VOTERS decided this fall to give Barrow an Inupiat name, but a Native corporatio­n says in a lawsuit that the process was rushed and the name isn’t even correct.

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