Santa Cruz Sentinel

Kansas City weighs another bid to honor Martin Luther King

- By Margaret Stafford

KANSAS CITY, MO. >> A year after a divisive debate that ended with Kansas City residents voting to remove the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s name from a prominent boulevard, the city is trying again to find a way to honor the civil rights icon.

Missouri’s largest city started discussion­s about finding a new way to honor King shortly after last year’s vote, but that effort stalled when the coronaviru­s pandemic began in the spring.

Now, the Board of Parks and Recreation is considerin­g a proposal to rename a 5-mile-long route along thoroughfa­res that run east and west between a mostly-Black area of town and the well-known Country Club Plaza for King.

The discussion revives issues that arose when, at the urging of the Southern Christian Leadership Council- Greater Kansas City and other civil rights advocates, the City Council in 2019 renamed one of the city’s most historic boulevards, The Paseo, as Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard.

A group of residents who wanted to preserve the street’s history and said the city had not followed proper procedures before the renaming collected enough signatures to get the issue on last November’s ballot, and voters overwhelmi­ngly chose to reinstate The Paseo name, leaving Kansas City as one of the largest cities in the U.S. without a street named for King.

Testimony at two public hearings last week suggested that finding a solution won’t be easy. Some speakers supported the new proposal, while others said it wasn’t a big enough tribute to King, suggested different sites or opposed the renaming of any streets.

Teresa Rynard, director of the parks department, said the park board wants to listen to all opinions to avoid making a decision that will contribute to current tensions over social justice issues in Kansas City and the nation.

“It’s really important that this not be seen as ‘let’s just name a street and we’re done,’” Rynard said. “When we finally agree on an honor, let’s use this as a starting point of how to heal and deal not just with the past but with present concerns involving Black Lives Matter and racial injustice that we’re confrontin­g.”

Ajamu Webster, a former parks board member, said during one hearing the board should honor the man who was assassinat­ed while working for the benefit of minorities, even if the decision isn’t popular. He said opponents should stop worrying about whether changing a street name will inconvenie­nce them and see the bigger picture.

“Do we want to be remembered as people who stood for healing and justice or do we want to be remembered as one of the people who stood back in the background and let other people make the sacrifice?” Webster said. “I plead with the citizens of Kansas City to have a broader vision about what this city can become.”

Not everyone agreed, though.

A s i a C a mp b e l l , a 27-year- old Black woman who works for a local economic developmen­t organizati­on, said she thinks that naming a street for King would be divisive and wouldn’t help the city’s Black community. Instead, the city should concentrat­e on providing economic opportunit­ies for its Black residents.

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