The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Will Atlanta pave over history?

- George Mathis

It’s not easy running one of the biggest cities in the U.S.

Or is it?

Atlanta City Council has clearly solved the issues that plague most big cities.

Yet, one issue remains before Atlantans can claim they live in the greatest city of Earth.

We’ve got to rename dozens of streets!

As you know, many are upset that statues honoring those who fought for slavery not only exist but are used to decorate the lawns of local courthouse­s where the civil rights of minorities were once routinely repressed. Monuments to revisionis­t history should be removed.

I can also see modifying the name of streets which honor Confederat­e leaders. Atlanta previously changed Forrest Avenue to Ralph McGill Boulevard, but how many people knewthe street was named for Confederat­e Army general and Ku Klux Klan leader Nathan Bedford Forrest? Probably the same amount that know McGill was an Atlanta Constituti­on publisher who won the Pulitzer Prize in 1959 for anti-segregatio­n editorials.

Renaming Forrest Avenue was a good idea, but taking an “R” off the street signs would have been a more economical­ly effi-cient solution.

How did we get here? Following fatal racial violence at a white-nationalis­t rally in Charlottes­ville, Va., thousands of Atlanta residents signed petition store move statues andre name Confederat­e-themed streets. Mayor Kasim Reed appointed an advisory committee that recently discussed some of its recommenda­tions. Their full report will soon be submitted to Reed and City Council.

If the renaming of streets is approved, residents living or doing business on those streets will be contacted and 75 percent of them have to agree before signs are changed, according to Atlanta city code.

Seventy- fifive percent is a high bar. That ordinance maybe quickly revised.

Votes shouldn’t be taken for granted.

Wednesday, I was downing a massive plate of food at a meat-and-three in Avondale Estates and discussing this topic with random strangers when an elderly black gentleman interjecte­d. He said he’d lived in Atlanta for 65 years and didn’t want any streets renamed. I asked him for his reasoning and he said it wouldn’t change history, and sometimes it’s good to not forget painful parts of the past. Then he said he might not be able to fifind his way home if all the street signs changed overnight.

He has a point. I don’t live on Confederat­e Avenue, but if I’d been there for decades and someone suggested renaming it just before Christmas gifts start hitting the mail I’d vote against it too.

Will dozens of Atlanta streets be renamed? Will the “Lost Cause” lion in Oakland Cemetery finally succumb to his sadness? Will we ever run out of things that offend us?

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