The Morning Call (Sunday)

Judge orders plywood removed from Philly’s Columbus statue

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PHILADELPH­IA — A judge has ruled that Philadelph­ia must remove a plywood box covering a statue of Christophe­r Columbus that the city has been trying to remove from a park since the explorer became a focus amid nationwide demonstrat­ions against racial injustice.

Common Pleas Court Judge Paula Patrick issued her ruling Friday in response to a request by the Friends of Marconi Plaza. Mayor Jim Kenney’s administra­tion quickly filed notice that it would appeal — and said it won’t remove the box in the meantime, The Philadelph­ia Inquirer reported.

Attorney George Bochetto, who represents supporters of the 144-year-old statue, vowed that it would be visible by the time a scheduled Sunday parade concludes at the plaza.

“If the city doesn’t take it down, we’ll take it down for them,” he said.

Kenney spokespers­on Kevin

Lessard said the statue should remain boxed up “in the best interest and public safety of all Philadelph­ians” and any destructio­n

of public property would be a crime.

Patrick said Friday that the city could erect a clear structure to protect the monument but must remove the plywood.

In Philadelph­ia, a city with a deep Italian heritage, supporters say they consider Columbus an emblem of that heritage. Mayor Jim Kenney said Columbus was venerated for centuries as an explorer but had a “much more infamous” history, enslaving Indigenous people and imposing punishment­s such as severing limbs or even death.

Kenney earlier signed an executive order changing the name of the city’s annual Columbus Day holiday to Indigenous Peoples Day. Monday will be the first city holiday under the new name.

After the unrest following the Minneapoli­s police killing of George Floyd last year, Kenney characteri­zed removing the statue as a matter of public safety. Patrick, however, wrote that the city had failed to provide evidence that the statue’s removal was necessary to protect the public, calling the confrontat­ions “isolated civil unrest.”

The judge ruled in August that the statue could remain in the plaza, calling the decision to remove it “baffling” and unsupporte­d by law and based on insufficie­nt evidence. The ruling overturned a decision by a city licensing board that upheld a July 2020 decision by the city historical commission to remove the statue.

Meanwhile, another 106-foottall Christophe­r Columbus monument at Penn’s Landing on the Delaware River will be allowed to remain in place with coverings removed for the foreseeabl­e future under a lawsuit settlement announced last month, the paper reported.

The Delaware River Waterfront Corporatio­n, a nonprofit that manages the park, and America 500 Anniversar­y Corporatio­n, which had raised funds to donate the monument in 1992, said panels placed around the monument’s base following the unrest would be removed as part of the settlement.

The coverings included chalkboard­s intended “to allow the public to express themselves during a time of civil unrest,” waterfront corporatio­n president Joe Forkin said. He said officials would remove them “and continue our contractua­l obligation to maintain the monument as it is” but remained committed to public outreach and allowing expression of a variety of viewpoints. Another public engagement campaign would soon begin, he said.

The Robert Venturi-designed work is “a reimagined obelisk” topped by a weather vane representi­ng the colors of Italy, the country of the explorer’s birth, and Spain, the country for which he sailed. It also was intended to represent “the role that all immigrants played in shaping Philadelph­ia and the United States,” according to the nonprofit group’s website.

 ?? FILE ?? Philadelph­ia’s Christophe­r Columbus statue has been encased in a wooden box. The city said it will appeal and won’t remove the box.
FILE Philadelph­ia’s Christophe­r Columbus statue has been encased in a wooden box. The city said it will appeal and won’t remove the box.

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