Toronto Star

City says it will review all street names that could be considered racist,

Briefing gives options for how council can respond to renaming petition

- DAVID RIDER CITY HALL BUREAU CHIEF With files from Ted Fraser

Toronto’s response to a petition to rename Dundas Street could lead to far-reaching anti-racism remedies, including the renaming of other city streets and squares, and the removal of monuments from public property.

Those possible outcomes — city council will decide what, if any, actions are actually taken — are in a briefing note released Tuesday by city manager Chris Murray. The note comes amid a wave of internatio­nal protests over systemic racism following the killing of George Floyd by Minneapoli­s police. On Saturday, Toronto police arrested activ- ists who splattered pink paint on a number of downtown statues.

Murray, who was appointed city manager four years ago after holding the post in Hamilton, acknowledg­es racism in tthe city’s protocols for honour- ing people.

“The city of Toronto is committed to addressing the legacy of Dundas Street and establishi­ng a process to more broadly understand and respond to how systematic racism and discrimina­tion are embedded in city assets, commemorat­ive programs and naming policies,” he wrote.

“This might ultimately touch aall named city streets, parks and facilities, f public monuments, and civic awards and honours, potentiall­y leading to a variety of actions (e.g., renaming streets, removing monuments, revoking awards or reinterpre­ting any of these).”

A Dundas review alone could also encompass Yonge-Dundas Square, two subway stations, streetcar routes, parkettes and a library branch.

Murray will present his findings and recommenda­tions on Sept. 23 to city council’s executive committee and its chair, Mayor John Tory, who tasked Murray with the report in response to the street renaming campaign.

More than 14,000 names are now on the online petition, launched in June by Torontobas­ed artist Andrew Lochhead, that calls the legacy of Henry Dundas, an 18th-century Scottish politician, “highly problemati­c.”

Dundas “actively participat­ed in obstructin­g the abolition of slavery in the British Empire” and his actions “cost tens of tthousands of lives, if not more,” the t petition states.

Lochhead was inspired by calls in Edinburgh, Scotland, to remove a towering Dundas monument there. On Tuesday, he welcomed Murray’s briefing note as a small but important step tow ward institutio­nalized Toronto reckoning anti-Black with and anti-Indigenous racism.

“I think this is, in ways, more than what I asked for initially,” Lochhead said of the widerangin­g city review. “I’m very pleased to see the city undertake this process. It’s a long way to go and we’ve got plenty of fight left, but this is important to begin.

“The goal is no less than the re-examinatio­n of how we engage with public memory here at the city of Toronto. It’s important that we don’t separate tthis issue from calls to defund the t police service, Black Lives Matter and broader calls for racial equality and justice.”

Murray’s note suggest options for city council to respond to the Dundas petition, including: Doing nothing; Retaining street names and adding “ceremonial” names;

Retaining street names but renaming three parkettes and the Dundas library branch;

Changing the names of Dundas Street East, Dundas Street West, Dundas Square and Old Dundas Street, as well as “other civic assets carrying the Dundas name.”

“Staff are not recommendi­ng option 1, do nothing,” the note adds.

If Dundas Street is renamed, Murray said council should not use the city’s street-naming policy, which requires the applicant to provide an alternate new name and to get approval from three-quarters of the street’s property owners.

He said an alternativ­e process could rely more on public suggestion­s and input from an advisory panel with Black and Indigenous “knowledge and language keepers.”

The city is at a “particular­ly turbulent moment,” Murray concluded, facing calls for racial justice while COVID-19 disproport­ionately impacts racialized communitie­s.

Toronto should reaffirm commitment­s, with necessary actions, to its Action Plan to Confront Anti-Black Racism, the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission of Canada’s Calls to Action, and the Calls for Justice for Murdered and Missing Indigenous Women and Girls, Murray wrote.

“At the midpoint of the UN’s Internatio­nal Decade for People of African Descent, taking steps to right wrongs, challenge systematic institutio­nalized racism and build a more inclusive Toronto is more important than ever,” he added.

“Addressing the historical legacy of Dundas Street is one of these steps.”

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