Daily Camera (Boulder)

Lafayette City Council votes to rename Mary Miller Theater

Historical, education context will be added to mural

- By Andrea Grajeda

Lafayette City Council will rename the Mary Miller Theater and add educationa­l context to other Mary Miller commemorat­ive art in the city.

Council voted 5-2 on Tuesday night to rename the Mary Miller Theater. Mayor J.D. Mangat and Councilmem­ber Brain Wong voted against the proposal.

Meanwhile, Council voted 5-2 against changing the Mary Miller Sculpture or the name of North Miller Avenue or South Miller Avenue. It also voted to leave the Mary Miller Mural in place, but to add historical and educationa­l context on Miller. With all three votes, councilmem­bers Tonya Briggs and Tim Barnes voted against the majority.

Lafayette Public Library Director Melissa Hisel said that there was a resident-driven petition in 2020 to rename “The Miller” apartment complex as the Miller name is closely associated with the Ku Klux Klan’s history in Lafayette. Hisel said that the petition was the momentum the city needed to seriously discuss all the Miller-named city property.

Mangat said he believes that the Mary Miller name should stay. He said that removing her name will not uplift marginaliz­ed communitie­s. He said that the city should not remove its history, but instead educate the community about Lafayette’s history and how marginaliz­ed communitie­s were treated.

Mangat said that Miller was not in the KKK, but her descendant­s were and “that sucks” as the Miller name has become closely associated with racial discrimina­tion. He said that the the city should direct its effort towards helping communitie­s of color and making efforts to combat discrimina­tion in the city.

Wong said that his family has experience­d a lot of discrimina­tion as Asian Americans, but people need to remember history in order to grow. He said that adding context to the Miller name will help the city move forward.

“If we erase, we will forget. And once we forget, history will repeat itself,” Wong said.

Barnes said that the council represents the challenges that people face. He said that Lafayette has a long history of discrimina­tion. He said that he believes that the Miller name should be removed from the city, as it adds to the trauma for communitie­s of colors.

Hisel said that the cost to rename North Miller Avenue and South Miller Avenue would be low, but would significan­tly impact the residents who live on those streets.

A street name change would

mean residents would have to change anything that includes their mailing address, such as their license, bills, homeowner’s insurance and delivery platforms.

It could also involve mortgage holders and title companies.

Elizabeth Lichtenste­in, chair of the Lafayette Human

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