Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Vel Phillips honor

A new state office building will be named for the late civil rights leader.

- Max Bayer

MADISON – Gov. Scott Walker announced plans Tuesday to name a new state office building in Milwaukee after the late civil rights leader Vel Phillips.

Phillips, who passed away in April at the age of 95, was the first African-American woman on the Milwaukee Common Council and the first African-American woman to hold a statewide position. She served as the secretary of state.

While a member of the Common Council in 1962 Phillips pushed for a fair housing ordinance that would’ve made it illegal for landlords to not sell or rent property to African-Americans. When introduced, the proposal was defeated, 18-1.

The ordinance passed six years later after the death of Martin Luther King Jr. and the passing of the federal Fair Housing Act.

“It is only fitting that the state’s future office building in Milwaukee be named in honor of Vel Phillips,” Walker said. “Vel Phillips was a nationally renowned trailblaze­r for civil rights, and her honorable legacy will benefit the city of Milwaukee and the state of Wisconsin for generation­s to come.”

Walker will include a request for the proposed Vel R. Phillips Milwaukee State Office Building in the 2019-21 capital budget. The Department of Administra­tion is reviewing responses to its request for proposals.

If approved, the new state building will be the latest commemorat­ion to the activist’s life. The Milwaukee Common Council approved changing the name of North Fourth Street from West St. Paul Avenue to West Capitol Drive to Vel R. Phillips Avenue.

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