New York Daily News

Council names streets for slain cop and cashier

- BY TIM BALK NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

A police officer killed in the line of duty, an influentia­l Black lawmaker, a relentless labor leader and a Burger King cashier killed in an East Harlem shooting are among the honorees in a street-naming bill that passed the City Council on Thursday.

The legislatio­n, passed by a 47-0 vote, came under scrutiny for its inclusion of Elijah Muhammad, the controvers­ial late leader of the Nation of Islam, who would be honored with a street name in Harlem.

But the vast majority of the honorees did not attract debate.

They included Wilbert Mora, a cop killed in a Harlem apartment shootout; Eddie Kay, a charismati­c, gravel-voiced union official; and Kristal Bayron-Nieves, an admired cashier killed during a late shift at the Burger King at Lexington Ave. and E. 116th St. in Manhattan. All three died last winter.

The legislatio­n would also name a Jamaica, Queens, block for Clifford Glover, the 10-year-old Black boy who was shot and killed by a white police officer in 1973. The intersecti­on of 112th Road and Guy R. Brewer Blvd. would become Clifford Glover Road.

With Mayor Adams’ signature, the intersecti­on of Keap St. and S. Third St. in Williamsbu­rg would be named Detective Wilbert Mora St. The crossing of Avenue N and E. 19th St. in Midwood, Brooklyn, would become Eddie Kay Way. Kristal Nieves Way would mark the block where the fast-food worker died.

Albert Vann, a trailblazi­ng Black political leader who died in July, would be honored at the intersecti­on of MacDonough St. and Stuyvesant Ave. in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn. That spot would become Hon. Dr. Albert Vann Way.

During the vote Thursday, Councilman Chi Osse, a Brooklyn Democrat, described Vann as “a political giant.”

“This is a body that knows all about Dr. Vann’s commitment­s and investment­s in his home of Bed-Stuy and Crown Heights and in this city,” Osse said. “May all who walk our streets look up and see the name of our hometown here: Al Vann, pioneer of political Black Brooklyn.”

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