USA TODAY US Edition

Cincinnati can’t afford to fix fading BLM mural

- Sharon Coolidge and Briana Rice

CINCINNATI – In the aftermath of civil rights protests last summer that swept through the country, local artists painted a Black Lives Matter mural in front of Cincinnati City Hall.

Blessed by Cincinnati city officials and unveiled on Juneteenth amid singing, dancing, poetry and political speeches, the mural was an internet sensation.

But once the fanfare died down, the downtown mural was left to rot.

Street barriers protecting the mural were taken down the next day. A councilwom­an stepped in to briefly put the barriers back.

Somebody dumped red paint on it one night. No one was arrested, and the paint stain remains.

Friday, as the Pan-African flag was raised outside City Hall for the first time, celebrated with a ceremony that drew people from Cleveland, Dayton and Columbus, the mural was a shadow of itself.

It’s coated in salt used to battle the snow and ice. Jagged cracks of asphalt peek through where the street has eroded. The red paint stain is a faded pink blur, marring a corner of the mural.

Cincinnati City Council unanimousl­y passed an ordinance last June 17 saying the mural should be painted and maintained by the city.

Within a week it became apparent that there was no plan to preserve the mural, so council members asked the administra­tion to fix it. What they got was a memo from then-City Manager Patrick Duhaney saying that taking care of the mural and closing the street would cost $25,000 – and that there was no money to take care of the mural or build a pedestrian plaza.

So nothing happened. Alandes Powell, who was behind the mural, has said those conversati­ons are still going on, and she’s hopeful.

“Our vision was for it not to leave until we’ve made progress in these areas, that the bat signal needs to stay there,” Powell told The Cincinnati Enquirer, part of the USA TODAY Network, on Friday.

The artists said they are not surprised about the state of their mural today.

Powell is working with City Councilman Greg Landsman and Mayor John Cranley to fix the mural. Proposals include repainting it where it is, repainting a smaller version, and even painting a second mural on a city street that’s easier to close to traffic.

“It’s definitely going to be preserved,” Landsman said. “It’s an absolutely beautiful mural, and it’s representa­tive of not just the critical Black Lives Matter movement but these incredibly talented artists and the stories they have to tell.”

Holly Stutz Smith, the mayor’s chief of staff, said Cranley has spoken with the artists and the Urban League of Greater Southweste­rn Ohio and will soon bring forward a plan to pay for paint and add a historical marker to the current mural location.

Powell estimated it would cost $10,000 to $20,000 to touch up the mural each year. Landsman said it’s difficult to close the street in front of City Hall.

Councilwom­an Lemon Kearney is hopeful a pedestrian plaza will still be created.

“It should be a beautiful place for people to gather and talk about race relations,” Kearney said. “This (last) summer people came and they talked. City Hall is the citizen’s house. It would be nice to have a gathering space in front of the people’s house.”

Kearney said other cities have street murals that are somehow protected.

“We need to see how we can preserve it,” Kearney said.

To Brandon Hawkins, project manager for the mural, just the painting of the mural is symbolic of the Black Lives Matter movement.

“The day it was completed was more important than the days that continue to pass by,” Powell said.

 ?? ALBERT CESARE/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Robert Thomas stops on a bicycle near the Black Lives Matter mural on Plum Street on Friday. Last June, 70 artists to design and paint a Black Lives Matter mural downtown.
ALBERT CESARE/USA TODAY NETWORK Robert Thomas stops on a bicycle near the Black Lives Matter mural on Plum Street on Friday. Last June, 70 artists to design and paint a Black Lives Matter mural downtown.

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