Scoop: Salt Lake City Council weighs César Chávez street name change

The Salt Lake City Council is considering renaming a stretch of 500 South, which honors César Chávez, following sexual abuse allegations against the late civil rights leader, Axios has learned.

Why it matters: Cities, states and universities across the U.S. are reexamining Chávez’s legacy, with some weighing whether to rename streets, buildings and public spaces that bear his name.

State of play: Council Chair Alejandro Puy, who represents one of two heavily Latino districts in Utah’s capital, told Axios that the council is working on a formal proposal on the potential name change.

  • “Being an immigrant Latino, this touches me in so many different ways,” Puy said, adding that the accusations were “very painful and disappointing” to learn.
  • He noted the causes Chávez fought for were always bigger than one person.
  • Honoring civil rights icon Dolores Huerta has come up in early discussions as a possible alternative, he said, though the council plans to seek community feedback before moving forward.

Driving the news: Members of the Latino-majority council first started discussing a name change on Wednesday, according to Puy, after a New York Times investigation detailed extensive evidence that Chávez sexually abused women and girls as young as 12 over decades, including United Farm Workers leader Huerta…

Story continues

TRENDING NOW

LATEST LOCAL NEWS