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Street names and recognizing public figures

Street names and recognizing public figures

Opinion
'A rose by any other name would smell as sweet,' William Shakespeare famously wrote in his play, Romeo and Juliet.
The problem is, sometimes the bloom falls off the rose, and other times, the smell becomes something that isn't sweet at all.
A year ago, Bishop Grandin Boulevard was renamed Abinojii Mikanah, a name that translates to 'children's way' in Anishinaabemowin. Bishop Grandin Trail became Awasisak Meskanôw — 'the children's road' in Ininimowin, or Cree, and Grandin Street, which runs from Taché Avenue
to St. Joseph Street in St. Boniface became
Taapweewin, which means 'truth' in Michif.
Russell Wangersky / Free Press
A street sign for Wolseley Avenue
The name changes all came because of the recognition of the extent of Bishop Vital Grandin's troubling role in establishing residential schools.
With that change in mind, it may well be a reckoning is coming for Wolseley the school, Wolseley the avenue, and maybe even Wolseley the neighbourhood — to cite just one other troubling name from the past.
Wolseley School's parent council has looked at the possibility of changing the school's name, and the Winnipeg School Division has collected feedback on the idea, because the school is named after Col. Garnet Wolseley, who led a campaign of repression against Manitoba Métis. (Interestingly, the Manitoba Métis Federation has argued the name should stay, arguing that renaming landmarks and removing statues is a way of erasing a history of wrongdoing.)
But one thing has arisen out of the renaming process that should also be considered by the city going forward. The WSD set renaming criteria for the Wolseley school that said prospective names 'should represent the neighbourhood and community; should connect to learning for the students' and 'must avoid the names of people.'
The last one is an idea whose time may have come — avoiding the names of people.
Because, more than anything else, people are complicated.
Right now, the City of Winnipeg website devotes more than 300 words to explaining how it chooses to name a street after a person, saying that it wants 'to honour and commemorate noteworthy people associated with the city of Winnipeg.'
That includes 'a person who demonstrates excellence, courage or exceptional dedication to service in ways that bring special credit to the city of Winnipeg; a person who volunteers and gives extraordinary help or care to individuals, families or groups, or supports community services or humanitarian causes; a person who fosters equality and reduces discrimination' and even 'an early pioneer or group or settlers who have contributed to the development of the city.'
The city is so keen on naming streets after worthy Winnipeggers that the $200 fee for adding a name to the suggested street name reserve list is waived 'for applications recognizing individuals.'
But maybe streets shouldn't be named after people at all, because history is a long road, and our viewpoints — and our knowledge about the character and behaviour of people who may seem like great examples today — can change with the years and with new knowledge. We've certainly seen that here. It's been recognized in other places as well.
Wednesdays
Columnist Jen Zoratti looks at what's next in arts, life and pop culture.
St. John's, the capital of the province of Newfoundland and Labrador, has taken the approach of changing its street naming policy this month to exclude naming streets after individuals. Simply put, it can be fraught with difficulties.
'Naming streets after people carries a number of risks,' St. John's Coun. Ron Ellsworth said during a June 17 council meeting, including ' problematic legacies, political polarization, disparity in representation and cultural marginalization.'
The council vote in St. John's was unanimous, following the advice of the city's legal staff and the advice of the city's senior management.
Maybe it's not an approach that will garner much support from Winnipeg's council.
But maybe it's an idea whose time has come.
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It wasn't until I started to travel often for work, and to factories producing furniture around the world, that I started to look at what I took for granted back home in a new light. 'It's a beautiful material, and it's only found in the Canadian Prairies, just outside Winnipeg.' The Winnipeg-born designer, who moved to Montreal in 2021, worked with Gillis Quarry to locate stone pieces large enough for the design he had in mind. The tables were ground shipped in crates and driven carefully to the site, where a team of nine people were waiting to set up the 545-kilogram display tables and 225-kg side table. Fougere explains that a lot of his design decisions were pragmatic in nature, such as splitting the long display tables into a composition of two gestures, making them easier to manufacture, install and later move. 'I wanted to really show off the material with these pieces, so I elected to use fairly large heavy blocks of stone, and positioned them in a fairly brutal but balanced fashion,' he explains. 'The side table took a few forms, but I eventually landed on a vase-like piece that would hold a flower arrangement and also function as a practical side table.' The tables will eventually be moved and used in a government building in Ottawa. Thom Fougere Studio Thom Fougere furniture was prominent at the G7 Summit in Kananaskis, Alta. Thom Fougere Studio Thom Fougere furniture was prominent at the G7 Summit in Kananaskis, Alta. The G7 summit design project has been the most high-profile commission 1×1 Architecture has been involved in, Cooke says. It was also one with the swiftest turnaround time. 'Federal projects usually take multiple years to deliver, so for this one to have started in October and finished in June is an extremely aggressive schedule,' Cooke says. 'We had to get design signoff from the federal government on the chosen scheme, then we had to produce construction drawings so that the contractor — who had only 14 days to construct the entire project — could build it.' Their main scope of work was the Outreach Room where the G7 Nations and Outreach Countries came together on the last day of the summit. The conference room had windows overlooking the Rocky Mountains, which were fitted with rough-sawn spruce timbers in front of an existing curtain wall. 'These timbers were culled from a firebreak initiative around the town of Canmore, which is only 30 miles away from Kananaskis,' Cooke says. Thom Fougere Studio Thom Fougere's side table doubles as a vase. Thom Fougere Studio Thom Fougere's side table doubles as a vase. 'Watching the news, it's hard to ignore the forest fires that we're currently dealing with annually. So it was a nice way to also tell the story of Canada's commitment to forestry stewardship,' Jull adds. 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Every piece of reporting AV produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates. Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

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