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Council Urged to Develop Policy for Naming Facilities

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What’s in a name? Plenty, if you ask Los Angeles City Councilman Joel Wachs. And that’s the problem.

Wachs asked his council colleagues Tuesday to create a policy for naming city properties. Among his first proposals: that the person be dead before a building, park or pool is named after them. And that properties be renamed if that person’s reputation becomes discredited.

Several City Council members supported creating a policy but they warned that communities should have input. The city was criticized last year when the library commission first denied a request to name a new Watts library after one of its biggest community boosters. The commission ultimately relented.

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But Wachs says facilities shouldn’t be named after people, anyway, but after their locations.

The council agreed Tuesday to a proposal by Nate Holden to name the Rancho Cienega Recreation Center gymnasium after the late Lonnie Wilson Jr., a community activist. The council also voted to name the Rancho Cienega swimming pool after Celes King III, a rights activist.

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