Victoria is reviving the discussion to rename Trutch Street, as cities nationwide reckon with monuments and streets that 颅honour figures with racist 颅legacies.
Trutch Street is named for Joseph Trutch, chief commissioner of lands and works in the 1850s whose contempt for Indigenous people showed in his racist speech and policies that reduced the size of reserves.
Victoria councillors Ben Isitt, Jeremy Loveday and Sarah Potts, and Mayor Lisa Helps, are proposing changing the two-block stretch of Trutch Street to Truth Street. Councillors are expected to discuss the proposed name change Thursday.
Isitt said the idea of a name change has been around for the past decade and many 颅community members have expressed an interest in 颅removing Trutch鈥檚 name from the city street.
鈥淗e lived on this Island for a relatively short period of time. His contribution in public life had a devastating impact on Indigenous people, and so it makes no sense to me that the City of Victoria would choose to honour a municipal asset after this individual, he said.
Margaret O鈥橠onnell, a Trutch Street resident for 30 years, said she was pleased the idea of a name change has been picked up again.
鈥淚t鈥檚 time for us to move on to something more inspiring and hopeful for a name for our street,鈥 O鈥橠onnell said.
Residents petitioned for a name change about a decade ago, and in 2018 a community meeting was held to discuss his legacy. This year, a group of University of Victoria students presented a petition to Victoria councillors calling for a name change.
鈥淭rutch cast Indigenous Peoples as lawless and violent, dehumanized them, and systematically displaced them from their land. Today, Victoria still commemorates this blatantly racist individual by naming a street after him,鈥 the group wrote in the petition, which has just over 1,300 signatures.
When O鈥橠onnell first heard of the name-change debate years ago, she said she was just 鈥渨aking up鈥 to the effects of 颅colonization on Indigenous 颅people and she took it upon herself to learn about Trutch鈥檚 legacy.
鈥淗e had a cruel heart,鈥 she said.
Florence Dick, a member of the Songhees Nation, said she鈥檚 more interested in seeing concrete action to improve the economic status of Indigenous people than a name change.
鈥淲hy don鈥檛 you come on the reserve and see what we really need?鈥 she said. 鈥淲e need 颅people鈥檚 homes repaired.鈥
Dick said Indigenous people have been deprived of the resources of their own land, and live in inadequate reserve homes 鈥 the result of racist colonial policy 鈥 that perpetuate health issues.
The motion coming to councillors Thursday asks council to invite comments from the Songhees and Esquimalt Nations, the City Family, residents of Trutch Street and the Fairfield Gonzales Community Association. The motion also directs city staff to report back on the implications of changing the name for the approximately 60 households that would be affected by an address change.
Residents would likely have to change their addresses for various accounts and documents, such as electricity, internet and phone bills, car insurance, financial documents, driver鈥檚 licences, and employment and educational documents.