I arrived in Kansas City on a rainy September night in 1969. I had driven all day, mostly in the rain, from my hometown of Louisville, KY, and didn’t have an apartment or a place to stay. All I had was a suitcase and a job with The Star, which I was to start in a few days.
I found a Travelodge downtown and asked if a room was available. Sorry, the desk clerk told me, no vacancies. When I asked for suggestions on where I might get a room, he said, “You might try the Admiral Motel over on The Paseo.”
“On what?” I said.
“The Paseo,” the clerk repeated. “It’s a boulevard divided by a median.”
I had never heard of a street with the word “the” preceding its name, and I had never heard a name like “Paseo.”
(I learned within the last few days it is named for an iconic Mexico City thoroughfare called Paseo de la Reforma.)
The clerk gave me directions, and I drove over to Admiral Boulevard and The Paseo and spent my first night in KC at the Admiral Motel, which last year was renovated and converted to a Rodeway Inn.
Since that first night, I have always loved The Paseo, not only for its distinctive and elegant name but also for its wide and grassy median, its smooth-flowing traffic patterns and the variety of neighborhoods it cuts through.
And so it is with a sense of propriety that I oppose the effort by black political leaders and a group of black ministers to change the name of The Paseo to Martin Luther King Boulevard.

Near Research Medical Center
This has quickly become a contentious issue. The Star’s Bill Turque, who covers City Hall, had a front-page story on it over the weekend, and today three black community leaders spoke about it on Steve Kraske’s “Up to Date” show on KCUR-FM.
On Friday, advocates of the name change will stage a march and a rally to promote the cause. The march is scheduled to start at 5:30 p.m. at 34th and The Paseo. It will proceed north to 27th Street and end at Prospect Avenue, where U.S. Rep. Emanuel Cleaver will be the lead speaker.
Before going any further, I want to say I am totally in favor of renaming a boulevard or parkway after King…just not The Paseo. My preference — which I suggested in an email to Kansas City Parks and Recreation Department Director Mark McHenry yesterday — is Linwood Boulevard.
Unlike The Paseo, Linwood is not a distinctive name with intrinsic appeal. It is, however, a major east-west boulevard, stretching from Van Brunt Boulevard on the east to Broadway on the west. In addition, because of its east-west layout, Linwood (or Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard) would be seen and traveled by a wider cross-section of Kansas City residents. In straight language, as I told McHenry, “it would get greater exposure to white and Hispanic people than The Paseo would.”
The Paseo, as you know, runs north and south on Kansas City’s East Side, where a majority of Kansas City’s African-American population lives.
**
The main reason this issue has mushroomed into a controversy is that the Kansas City Board of Parks and Recreation Commissioners, which oversees the Parks Department (which has jurisdiction over the city’s renowned parkway and boulevard system) has mishandled the matter.
In a March 23 letter to two black leaders, Park Board President Jean-Paul Chaurand wrote that long-standing naming policy is to honor only those “who have made significant and outstanding contributions of land, funds, goods or services” to the city or park system.
Chaurand went on to say the park board “believes wholeheartedly the work and legacy of Dr. King merit recognition and gratitude,” and he suggested the establishment of a “citizen-based commission to develop, examine and recommend how best the city can pay tribute to Dr. King and his legacy.”
All I can say about that is…worse than lame.
Chaurand should never have said the policy is to honor people who have made significant contributions to the city or park system. That is incredibly short-sighted.
Martin Luther King Jr.’s legacy supersedes any parochial barometer such as whether he personally made a significant contribution to the city or the park system. Hell, he changed the course of the nation and deserves to have a thoroughfare or major building named after him in every major U.S. city!
Compounding the problem is that Chaurand has now apparently decided to duck the issue publicly. Turque was not able to reach him for his story, and he didn’t respond to Kraske’s attempts to get him to appear on, or at least speak by phone on, “Up to Date.”
On the plus side, McHenry, the Parks Department director, opened the door for a compromise in his email to me and also in a conversation we had this afternoon.
For this post, I’ll stick to what he said in the email, which was…
“We agree a major thoroughfare does warrant bearing the name of Dr. King. This has been said to the individuals making this proposal on more than one occasion.”
Regarding my suggestion that Linwood would be a good alternative, McHenry wrote…
“Linwood Boulevard has been suggested for the exact reasons you have mentioned, along with a couple other east/west streets.”
**
The process of honoring Martin Luther King Jr. by naming a boulevard or parkway after him would have been smoother and more amicable if not for Chaurand’s ill-advised March 23 letter. What he did was hand black ministers and black political leaders a megaphone they are now using to bellow that the Park Board is insensitive to and unappreciative of King’s legacy.
The letter gave Paseo-name-change advocates a reason to rail and chant, march and rally, and stir the cauldron of emotions.
That is regrettable, and I hope it doesn’t result in a name change for a very special boulevard, one I have had a strong sentimental attachment with the last 49 years.
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