Stretch of road in LA to be renamed Obama Boulevard

Former President Barack Obama is getting a stretch of road in Los Angeles named after him. 

LOS ANGELES (AP) -- A stretch of road in Los Angeles will be renamed after former President Barack Obama. 

A concert and ceremony is scheduled Saturday to unveil Obama Boulevard. The street will replace Rodeo Road, a 3 1/2-mile street that runs across the city's historic black neighborhood. It will also intersect with Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard and further establish a "presidential row" that includes Washington, Adams and Jefferson boulevards.

"With this change, we are publicly documenting what Obama's legacy as our nation's first black President means to our city and our South Los Angeles community," City Council President Herb Wesson said in a statement. 

"For every child who will drive down this street and see the President's name, this will serve as a physical reminder that no goal is out of reach and that no dream is too big."

A couple who proposed the name change told the Los Angeles Times say they wanted to raise the profile of the road, attract more funding for the Baldwin Hills/Crenshaw neighborhood and honor the 44th president.

While residents were receptive to having a street named after Obama, some believed organizers should have chosen a more prominent street. Wesson argued Rodeo Road was symbolically important: The road is home to Rancho Cienega Sports Complex, where Obama held a campaign rally when he was running for president in 2007.

For decades, discriminatory practices, including the use of racially restrictive covenants on deeds to keep people of color from buying homes, kept the area off-limits to non-whites.

After the U.S. Supreme Court outlawed housing discrimination, and segregation was scaled back, black residents moved into the formerly white enclave of Baldwin Hills and established the first of L.A.'s black middle- and upper-class neighborhoods. 

Black-owned businesses and cultural activities once thrived on Crenshaw Boulevard. But over the years, they struggled and there are ongoing efforts to revitalize the commercial corridor.  

Earl Ofari Hutchinson, a political analyst and author who has lived in the area for 50 years, said he hopes the name change will lead to more investments in the neighborhood.

"The area needs not just street name change, but also fresh programs, initiatives and spending on jobs, education, and housing programs for the mostly black and Hispanic low-income residents that live on or near Obama Boulevard," Hutchinson said. "This will truly be the greatest way to pay tribute to Obama."

 
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   This story has been corrected to show that the road being renamed is Rodeo Road, not Rodeo Boulevard.