If it had been up to me, I wouldn't have named a San Francisco elementary school after U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein. As a general rule, it feels unseemly and premature — not to mention risky — to name schools and parks and buildings for living people.
Remember the Richard Nixon Freeway, which had to be hastily renamed the Marina Freeway after the president's resignation in disgrace in 1974? And the building named after Jeffrey Epstein at the Interlochen Center for the Arts?
All in all, it's better to wait until people are dead before building monuments to them.
But in the case of Dianne Feinstein Elementary School in San Francisco, the deed is already done. The school was named for her 14 years ago, and renaming it at this point seems ludicrous. She was, after all, the first female mayor of the city where the school is located, and she's a well-regarded liberal politician who's been elected by Californians to the U.S. Senate six consecutive times.
But Feinstein got caught up in the school district's current project to rebrand schools that bear the names of historical figures who can't stand up to modern scrutiny — colonizers, environmental abusers, human rights violators and the like. Earlier this year, a committee began to consider the relevance and appropriateness of school names, and it has now put forward a list of 42 schools it believes should be renamed.
The schools include one named after President Roosevelt — the committee doesn't know which Roosevelt it's named for, but apparently neither Teddy nor FDR is acceptable. There's also George Washington High School ("slaveowner, colonizer," say the committee's terse notes summarizing reasons for the recommendations). Also schools named for Abraham Lincoln, Thomas Jefferson, Paul Revere and Feinstein, among others.
Each of the schools has been asked to propose alternative names for itself by Dec. 18, preferably names grounded in "social and economic justice." Ultimately the school board will have to sign off on any changes.
It is entirely reasonable to reconsider school names. Attitudes evolve. History is reviewed and revised, and yesterday's heroes won't always be those we admire most today. Public schools have too often been named for white men who don't look like the students who study there. Worse, they have sometimes been named for people best known for dishonorable, offensive or racist behavior.