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After initially being proposed five years ago, City Councilman Steve Cohn’s idea to name Sacramento alleys has finally been put into action. On Oct.11, the City Council approved a list of new names for the alleys.
Cohn said that the alleys need names to help residents identify them more easily.
“Instead of saying ‘the alley between L and Capitol,’ you could just say the name of the alley,” he said.
The process for naming the alleys took so long, Cohn said, because it is very complicated.
“It took a while because we had to do a lot of outreach,” he said. "It's part of the rules and regulations for naming streets."
Cohn said that approval was needed from various administrative agencies like the Department of Transportation, the Sacramento Police Department and the U.S. Postal Service. Permission from these agencies was needed to coordinate and integrate the new names without creating duplication or confusion.
All of the alley names begin with the letter of the street they are directly south of. However, there was often disagreement on what words should be used for the naming.
“My original proposal was names of international cities, and some (residents) liked that, but others didn’t,” Cohn said.
To reconcile the differences, he said that city staff asked local neighborhood and business associations, such as the Downtown Sacramento Partnership, what kind of names they would like to see by holding public events throughout 2008 and 2009. Names relating to Sacramento's history and culture were often popular, like Democracy and Jazz.
The proposal was also delayed several times during the past five years.
"It was put on the shelf from time to time," Cohn said. "There wasn't a lot of people working full-time on it."
Cohn said that street signs will not be put up on the alleys anytime soon, especially with their $300 price tag.
“Little by little, as the economy improves and our budget improves, we may go back and appropriate the money,” he said.
The alleys are located in between B and W streets, and many stretch between Third and 30th streets. The first letter in each alley’s name is the same as the street that it is directly south of.
The Sacramento Press high-lighted some of the alleys below.
Blues Alley
Formerly called the B and C Streets Alley, this area of Blues Alley faces Grant Park.
(Image by: John G. Hernandez)
Blues Alley is located in the northern part of the city that lies near many industrial buildings and residences.
Saleh Tyebjee, 26, is an engineer who lives in the downtown area. He said that although naming the alleys gives them some much-needed character, the names will ultimately make it more difficult for people to navigate on the grid system.
“It’s one of the nice things about living on the grid,” he said. “You always know where you are. (Naming the alleys) makes it a little more difficult to find your way around.”
Tyebjee said that if he could have named the alley, he would have called it “Grant Alley” because the alley runs right up to Grant Park.
Chinatown Alley
Raiders Rooters, on the corner of Chinatown Alley.
(Image by: John G. Hernandez)
South of Blues Alley is Chinatown Alley, which runs through some of Sacramento’s oldest neighborhoods.
Jeff Laible lives off of Chinatown Alley. The 52-year-old installation mechanic said that he believes naming the alleys will actually help people navigate better throughout the central city.
“It’s not just the alley between C and D,” he said. “If you say ‘Chinatown Alley,’ you know which one it is.”
Laible said that he has no preference when it comes to names for the alleys, as long as everyone actually knows the alleys’ names.
Democracy Alley
A morning-jogger passes by Democratic Alley.
(Image by: John G. Hernandez)
Eggplant Alley
Eggplant Alley in a residential area in Midtown Sacramento.
(Image by: John G. Hernandez)
Forty-seven-year-old promoter and resident of Eggplant Alley Jerry Perry said that he had trouble understanding how the name “Eggplant” was decided on.
“I cannot believe that they couldn’t find something more relevant historically than the word ‘eggplant,’ ” he said. “(It) sounds like some 1920s cartoon character lives here.”
Perry said that he has lots of ideas for the alley that he thinks would have been more suitable, like “Excellent Alley.”
“I think it would have been more exciting if they had found more historical Sacramento characters,” he said. “A lot of the names they chose are weak.”
The rest of the alleys will be showcased throughout the course of this week.
What do you think of the city's names for the alleys? Leave your thoughts in the conversation below.
John G. Hernandez contributed to this story and created the video.
total bummer. I don't believe the names are worth learning quite frankly- it would be a bit embarrassing to tell a wayward visitor to be on the lookout for a sign reading Eggplant or other such drivel. Bad Decisions 1 Sacramentans 0
One of the reasons the whole thing took so long was that city government kept being cut back and reshuffled so much there wasn't great continuity in the oversight of the process. In the end, I think the names are vapid and generic, with a few exceptions, I think. Declaring that somehow Democratic Alley, Jazz Alley, and Blues Alley are uniquely characteristic of Sacramento's rich history is just sad. I tried to stress this point by suggesting Uvula Alley at one point, because, you know, there are also a lot of uvulas in Sacramento.
Similarly, declaring that there was a lot of community outreach in the naming process doesn't mean there actually was. Conferring with business organizations (I'm starting to get that this is usually what the council really means by "community outreach") isn't the same as reaching out to artists and historians and other scholars for suggestions. Business doesn't name things--it brands them. Business comes up with crap like Arco Arena. And bureaucrats come up with things like Democratic Alley, because, you know, we're a government town.
It's kind of a shame. Small things like this actually matter. They subtly give character to a city. They help people who don't live there get some idea of how the city views itself. The easiest way for a city to do that is to celebrate its local heroes. And you celebrate them by naming things after them. Like Matsui Alley.
The really funny one is Liestal Alley. I paused when I read it, thinking, well, now, there's the name of a local hero I don't know. I discovered that it was our sister city in Switzerland. Switzerland? Couldn't we have at least found something an hour or two away, you know, like the way we promote our tourism?
Puente Alley? Anyone? Anyone...?