Wash. county trashes garbage bags with MLK's face

By MANUEL VALDES Associated Press Writer

SEATTLE (AP) - More than two years after his face was adopted as the
official logo for King County, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s profile is
on voter ballot envelopes, on metro buses, at the county council chambers,
and prominently displayed on the county's Web site.

But officials were concerned about one place they felt wasn't appropriate
for the slain civil rights leader's likeness - the county's trash bags.

The bags were quietly pulled from use earlier this summer, even though no
one from the public had complained. The pre-emptive move opened a window
into the delicate decisions officials have made after King County adopted
the face of the revered figure as its official emblem.

"It's new territory," said Carolyn Duncan, the county's communications
director.

King County - the most-populated county in Washington, with a county seat of
Seattle, and the 14th largest by population in the nation - adopted the logo
in 2006 and unveiled it the next year. It features a striking profile of
King in a black and white silhouette. King County had been originally
christened after former U.S. vice president William Rufus DeVane King, a
slave owner.

The possibility of plastering King's face on mundane county items like trash
bins or prisoner uniforms raised eyebrows among county officials when the
proposal was approved. The old logo was a generic crown.

The decision of where the new logo goes lies with Duncan and King County
Executive Ron Sims, who is black. As the head of communications, Duncan is
in charge of the messages - symbolic or not - King County sends.

Her challenge: to maintain the county brand, without splashing King's face
on something that's demeaning to King's history.

"Some of the things that people were concerned about were if the logo was on
the floor, if the logo was on garbage cans or dumpsters," Duncan said. "It
seemed unseemly to have an icon like Dr. King, to have his image on
something like a waste bin at a park."

Duncan said that the old crown logo was not used on trash bins or prison
uniforms, but communication directors in county departments were directed to
look carefully at where the logo is used.

Some county officials and African-American leaders in Seattle have no qualms
about using the image of King.

"Personally, we should use the logo wherever we traditionally printed that
logo," said Larry Gossett, the county council member who led the name and
logo change. Gossett said the symbol can be used "to do better."

Gossett, a longtime leader in the African-American community here, knew from
the beginning there would be challenges. His own son told him that he didn't
want to see King's face on a police car.

Tye Heckler of Heckler Associates - a design and advertising firm that
helped developed the Starbucks brand - said once the county approved the
logo, it accepted all the risks of using King's face, including the
possibility that the logo may be defaced someday. But as a government,
Heckler said, they have the freedom not to use the logo.

Steve Kline, a spokesman at the King Center in Atlanta, said there are no
set guidelines when it comes to the use of King's image, but there have been
examples of inappropriate use.

"Many years ago, some guy tried to make a knife with Mr. King on it," Kline
said. "Stuff like that is always a concern. They take it of a case-by-case
basis. They do try to monitor the commercial use of it."

While Kline said that King County is believed to be the first government to
take King's likeness as a logo, scores of local governments have named
streets, parks and even pool centers after the civil rights leader. But many
of those moves have carried a stigma: many Martin Luther King Jr. streets,
avenues, ways and boulevards are in low-income, crime-ridden areas.

But Gossett said that the logo has potential for good.

"You can use it to inspire and move for reforms (King) could have been be
very proud of," he said.

---

On the Net:

King County: http://www.kingcounty.gov


-- 
"Usually when people are sad, they don't do anything. They just cry over
their condition. But when they get angry, they bring about a change."
- Malcolm X, Malcolm X Speaks, 1965

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