Leave Negro Creek alone

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Errio said there had been a lot of heated talk from both sides on the Internet regarding the issue. However, the debate with Cosmo Andoloro, who is now spearheading the name change, is currently halted.

Errio said he and Andoloro had a “civil” conversation on Sunday.

“He said, ‘We should sit down and have a beer some time. We have a lot more in common than you think,’” Errio said.

In addition to determining the wording on the plaque and raising funds, Errio said a location for the monument must be determined.

“The general opinion is probably in Seatonville because that’s where the creek is the widest and easiest accessible,” he said.

Errio said he believes the name might eventually be changed.

“If it happens, it happens,” he said. “You have to accept it. If it says Adams-Love Creek on the map, that’s what it’s called.”

Errio said the creek will always remain Negro Creek in the heart of supporters, which would be an ironic twist to those who want the name changed. Before the efforts to change the name, Errio said many people didn’t even know the creek had a name.

“It was the ‘creek,’ or the ‘crick,’” he said, adding if the name is changed, it will only affect local residents.

“It’s a 10-mile stretch of creek that nobody heard of before this situation, and it will be a 10-mile stretch of creek that nobody outside this area will ever hear of after this situation,” he said. “The government does what government’s going to do, and you live with it.”

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