Controversy over the use of "Dixie" has repeatedly arisen in the larger Southern Utah community.
Dixie State University The Confederate flag was removed as a Dixie College symbol in 1993. The Confederate soldier "Rodney the Rebel" was eliminated as the mascot in 2005 and the nickname "Rebels" was discontinued in 2007. That same year, the Dixie State College administration considered affiliation with the
University of Utah, and "U.U. officials said dropping the 'baggage' of Dixie would be mandatory." "'Dixie' has connotations of the Old South, the Confederacy, and racism," Randy Dryer, then the chairman of the university's trustees, wrote to the academic journal
The Chronicle of Higher Education. The affiliation with the University of Utah did not happen at that time. In 2012, many articles appeared as the college was about to make "the leap to
university status next year". An African American student told the
Tribune he was shocked to find old college yearbooks with photos "of students in blackface, holding mock slave auctions, dressed in Confederate uniforms and staging parade floats and skits that seem to ridicule blacks, such as a crowd in black face behind a white student dressed as a Col. Sanders-type figure. 'In 1968 they were still doing minstrel shows,'" he said. The college student body president said in 2012 that when "on recruiting trips to
California that he encountered students unwilling to consider studying at a place called Dixie. "One said, 'Your name makes me shudder,' and walked away ..." Faculty members who raised the issue complained about being asked to leave the community. In July 2015, following the
Charleston church shooting, Dannelle Larsen-Rife again editorialized for renaming Dixie State University. She was interviewed on an episode of the state-wide
public radio program
"RadioWest" on station
KUER-FM, with professors from the
University of Utah and the
University of Wyoming. A substantial statue of rebel soldiers and a horse, with a Confederate flag displayed, was returned to its sculptor. In 2020, in the wake of the incident of the
murder of George Floyd by city police officers in
Minneapolis, Minnesota, and the extensive nationwide
subsequent protests, the issue again returned to the forefront of public attention. Jamie Belnap, a former resident of St. George, wrote "Now, seven years after the vote at DSU [to retain the Dixie name], murmurings about the name 'Dixie' have begun again. There's a new petition and, unsurprisingly, online detractors from the community have already begun to emerge.... Isn't it time DSU sends a message to its students of color that it cares more about equality than nostalgia?" On December 14, 2020, the University's board of trustees voted to recommend removing the word
Dixie from the school's name. The 2021 session of the
Utah Legislature meeting in the
Utah State Capitol in
Salt Lake City voted to take the recommendation, starting a year-long process to solicit input and consider alternative names. The Board of Trustees of D.S.U. and the Utah State Board of Education both voted unanimously voted to move forward with the new name of "Utah Tech University". Earlier than expected, after in November 2021, the
Utah State Legislature was called into a special session by 18th
Governor of Utah Spencer Cox (born 1975, serving since 2021). While the primary purpose for that session was to approve redistricting maps following the
2020 U.S. Decennial Census, The name change bill for Dixie State was also included on topics to be raised and discussed by Utah legislators that term. While the issue continued to be contentious, the decision to bring the issue early into special session at the State Capitol was made because leaders felt no more information was needed, only a vote and decision. Both chambers of the
bicameral state legislature voted on November 10, 2021 to change the name of the university near St. George to
Utah Tech University effective eight months later in July 2022.
Dixie Convention Center In 2020, controversy also affected the name of the
Dixie Convention Center. After a rebranding study, the governing board voted to change the Dixie Center name to Greater Zion Convention Center, consistent with the area's already renamed Greater Zion Convention and Tourism Office, which had an earlier name change the year before in 2019. "The vote to change [the Convention Center name] to Greater Zion on June 23 led to a flood of social media posts and an
online petition that gathered over 17,000 signatures of public citizens in favor of keeping Dixie as the name." "[A]fter a public comment period in which multiple community members expressed strong support of the Dixie name, the Interlocal Agency amended the motion to temporarily revert to the Dixie Center name and to meet again on the issue in six months."
Dixie Regional Medical Center On July 16, 2020, Intermountain Health Care announced that the Dixie Regional Medical Center’s name would become Intermountain
St. George Regional Hospital effective six months later on January 1, 2021. Mitch Cloward, hospital administrator, said "The meaning of Dixie is not clear for everyone. For some, it only requires explanation; for others, who are not from this area, it has offensive connotations.... Our hospital name should be strong, clear and make everyone we serve feel safe and welcome." == Today ==