A mural of Cesar Chavez in San Francisco’s Mission District was painted over this week, becoming one of the first visible public reckonings with newly surfaced allegations of sexual abuse against the labor leader.The artwork, which covered the facade of the Latin Rock Music House at 25th and York Streets, was removed Wednesday by the building’s owner, Richard Segovia, along with artist Carlos “Kookie” Gonzalez, according to ABC7 Eyewitness News. The decision came days after a New York Times investigation detailed allegations that Chavez abused women and girls connected to the United Farm Workers movement. “I did this to let everyone know,” Segovia said. “Let’s get the ball rolling.” Gonzalez, who has painted Chavez multiple times over the past three decades, said the allegations prompted an immediate reassessment. A planned new mural featuring Chavez has already been revised to instead center labor leader Dolores Huerta, who has publicly said she was among those harmed. The removal marks a rapid shift in how Chavez is being publicly commemorated, particularly in California, where his legacy has long been institutionalized through murals, school names, and a state holiday.That reassessment is now extending beyond street-level tributes. In Sacramento, the California Museum said it plans to remove Chavez from the California Hall of Fame, an honor he has held since 2006, citing the seriousness of the allegations. The museum’s move would be the first time it has rescinded the distinction and signals how quickly institutions are responding as the story develops. In Denver, a bust of Chavez was removed from a park in Tennyson, and the city’s mayor said the Chavez name will be stripped from another park and a civic holiday after the motion is approved by the Denver City Council.Elsewhere in the Bay Area, officials and community leaders are weighing similar changes. At San Francisco State University, administrators are moving to temporarily cover a Chavez mural and rename a student center that has borne his name for decades, while local politicians have said they would support removing his name from public sites altogether. For decades, Chavez occupied a near-unassailable place in the American civil rights canon, credited with advancing labor protections for farmworkers. The allegations—based on interviews with dozens of people and internal union records—have prompted a swift and uneasy recalibration of that legacy.