The city of Austin, Texas, could be headed for a name change because of founder Stephen F. Austin’s pro-slavery stance, according to a report recently drafted by officials.

The state capital’s city council is considering renaming dozens of streets, parks, monuments and landmarks with ties to the Confederacy.

The city name itself is included on that list — which designates it as “not directly tied to the Confederacy and/or the Civil War but within the spirit of the resolution representing slavery, segregation, and/or racism.”

Stephen F. Austin, known as the “Father of Texas,” fought to defend slavery and saw it as vital to the city’s sugar and cotton production, says the report published last week by the city’s Equity Office.

He “believed that if slaves were emancipated they would turn into ‘vagabonds, a nuisance and a menace,’ wanted slaveowners to be compensated if their slaves were emancipated,” the report notes, citing the 1926 book “The Life of Stephen F. Austin” by Eugene Barker.

The Austin city name is up for “secondary review,” meaning it requires “more analysis” by council members.

Also included on the list are the neighborhood name of Bouldin Creek, which was named after slave owner Col. James Bouldin, and a historical marker for Major William Martin “Buck” Walton, the late governor of Texas who served as a major in the Confederate army.

The report lists changing several street names — like Dixie Drive, Confederate Avenue and Plantation Road — as high priorities and estimates it’ll cost $5,956.23 to make the updates.

In compiling the list, chief equity officer Brion Oaks wrote that “nearly all monuments to the Confederacy and its leaders were erected without a true democratic process.

“People of color often had no voice and no opportunity to raise concerns about the city’s decision to honor Confederate leaders,” he continued. “This process not only calls attention to remediating symbols of the Confederacy in our city, but creates a new opportunity for us to rename these symbols in order to commemorate the current values and legacy of those we choose to honor in our community’s public spaces.”

Austin has already renamed the streets Robert E. Lee Road, which honored the Confederate general, and Jeff Davis Avenue, which commemorated the president of the Confederacy.