We should rename our city as well, I suppose.
[This] should happen. Immediately.
And no, I'm not joking.
To me, the meaning and power of language has the ability to evolve far beyond its original etymology. Yes, the city was named after Andrew Jackson. But if you say "Jacksonville, Florida" to 100 random people on the streets, what's the first image that pops to mind? The second? The third? The hundredth? I virtually guarantee it's not the man that the city was arbitrarily named after 201 years ago. Collectively, the word "Jacksonville" has established its own meaning and identity over the centuries, far outside of Andrew Jackson, to the point that - besides in the history books - the namesake and the city are almost completely divorced. It's like an Atomic Fireball. What kid pops an atomic fireball in their mouth and thinks, "man, it feels wrong to eat this cinnamon candy because the product was launched in the 1950s in the wake of the bombing of Hiroshima?" Should the candy be renamed? Probably. But its developed its own identity divorced from the etymology.
In the same way, in a perfect world, would the city be named after a dude who has such a shithead to Native Americans? Of course not. But is it worth flushing 201 years of collective identity and history as a city down the drain to correct something that maybe 1% of the population even actively thinks about on an annual basis? I'd argue that's like curing a common cold with an atomic weapon.
From a purely pragmatic standpoint, 13 years later, our city hasn't even figured out how to properly renamed FCCJ. The absolutely colossal undertaking that would be involved to change every street sign, postal address, letterhead, school and public facility name, etc. would set us back 20 years. From a budget perspective, it would make jail relocation seem cheap.
All that said, in regards to the statue, that's a different thing. You see the statue, you immediately think of Andrew Jackson. It has no other meaning. It's a statue celebrating Andrew Jackson. That one is much more open to debate, in my opinion.