It's just a minor tweak so that taking a hurricane's wind speed to the nearest 5 kt, converting it to mph, and then rounding to the nearest 5 mph doesn't cause a contradiction of a hurricane's classification. If you had a 115-kt hurricane (defined to be Category 4), which converts to 132.3 mph, you would end up rounding down to a 130 mph hurricane (Category 3 on the older scale, Category 4 with this tweak). See it now? If you're wondering, the above converting and rounding with wind speeds is how NHC handles all tropical cyclones.
The name change earlier that Zach mentioned was just to emphasize that this scale only classifies hurricanes by winds alone. We found through studies of recent landfalls that the magnitude of the hurricane's winds don't always correlate with the intensity of other hazards like storm surge.