First Amendment advocates say a Minneapolis board broke state law this week when its members stopped journalists from covering a public meeting on a $200 million North Side infrastructure project.
It wasn't the first time. And Minneapolis officials knew the same committee members had stopped journalists from reporting on previous meetings.
In December, journalists from Fox 9 complained to Minneapolis communications staff that board members told them they couldn't record video for a story on the development of the Upper Harbor Terminal site, a 48-acre plot of city-owned riverfront land in north Minneapolis. The redevelopment, funded by a combination of private and public money, is what Mayor Jacob Frey considers "one of the most important projects Minneapolis has undertaken in decades," and residents have passionately disagreed about the planning.
"It's a public meeting," Fox 9 reporter Tom Lyden wrote to Minneapolis' communications staff on Dec. 12, including director Greta Bergstrom. "We cover those. With camera(s)."
Bergstrom agreed the media had the right to attend and record the meeting. "We are working internally to make City staff aware of this who may have been under the wrong impression," she said.
On Wednesday, six weeks later, members of the board halted a meeting to tell journalists they could not record or take pictures, saying they wouldn't discuss certain business items with reporters present. Some of the board members said they did not trust the media to accurately represent them.
One member, longtime community activist Bill English, said in an interview Friday that members were suspicious of the "white media" and its past portrayal of black communities.
Several city officials were present at the meeting, including Shauen Pearce, an aide to Frey, staff members for the department of Community Planning & Economic Development and City Council Member Phillipe Cunningham.