It wasn't long after George Floyd was honored in a stirring service beamed around the country that work resumed for both politicians and community members geared toward a goal of racial justice.
Reforms were the topic at a closed roundtable on police brutality just a few blocks west of 38th and Chicago late Thursday afternoon organized by the office of U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar. She along with Gov. Tim Walz, Mayor Jacob Frey and others listened to citizen concerns.
Walz said the meeting, which was closed to the press, was full of "raw emotion" and an overwhelming desire to seize the moment for changes to policing methods and oversight.
Minnesota lawmakers are set to convene a previously scheduled special session at the end of next week.
"To think that all this momentum is going to stop in a legislative session, that is absolutely ludicrous," Walz said.
Walz cited bail reform as one area where he sees the potential for bipartisan collaboration.
Omar also joined in the roundtable at Sabathani Community Center. The Minneapolis Democrat, joined by fellow U.S. Rep. Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts, enumerated federal legislation they will push: an independent agency to investigate police-involved killings and excessive use of force, and emergency funds to help rebuild neighborhoods where properties were set ablaze or looted.
Frey said a road map for reform is taking shape but that the Minneapolis police union's contract is likely to be the stumbling block. City Council Member Jeremiah Ellison said the city needs to "dramatically reimagine" how it keeps residents safe and consider "if policing is needed at all."