Minneapolis residents watching their city burn night after night — with minimal intervention from authorities — began gearing up Saturday to take their safety into their own hands.
Online neighborhood groups were peppered with advice about keeping lights on, bringing garbage cans and propane tanks inside, keeping hoses and fire extinguishers at the ready, and staying in touch with other neighbors. Others simply packed up and left town, concerned for the safety of their families.
Maria Kramer was spending the afternoon packing her two cats and her valuables to drop off at a friend's house in Minnetonka. Then she was going to stop by a firefighter friend's house to pick up a few extinguishers to give to her neighbors near Chicago Avenue and 43rd Street.
She's lived in the neighborhood for 20 years and said her neighbors want to "have a fighting chance" at saving the racially and economically diverse area from looters and arsonists. They've been trying to coordinate their efforts with supplies, various directives like keeping their lights on and even hosing down the nearby automotive shop.
"It'd be sad to lose [our homes] but it's not as sad as someone being murdered," Kramer said. "We don't value property over people but we want to at least maintain our community as much as possible."
Travis Brew and his partner left their home in Minneapolis early last night after seeing the news of destructive unrest. Getting out of the city amid the traffic and street closures was hard enough, but they also soon realized they were low on gas. Brew said they endured multiple instances of using Google Maps to find an open gas station, only to find it closed. Now they're at his partner's parents' house near St. Cloud and are debating if and when they go back home.
"Just the overall lack of feeling of safety when I'm out in my garden watering my plants or taking my dog for a walk, or every time I hear a loud bang or see smoke, see burning debris on the street in front of my house, it was just an overall very generally uncomfortable feeling," Brew said. "When there's already enough to be concerned about in general going out into the community, going out into the world ... it can become too much for people really quickly."
In addition to suggestions about garbage cans, hoses and lights, one neighborhood's safety plan advised residents to prepare by charging phones, wetting lawns and removing heavy lawn ornaments that could be used to break windows. Council Member Andrew Johnson, who represents a ward in the southern half of the city, stressed in an e-mail to residents that they should not conduct neighborhood patrols.