Davion Jones never had much use for the Minneapolis Police Department growing up.
From an early age, he saw its officers not as protectors, but as unwanted authority figures who were quick to pull over young Black men like him, talk to them disrespectfully and force them to sit handcuffed on the curb, in full view of passing motorists — run-ins, he said, that left him traumatized and humiliated. And so instead of calling 911, his family "figured out our problems a whole different way," which landed Jones in trouble with the law more than once.
"I'd rather call my grandma than I'd call the police. My grandma's 70-something years old, you feel me? She's getting old," said Jones, 28. "And I would call her before I call a 19-year-old police officer or a 37-year-old police officer."
With citywide elections looming in November, Minneapolis faces a choice about what the future of policing looks like and whether the MPD can reshape itself into the needs of a changed world often full of mistrust for law enforcement since George Floyd's murder and the protests and riots that followed.
Voters will consider a proposed charter amendment, which in removing a minimum police staffing requirement would pave the way for a new public safety agency that would send unarmed civil service groups to handle 911 calls involving homelessness, substance abuse and mental illness, while maintaining a smaller number of armed "peace officers" to respond to violent crimes.
Jones looked on early this month as Police Chief Medaria Arradondo spoke with community members at Shiloh Temple in north Minneapolis. He was among other blue hoodie-clad members of Emerge, a program that helps people whose prior contacts with the criminal justice system have made it hard to secure jobs and housing.
But just as Jones is skeptical of calling police, Pastor Ian Bethel of New Beginnings Baptist Tabernacle Church scoffed at the notion that social workers could replace law enforcement. "I ain't calling no social worker," said Bethel, who opposes the proposed amendment. "I'll call the social worker after I get with law enforcement."
Robin Wonsley Worlobah, a housing advocate who is running for the Second Ward City Council seat, said the amendment's opponents are seizing on the anxiety around crime by suggesting "that no public safety infrastructure will exist, and that's a lie." From an early age, people have been taught to associate public safety with police, she says, making it hard for them to imagine alternatives to traditional policing — even though other models exist for keeping communities safe.