Stung by budget constraints and growing calls for reimagining public safety since the killing of George Floyd, Minneapolis police officials are considering sharp cutbacks to popular community-oriented programs like the Police Activities League and procedural justice to avoid making cuts elsewhere.
At the same time, the department is facing staffing pressures. Since June, 35 officers have retired or been terminated and dozens more may soon be temporarily sidelined on medical furloughs. Officials worry the resulting shortages could affect the department's ability to adequately police the city amid rising crime.
Budget pressures come as the City Council pushes to shrink or radically restructure the MPD. The figure circulating around precinct houses and at downtown headquarters is that the department will have to cut $8 million to $13 million from its $193.3 million budget. About 80% of the department's budget is tied up in salaries and benefits.
In Minneapolis, as elsewhere, calls to defund, or even abolish, the city's police force have grown since Floyd's death, which prompted nationwide protests over racial injustice and police brutality. Advocates say it only makes sense to divert some of the millions of public dollars given to police departments to social service agencies and community groups that focus on social issues — like mental health, housing, systemic racism and the opioid crisis — that help crime flourish.
With the recent departures, the number of MPD officers has fallen to about 825 — out of an authorized strength of 888 — which includes a class of 31 rookie officers who just hit the streets. But with the COVID-19 pandemic stretching the city's financial reserves, the MPD and other city departments face difficult choices.
MPD insiders say this will likely involve scaling back or disbanding the procedural justice and community engagement units, as well as the PAL program — which runs youth sports teams across the city — in order to preserve a more essential function: responding to 911 calls. If those units do fold, most of those officers would likely go back to patrolling the streets, joining school resource officers, who returned to working out of a squad car after the department lost its contract to work in city schools.
Jamil Jackson, who consults for the city's Office of Violence Prevention, said he found the decision to cut programs like PAL "disappointing, but not surprising."
"Cutting community engagement and cutting the youth programs, which are supposed to be about preventing, that's asinine," said Jackson, who runs a mentoring program called Change Equals Opportunity. "Community engagement is what we're lacking in the most, if you ask me."