There are no boards covering the windows of Kevin Ni's sushi restaurant on Nicollet Mall. Not for now, at least.
While some of his downtown Minneapolis business neighbors are considering tacking protective plywood to their storefronts and sending staff home in anticipation of protests when former police officer Derek Chauvin stands trial for murder and manslaughter, Ni is planning to stay open as long as he safely can: "Hopefully there won't be riots again. I'm hoping people will calm down and do what they've got to do without damaging others. … To board up a business is actually making downtown like a ghost town. We don't want to paint that picture."
As one of the most significant police brutality trials in American history is scheduled to start soon, months after George Floyd's death, pandemic-squeezed business owners and building managers are torn between putting on a show of confidence by staying open or boarding up in case riots erupt.
Amid conflicting advice from city and neighborhood leaders, many are wondering whether authorities will make good on their promise to quell violence quickly, unlike last summer.
Ni, who owns Sushi Train, said rocks sailed through his window while employees were still at work in August after a man killed himself outside the U.S. Bancorp Center and crowds vandalized shops, mistakenly believing police were at fault.
Far worse than shattered glass, Ni said, is the psychological harm employees suffered after a year of reduced hours and income.
"Income is the biggest issue for everybody right now," he said. "They will much rather make some money and then also stay safe at the same time."
The stage for protest is being set near government buildings now surrounded with fencing and wire.