Under a tent on a blazing hot morning, Minneapolis officer Mike Nimlos described a police force that is overwhelmed.
"We need to get out there and do more proactive work, but we don't have the bodies," Nimlos told several dozen North Siders gathered in a backyard. "We barely have enough time to answer calls — we're going from one call to the next call to the next call. Officers are getting burned out. They're getting tired."
From the side of the garage, resident Dave Haddy countered that the lack of response sent a message: People can light fireworks, run red lights and shoot guns all they want.
"It's sickening!" he said.
The exchange last Tuesday captured the tensions between officers and those closest to the surge in shootings in recent weeks as Minneapolis City Hall discusses how to overhaul law enforcement following the police killing of George Floyd.
Witnesses, victims, neighbors, peace activists, community leaders: All are reckoning with how to ensure public safety at a time when many feel their security is shaken as much by police as it is by criminals.
While they recognize the limits of the police in addressing crime, they are calling for civilians to take more responsibility — and finding that, too, is not always enough.
"After my house was struck by gunfire, I'm not going to feel safe no matter how many cops go past," said Crystal Rosebear of north Minneapolis.