Out of the pitch-black predawn, dozens of heavily bundled activists assembled on North Girard and 2nd Avenues in Minneapolis to shield the residents of the Near North homeless encampment from imminent disbandment. They brought wagons laden with hand-warmers and McDonald's sandwiches, and built fires from scrap wood as they watched for dump trucks and skid steers.
Among them were five City Council members, four of them newly elected. City Council Member Robin Wonsley Worlobah had put out a call on social media the day before, asking Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey to suspend all encampment evictions until the city comes up with a policy of closing encampments humanely, and only after all residents are housed.
"To destroy peoples' homes with nothing more than a list of possibly underfunded and overwhelmed resources in the midst of a Coronavirus surge while temperatures are routinely below zero is inhumane," she wrote, calling volunteers to join her at the camp at 6 a.m. Tuesday.
Council Members Jason Chavez, Aisha Chughtai, Jeremiah Ellison and Elliott Payne answered the call.
City and county officials say they already have worked to move most of the residents into permanent housing, and that only six to eight people were still living there. The camp's defenders said there were at least a dozen remaining.
Earlier this month, the city posted notices at the camp declaring Jan. 11 as eviction day. As word spread online in activist circles to galvanize around Near North, staff added, "week of" in tiny writing to qualify that eviction enforcement might happen spontaneously at any time over the next several days. Those gathered burned the eviction notices and discussed the possibility of monitoring the camp around the clock. Some council members said they, too, would return day after day.
"That's nasty," said former Near North resident Sandy Kelting of the open-ended eviction threat. "That just gives them the chance to sneak attack. When they tried to do this last year, it was scary. The volunteers were here 24/7 for two months after that. They felt like guardian angels."
Kelting, who told the Star Tribune last year that she had bad experiences with overcrowding and disrespect from staff in emergency shelters, eventually moved into an apartment in the Whittier neighborhood of Minneapolis with the help of a caseworker from Avivo.