After roiling Minneapolis and its politics for two years, controversy over police reform has of late grown comparatively quiet. But rumblings continue.
Activists and dissenting City Council members complained that the recently approved police union contract did too little to toughen discipline for cop misconduct. Mayor Jacob Frey explained that putting more disciplinary processes into the contract would merely give the union more power to block tighter accountability.
Newly elected Council Member Elliott Payne touted on these pages last month his proposal for a free-standing Public Safety Department that would exist side-by-side with the Minneapolis Police Department, offering alternative services. Payne is one of five council members elected last fall who had supported the effort to replace the MPD outright, which voters rejected.
Frey's search for a new, permanent police chief continues, and he recently proposed a more complete ban on no-knock warrants, following the Feb. 2 shooting death of Amir Locke in a no-knock raid. Prosecutors led by Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison's office are reviewing whether to bring charges in the case.
But in the meantime, as I noted almost a year ago, Minnesota's most important reform in police disciplinary processes may be unfolding in a far less visible arena.
The Peace Officer Grievance Arbitration Roster has published a second ruling, invoking a key principle that, if it takes hold, could at last empower law enforcement leaders to hold wayward cops accountable to the high standards the public has a right to expect.
As I've discussed numerous times in this column, mandatory labor arbitration has long posed one of the most demoralizing obstacles to firm discipline in law enforcement agencies across Minnesota, where the integrity and courage of most officers are betrayed by an unworthy few.
State law requires every police department and sheriff's office, as public employers, to allow discipline to be appealed to binding arbitration. It's a system that has too often reinstated fired officers or shortened suspensions, serving as a "broken and flawed" process of second-guessing, in the words of a 2017 lawsuit.