A day after a task force recommended a plan with a 3% cap on yearly residential rent hikes, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey said he'd veto that idea if it advances to him.
"It's not happening," Frey said Wednesday. "If it moves forward to my desk, I will veto it."
Frey's clear opposition, given in response to reporters' questions, underscores the uncertainty facing the prospect of rent control in Minneapolis as the idea enters its next phase on a potential path to voters.
The issue is heading to the City Council, where a majority of the members would be needed to put a specific policy on the November 2023 ballot. A supermajority of nine would be needed to override a mayoral veto.
On Wednesday, a majority of the 25-member Housing/Rent Stabilization Work Group recommended the City Council adopt a plan that would put Minneapolis among the cities with the strictest rent control policies in the nation. The plan is backed by a coalition of renter advocates and activists who see rising rents as a social and racial justice issue in need of transformative changes.
That plan — the one Frey said he would veto — seeks to cap rents at 3% annually, with exceptions only for freshly updated apartments.
That's similar to a measure approved by St. Paul voters in 2021. Facing a backlash from developers and falling residential construction permits, St. Paul has since scaled back its plan.
In 2021, Minneapolis voters approved a ballot question that said the City Council could come up with a rent control plan, but the ballot question didn't prescribe any specifics.