Minneapolis City Council members will meet again Thursday to discuss a tentative contract agreement with the city's police union — but without a recommendation from their colleagues on whether they should approve or deny the deal.
The deal with the Police Officers Federation of Minneapolis incudes raises and $7,000 "incentive payments" for officers who remain on duty until the end of the year, but it lacks many of the disciplinary changes a growing number of local activists are seeking.
The police contract has gained new scrutiny in recent years following the murder of George Floyd and other high-profile police killings. Many of the city's elected leaders repeatedly have pegged the contract as an obstacle to enacting much-needed reforms, and local activists say they now have a chance to fix it.
Now, some elected leaders are saying they believe those changes are better made in policy manuals that don't have to be negotiated with the union, a position echoed Tuesday by the city's director of labor relations.
"I think there's a large misconception that by somehow adding these things to the agreement that's how we gain authority to take action. That's just simply not the case," Holland Atkinson, the labor relations director, told members of the council's Policy & Government Oversight Committee Tuesday.
He added that Mayor Jacob Frey and MPD officials had made changes to the police policy manual since Floyd's death. City officials, for example, have announced efforts to limit the use of no-knock warrants and which officers can use "less lethal" munitions, plus tightening requirements for intervening in excessive force cases.
Local activists continue to urge officials to go further.
Had those types of policies been included in the contract, Atkinson said, they would have needed to negotiate the changes with the union. "That is why we intentionally keep the labor agreements a lot slimmer than what people might understand them to be."