Minneapolis residents made impassioned and often conflicting pleas Wednesday night for changes to the Police Department and public safety following George Floyd's death and an increase in violent crime.
Just like the elected leaders who represent them, the people who spoke during an especially long public hearing were divided. Some begged elected officials not to cut police staffing, while others urged them to trim the department and fund other services instead.
The 2021 budget, which city leaders will approve next week, has drawn immense public scrutiny and will provide the next major test of the city's appetite for changing policing and public safety following Floyd's death.
More than 400 people signed up to dial into the livestreamed meeting, a showing unlike any other in recent city memory. Residents were still speaking late into the night.
Some said their homes had been pierced by gunfire. More than 500 people have been killed or wounded by gunshots this year, according to police statistics. Others said carjackings and robberies have prompted them to rethink daily routines like grocery shopping and walking the dog.
"I have just never felt so unsafe recently. This isn't the Minneapolis I know," said Brent Johnson, of Whittier, who attributed some of the violence to discussions about defunding the Police Department.
Others said the department, which has in the past disproportionately used force on Black residents, made them fear for their safety. They said they worry about being killed, shot or harassed by police.
"I don't feel safe, so who's more important?" asked Vineetha Adams. "Clearly, white people walking their dogs is more important than Black people feeling safe and colored people feeling safe and Indigenous people feeling honored for a country that was stolen from them. It does not make any sense, and it is disheartening and is frustrating."