Minneapolis needs a new space for sewer and water distribution. Community members yearn for an urban farm.
But both proposals for the former Roof Depot site are in limbo after a key City Council committee failed to make a decision either way, leaving the city with a potential $12.3 million budget gap and a vacant building atop an arsenic plume.
"We're all just shocked and dismayed by it," said Karen Clark, a board member of the East Phillips Neighborhood Institute, which created the urban farm proposal.
An environmental review of the site was scheduled for discussion at Wednesday's meeting of the council's Policy and Government Oversight Committee. But the discussion soon mutated into a tug-of-war between council members who favored staying the course for a new city water yard, those who wanted to turn the site over to community members for their urban farm, and their dueling compromise proposals.
Council Member Alondra Cano, whose ward includes East Phillips, introduced a proposal to suspend all work on the new water yard, find a different location for it and enter into a two-year exclusive development rights agreement with urban farm advocates. In that time, the Neighborhood Institute would have to raise $12.3 million to reimburse the city's water fund in order to ultimately buy and redevelop the land.
"This is a legacy project," Cano said. "This is going to significantly improve the lives of working-class people, American Indian people, African American people … many who have been paying the price of probably 20 years of white supremacist urban planning by the city of Minneapolis."
Cano's proposal, which Council Vice President Andrea Jenkins and Council Members Cam Gordon and Andrew Johnson co-authored, passed 7-6. But in an unexpected twist, Council Member Jeremiah Ellison partly abstained on the single point of entering into an exclusive rights agreement with urban farm advocates. That item failed as a tie, leaving intact only the suspension of work on the water yard and the plan to find a new site for it.
A visibly rattled Cano said that the city would now not be able to offload any of its financial burden onto the community developer and would be left with the vacant Roof Depot building, shorn of a plan, until additional action is taken.