An influential bloc of Minneapolis City Council members is pressing ahead with plans to dismantle the police department as a monthlong eruption of gunfire sent tremors through some neighborhoods.
Council President Lisa Bender said crime typically spikes in the summer and that the COVID-19 pandemic and the unrest following George Floyd's death have added to the stress in the community.
"We still have a police department today," she said. "Its funding has not changed from three weeks ago."
Pressure is mounting on City Council members to clarify who would respond to reports of violent crime if they accede to calls to defund the police department.
At a community meeting in the city's Jordan neighborhood Tuesday, Sondra Samuels told a small group of police officers that she wants to see changes in the department in the aftermath of Floyd's killing. She doesn't want a "blue code of silence." She wants racism to end.
But, Samuels also told them, "We want to get rid of that. We do not want to get rid of you."
It has been more than two weeks since nine City Council members gathered in Powderhorn Park to declare that they would begin the process of "ending" the Minneapolis Police Department. There has never been one clear, detailed description of what that would mean. Various council members and community activists have used the terms "defund," "dismantle," and "abolish" in different ways.
In the weeks since that statement, many of the discussions in City Hall have focused on the possibility of boosting investments in violence prevention programs and even sending mental health professionals or social workers to some types of calls.