An attempt to create a unified plan for the future of Minneapolis police’s burned-out Third Precinct stalled Tuesday, as a divided Minneapolis City Council declined to endorse Mayor Jacob Frey’s plan to transform the former station into a community space and “democracy center” housing Election and Voter Services.
Meeting as a committee, the council discussed the proposal for nearly two hours — and then voted 7 to 6 to pull it off the agenda, with some council members insisting the city should not prescribe a new purpose for the former police station before having more conversations with residents.
Council Member Robin Wonsley voted against the plan, calling it “completely out of line with what residents have been asking for.” She added the city had not completed “authentic engagement” with residents.
But other council members voiced frustration with what they characterized as another delay in the now yearslong process of trying to sort out a new home for the Third Precinct and figuring out what to do with the building at 3000 Minnehaha Av., which continues to sit vacant, dilapidated and vandalized.
The city will soon make some cosmetic upgrades and remove the razor wire that has surrounded the building since it was burned by protesters following the 2020 murder of George Floyd by a then-Minneapolis police officer. And Frey’s administration can still move forward with the concept plans for the building without council support. On Tuesday, the mayor issued a statement indicating that he planned to keep going with the voting center plan.
“Independent of the confusion and discord on the Council, we are moving forward with a realistic plan to establish a voting center with a large space designated for community use,” he said. “We gave the Council an opportunity to weigh in, and instead, they punted.”
Earlier engagement
The city has already tried several strategies to gather community feedback on the future of the Third Precinct.
Last summer, the council voted to prohibit the city from ever reopening a police station on the site of the former station — even after a council-ordered survey of about 3,600 people who visit, live or work in the immediate area found 44%, the largest group of respondents, wanted to restore 3000 Minnehaha Av. to a police station. The survey was criticized by some council members and residents for precluding the option of not having a precinct at all in the locations offered by the city.