Only hours after voters rejected a ballot question to replace the city's embattled police department, civil rights activists and faith leaders gathered inside a south Minneapolis church to discuss reviving a 2003 federal mediation agreement on police use of force, diversity and race relations.
The Rev. Ian Bethel said he hoped the summit last week would be a first step forward "for transformation, for reform, for accountability, for transparency" of the department — and he urged activists of all stripes to come together to find a solution.
"We are also concerned about the 44% who voted yes" on question 2, Bethel said. "Truth be told, we all want the same thing."
That is just one of many signs of the intense pressure still building on Minneapolis leaders to improve the city's police department, which has been engulfed by criticism and a crisis of public confidence since the killing of George Floyd, even after voters said last week they do not want to replace it with a new public safety agency, possibly with fewer officers.
Newly reelected Mayor Jacob Frey emerged from the fall campaign victorious but bruised by criticism that chronic problems inside the department are festering on his watch.
Frey said the city has instituted policy changes that should not be underestimated, but he acknowledged there's more work to be done.
"Will any of those policy changes taken in and of themselves, or even on the collective, shift the culture? The answer is no, it won't. To those that have frustrations on that front, I agree with them," Frey said in an interview Friday. "Let's unite to actually get these specific reforms done so that we can make the necessary changes that the vast majority of our system is demanding."
But challengers have not let up in their criticism that the mayor should have done more to rid the department of problematic officers, to rein in the use of force and to improve transparency.