Minneapolis plans to ask the Legislature for $20 million for the massive redevelopment of the former Upper Harbor Terminal on the North Side, even as leaders of a community group tasked with refining the plan have resigned or spoken out in protest.
The City Council made a new effort to engage the community this year in its plan to revitalize 48 acres of industrial riverfront above Lowry Avenue with an outdoor concert venue, housing, a community hub, parks and more. Residents of the predominantly black neighborhoods nearby have expressed fears that what's built there wouldn't benefit them, and in fact could force them to leave as the neighborhood gentrifies.
At the urging of Council Member Phillipe Cunningham, the council created an advisory committee and appointed more than a dozen residents from north and northeast Minneapolis. Yet the meetings over the past seven months failed to convince the committee's leaders that the project is headed in the right direction.
Two of the group's members, including its vice chairwoman, resigned in November. Last week, its outspoken chairman was stripped of his position by the remaining members. Earlier, the city removed the consultants who were facilitating the meetings, which had become increasingly tense.
Alexis Pennie, the former committee chairman and a North Side resident, said he came into the group looking to make the Upper Harbor Terminal more inclusive of his community. Instead, he felt they had become a rubber stamp for the development.
"I definitely think it's a boondoggle," he said of the project. "I know that we're going to get some nice, bright, shiny buildings. If people think that's equitable and good development, that's unfortunate."
Cunningham, while recognizing the meetings are at times frustrating, rejected the claim that the city isn't listening to neighbors as it moves forward with the project, which is in his ward.
"There is good reason for the community to not trust the city, because the city has caused so much harm in the past," he said in an interview. "It's believable that the city is yet again leaving the North Side out of the process, and that is just not true. Not under my watch."