Mayor Jacob Frey believes Minneapolis must be more affordable for renters and homeowners. Its police should carry with them a list of immigrant rights written in multiple languages. Its leaders should raise their voices on national and global issues like gun control, the opioid crisis and climate change.
Standing in a north Minneapolis theater Thursday morning, Frey laid out the details of his far-reaching vision for the city and its leaders in his first State of the City address. In an hourlong speech, the 36-year-old mayor praised the city's parks and theaters, tactfully wove in every City Council member by name and quoted a 1945 speech from then-Mayor Hubert Humphrey.
He repeated his hope for the city to invest $50 million in affordable housing this year, called himself "pro-business" and "pro-growth" and promised to make Minneapolis more inclusive for its rising and increasingly diverse population.
"We are young, scrappy and hungry," said Frey, quoting the Broadway play "Hamilton" as he delivered his address at Lundstrum Performing Arts on the North Side.
Frey has campaigned and governed on promises on housing affordability, easing tensions between police and community members and addressing the unequal distribution of wealth and poverty in the city. His speech Thursday reiterated many of these promises, and provided more details for how he plans to realize them.
In a word, Frey told the crowd, the state of the city is "poised."
"There will be setbacks, but I'm asking you to hang in with me on those days," said Frey. "I promise that if we stand united, if you keep working alongside me, then together we will make the most of the moments ahead. We haven't arrived yet, but we are poised in every sense of the word to do so."
New policy for police
Among Frey's new policy announcements was an order for Minneapolis police to begin carrying placards in their squad cars that detail, in English and Spanish, the legal rights of immigrants when they are dealing with federal authorities.