Minneapolis is setting up a new community safety office two years after George Floyd's murder prompted a global movement calling for changes to policing.
Mayor Jacob Frey declared it a historic day after the City Council voted 9 to 4 Thursday to create the new agency, which is similar to one voters rejected last year.
"This is one of those rare occasions when we have the opportunity to make a longstanding, multigenerational impact on government structure," Frey said in a news conference. The change will make city government "more efficient, more responsive and more inclusive to the residents of our city."
Council Member Robin Wonsley said it will blur lines of accountability by placing "a new layer of unelected bureaucrats" in the hierarchy.
"Structural changes are just a distraction if they don't come with the political will for solutions," she said during the council meeting.
The questions of whether to create a new agency — and who should have control over it — have featured prominently in debates about how Minneapolis officials should seek to fulfill a promise to transform public safety in response to Floyd's death.
Minneapolis drew international attention when a majority of City Council members stood in Powderhorn Park after Floyd's murder and pledged to "begin the process of ending the Minneapolis Police Department" and create "a new, transformative model for cultivating safety in Minneapolis."
The next municipal elections focused on questions of how the city should set up its public safety systems and who should wield power.