City officials have set a date next week to clear a major homeless encampment in south Minneapolis' Phillips neighborhood, but on Thursday a majority of City Council members asked Mayor Jacob Frey to delay action until mid-February.
The request by eight council members came two days after scores of supporters of the encampment streamed into City Hall during a public hearing on the city budget to oppose the planned clearing on Dec. 14. On the other hand, some neighboring organizations have pleaded with the city for months to dismantle the site.
The encampment, known as Camp Nenookaasi, sits next door to the Phillips Community Center along 23rd Street near 13th Avenue South. According to organizers, it housed some 180 people as of this week. It was established by Native American women in September after the city cleared out another encampment along Hiawatha Avenue known as the Wall of Forgotten Natives.
City officials say public safety and public health concerns prompted the decision to close the encampment.
Organizers, as well as a number of council members, say the camp is different — more organized and strictly run than tent cities that spontaneously crop up in Minneapolis and cities across the nation.
"This is more controlled," Council Member Jamal Osman, whose Ward 6 encompasses the encampment, said at a news conference Thursday. "We haven't had a lot of incidents. ... There will be more safety concerns if these 180 people go to the surrounding streets."
That's not the picture painted by some indigenous groups in the area.
"Not only are crimes being committed regularly, but they are also being hidden from police with threats of and physical acts of violence, to those who would normally report," Ryan Salmon, interim chair of Metropolitan Urban Indian Directors, wrote this month in a letter demanding the encampment be "closed immediately."