The Minneapolis police union voted to approve a historic raise late Monday night, overwhelmingly supporting a tentative labor contract reached after eight months of public and closed-door negotiations and state mediation.
The agreement secures officers a 5.5% pay bump starting July 1, a 2.5% raise on Jan. 1, 2025, and another 3.5% jump next summer, city officials confirmed. It also includes a large amount of pro-rated backpay — which, taken together, equates to a 21.7% increase over three years for veteran cops.

Members of the Police Officers Federation of Minneapolis ratified the tentative agreement 301 to 63 — less than a week after a gunman shot and killed Minneapolis police officer Jamal Mitchell, the first such line-of-duty death the department has seen in over two decades.
That accord still requires sign-off by the full City Council, which could come as soon as next Thursday. But such approval is not guaranteed, given that the body’s progressive wing has signaled a desire that future contracts include “deep, transformational reforms.”
MPD’s contract gained new scrutiny in recent years following a series of high-profile killings by police, including George Floyd’s murder in 2020. In the aftermath, elected officials cited the police contract as an obstacle to changing disciplinary processes.
Although the Star Tribune has not yet obtained a copy of the tentative contract, senior city officials said in interviews Tuesday that it features several new provisions meant to increase disciplinary and staffing discretion by the chief. One extends the time period in which an officer accused of misconduct can be placed on leave while being investigated, from 30 days to 180 days. It also expands the number of civilian investigator positions and repeals language requiring that an officer be automatically notified when an individual requests public personnel records.
“This is a good contract,” Mayor Jacob Frey said in an interview, noting that he is “hopeful” the council will approve it. “It makes police officer pay competitive in the region, which of course helps us both retain and recruit police officers that are working tirelessly right now. I’m for that. And it gets some important changes and managerial authority where it should be — with the chief — which is something that is long overdue.”
Minneapolis’ current police labor agreement was adopted in March 2022 after state mediation and expired Dec. 31 of that year. Frey’s office declined to make the new, pending contract available to the public Tuesday. It is expected to be released later this week.