Minneapolis officials will raise the police chief's salary as they search for a candidate to lead a department that faces ongoing calls to improve accountability since George Floyd's murder.
Under a proposal approved by the City Council on Thursday, the next police chief will earn between $253,000 and $300,000 — up significantly from the roughly $204,000 former Chief Medaria Arradondo brought home last year.
The measure now heads to Mayor Jacob Frey, who has said he believes the increase will help the city find a high-quality candidate in a competitive hiring environment. "We felt strongly that, in order to recruit … we would need to properly pay for it," the mayor said during a news conference earlier this week.
Some council members who voted against the proposal said they believe the city should decide how it is going to restructure its public safety systems before raising the chief's salary.
"I think it's putting the cart before the horse to just presume this salary schedule," Council Member Elliott Payne said during Thursday's meeting. Payne noted that city leaders are still debating whether to create a new community safety office that would include police, fire and other services.
Minneapolis is searching for a new police chief at a time when the city — like many others — is grappling with how to respond to calls to transform public safety since Floyd's murder. The department faces steep challenges. It has about 280 fewer police officers than it did before Floyd's murder. The city faces one of the worst violent crime increases in decades. State authorities want the city to enter into a consent decree after determining that the department engaged in racial discrimination, and federal authorities are conducting a similar probe.
An analysis performed by the search firm Public Sector Search and Consulting Inc. for the city showed that at least eight other large, American cities had interim leaders. St. Paul is also seeking a new chief.
To raise the chief's salary to the new level, Minneapolis first had to ask state officials to once again waive a law that prohibits local government employees from making more than 110% of the governor's salary, an amount that equates to about $140,000.