Picnics in Minneapolis parks have all the usual fixings: sandwiches, fruit, maybe some pretzels.
But many people noshing while watching a movie in the park or listening to a concert at a band shell also bring liquid contraband, barely disguised. There's someone swigging from a beer, its label concealed in a can koozie, someone else sipping wine poured from a Thermos.
Drinking on the sly may not be necessary at Minneapolis' newest park, the Commons in front of U.S. Bank Stadium, if a proposal to allow parkgoers to bring their own booze during certain events prevails at City Hall.
That would mark a shift from rules in Minneapolis parks, as well as others across the metro, which bar alcohol except when it is served at concessions and events with special permits.
"Being able to sip a glass of wine on a picnic blanket in a park is cool and fun," said Council Member Jacob Frey, who is pushing the measure. "And you want to attract and retain talented millennials to a city. These small changes are the kind of things that get you there."
Officials have already been quietly relaxing the rules for alcohol in Minneapolis parks. Concession restaurants like Tin Fish and Sea Salt have been allowed to sell beer and wine for more than a decade. New rules approved by the Park Board in 2013 expanded where permits could be issued for alcohol-serving events — and nixed a ban on alcohol possession. But casual picnicking allowing BYOB is not legal.
Still, data show that police are citing fewer people for common alcohol violations at parks and parkways across the city. Such offenses have fallen by nearly 30 percent since 2011.
There were just over 400 citations, including some arrests, in 2015 for calls in which the primary offense was alcohol in a park or parkway — vs. an assault with an added alcohol offense. Nearly all of those occurred on land governed by the city's independent Park Board, and its Park Police, but the figure includes some plazas controlled by City Hall and Minneapolis Police, like downtown's Convention Center Plaza and Peavey Plaza. The Commons is the first major park operated by City Hall.