Minnesota legislators are locked in a stalemate over how to ensure law enforcement agencies can get help with the cost of pitching in with security during the trials of the four former Minneapolis police officers involved in the death of George Floyd.
State leaders are under a time crunch as they recruit police and sheriff's deputies from across the state to provide security for the trials, starting with former officer Derek Chauvin's trial in three weeks. Legislators debated proposals Monday intended to reassure outside departments that they wouldn't be on the hook for expenses they can't afford.
But those discussions have become ensnared in broader debates over police accountability, state aid to local governments and the Minneapolis City Council's decision to cut police department funding.
"You are kicking people while they're down," Sen. Omar Fateh, DFL-Minneapolis, said of a GOP-led proposal that could cut Minneapolis' state aid to reimburse other agencies. Fateh, who represents the district where Floyd died, called the bill "punitive and anti-human."
The Senate measure, which passed 35-32, says if a city like Minneapolis owes money to another community that provided law enforcement assistance, then that city would see its allotment of local government aid from the state reduced by the owed amount to cover the payment.
"It's just a bill who says who's going to pay the bill," Sen. Bill Weber, R-Luverne, said of the measure he sponsored.
In the DFL-majority House, Democratic leaders decided not to vote on their version of the bill, acknowledging they didn't have the votes to pass it.
"Apparently we are not yet at the point in time this legislative session where we can have a reasonable conversation with the Senate Republican majority," House Majority Leader Ryan Winkler, DFL-Golden Valley, said Monday.