The Minneapolis Charter Commission narrowly voted Wednesday to keep one police proposal off the November ballot — dimming the prospects for voters to weigh in this year on how to remake policing following George Floyd's death.
The commission voted 8-6 to block a proposal that would ask voters to remove the requirement to maintain a police force at a level based on the city's population. That was widely viewed as the simpler of two police proposals up for consideration this year.
The debate about how to remake policing — and how quickly — has divided the city. As they debated for nearly an hour Wednesday evening, it was clear the court-appointed commissioners are just as torn as the community they serve.
Some view the commission as a gatekeeper, tasked with deeply researching proposals and ensuring there wouldn't be unintended consequences before voters weigh in. Others feel the commission's role is solely to determine whether the questions are appropriate for voters — and then to trust residents to make the best decisions for themselves.
"At some point, we need to have a discussion about what our job is," said Charter Commissioner Jan Sandberg, who voted to place the measure on the ballot this year, "because some of the things I've heard in the last hour or so about what our job is with respect to this or any ballot initiative, I do not agree with. And I think we need … to come up with some kind of consensus on that."
The commission will convene again next week to consider a more far-reaching proposal to reshape policing brought forward by the City Council.
Conversations about how to change the Police Department have zeroed in on the city's charter, which serves as its constitution, and particularly on the clause that requires the city to fund a police force of a certain size.
Since Floyd's death, activists and some officials have called for the city to end its Police Department. Others, including many alarmed by a wave of shootings and other violent crime, have called on the city to pause and first develop a more detailed plan for how to proceed.