Minneapolis City Council President Lisa Bender and two other members unveiled a plan Friday to cut nearly $8 million from the Minneapolis Police Department and limit the number of officers it can hire to the already depleted force.
The announcement drew early concerns from Mayor Jacob Frey's office and set the tone for a frantic week and a half of budget negotiations as some look to cut from the department and others aim to bolster it amid a spike in violent crime.
This will be the first time city leaders are negotiating a full budget since George Floyd's death, and they have faced intense lobbying from residents who are making competing demands on policing.
The new proposal — written by Bender and Council Members Phillipe Cunningham and Steve Fletcher — would move nearly $8 million from the Police Department to violence prevention, a mental health crisis team and other departments that could help process reports of property damage and parking violations.
The council members' proposal would fund a department with roughly 770 officers and reduce the authorized force size to 750 in future years. That's far lower than the 888 "target level" included in Frey's budget proposal.
The three council members were on the losing side of a 7-6 vote this month to spend $500,000 for other law enforcement agencies to help the Minneapolis police patrol the city.
The mayor's office said in a statement that he is open to discussions about finding alternative ways to respond to nonviolent 911 calls and has included similar efforts in his own plan.
"He would have significant concerns if his colleagues attempted to make such large, permanent cuts to the number of officers in the department without sound data or community input to support such a decision," the statement said.