Some Minneapolis City Council members on Monday questioned the city's plan to bring in thousands of soldiers and police officers for former officer Derek Chauvin's trial, saying it could inflame tensions in a traumatized community.
"I have been a little bit disappointed with the heavy city and police-only focus of this plan up until today," Council Member Jeremiah Ellison said, adding: "I feel like I haven't really heard ... a plan that affirms the kind of trauma that happened this past summer, and not just from the four officers who killed George Floyd but from the response that happened afterward."
Council members spoke during a public briefing Monday that provided more details of the city's preparations for enlisting law enforcement, firefighters and community groups ahead of the trial in Floyd's death.
They announced, too, that they were backing off a plan to pay "social media influencers" to help with communication, after some expressed doubts about the proposal.
State and city leaders — who blamed each other for failures last year — face a delicate balancing act as they try to mount a coordinated response for Chauvin's trial. Some residents want a large police presence to thwart a repeat of last year's rioting, which played out for days and left 1,500 buildings damaged or destroyed. Others worry the intense law enforcement presence will actually stoke more unrest, particularly if officers use force on people brutalized by police in the past.
Council Member Phillipe Cunningham asked Minneapolis police for more detail about what training they have provided officers about the history of racism in policing and about what they will consider a peaceful protest. He said he was particularly concerned about officers coming from outside the city to help.
"Peaceful protests also include Black rage from the ongoing trauma and pain that has been a result of structural and systemic violence, but that kind of emotional expression is very upsetting to Minnesota's sensibilities ... particularly with a negative emotion," Cunningham said.
Police Chief Medaria Arradondo said Minneapolis officers have had conversations in roll-call about the anger underlying protests. Law enforcement will have a unified command center aimed at allowing key leaders to share information more efficiently.