A coalition of police reform groups on Monday unveiled a series of sweeping recommendations for the city's ongoing labor negotiations with the Minneapolis police union, meant to enhance accountability and officer wellness within the department's dwindling ranks.
One of the most significant proposals would bar licensed police officers from responding to certain non-emergency calls, freeing up MPD's 585 current officers to focus on addressing violent crimes. The proposal builds on one recently instituted by the Los Angeles Police Department's union, which assigns many low-level traffic, mental health and public nuisance calls to trained civilians rather than sworn personnel.
"It is time," Stacey Gurian-Sherman told members of the City Council's Policy and Government Oversight Committee on Monday. "We can use this stubborn low staffing to start realizing the promises and the reforms that were made — not only after George Floyd's death, but before — and have been solidified by two state and federal investigations."
"We must look at community safety beyond policing."
Organized under the name "MPLS for a Better Police Contract," the volunteer coalition penned 22 total recommendations, including limiting the number of hours an officer can work per week, mandating annual mental health screening and required testing for anabolic steroids.
Sgt. Sherral Schmidt, president of the Police Officers Federation of Minneapolis, could not be reached for comment Monday.
The city's current police labor agreement was adopted in March 2022 during a split 8-5 City Council vote and expired Dec. 31. That contract included raises and $7,000 retention bonuses for officers, but lacked many of the disciplinary changes activists demanded in the wake of Floyd's murder. At the time, many council members expressed frustration that the contract increased wages without adding any additional measures of accountability to rein in misconduct.
Elected leaders have repeatedly pegged the union contract as an obstacle to enacting much-needed reforms, while community advocates insist that City Council votes on contract renewals present a chance to fix it. However, some city officials have said they believe disciplinary changes are better made through policies that don't have to be negotiated with the union.