The Minneapolis City Council suddenly tapped the brakes Thursday on a plan to move the city's Third Precinct headquarters to a building downtown — the same plan that the same council members had all but approved two days earlier.
Several council members on Thursday said they didn't understand how much money it would actually cost and whether it was a wise use of funds — and they were surprised when a senior city staffer explained that officers could be stationed there for 10 years.
It's unclear if the plan is now in real jeopardy or whether council members simply need more time to understand what they were on the verge of voting for; officially Thursday, all members present voted to send the plan back to a committee for more discussion.
The issue
The current police station was ransacked and set ablaze during protests that turned violent. The charred building remains, boarded up and cordoned off by razor wire. The officers who used to work there continue to operate out of makeshift quarters in a downtown office building, where parking is scarce, accommodations are widely seen as inadequate and response times to the southernmost reaches of the precinct can be challenging.
Few think the status quo is working.
The city had narrowed options for a new location to two — rehabbing the original station or building a new one on a city-owned vacant lot nearby — but that binary choice drew spirited opposition from some in the southeast Minneapolis communities served by the precinct.
The plan