Mayor Melvin Carter could hear the gunshots from his house in St. Paul's Summit-University neighborhood last weekend.
Seven people were injured in three separate shootings. The next day, he listened to distressed neighbors make competing demands, some for more police, others for alternative approaches to preventing violence.
With the police chief at his side, Carter condemned the shootings but made no new commitments. "We have a lot of work to do," he said in response.
So far, that approach has paid off for the 42-year-old first-term mayor of Minnesota's capital city. With no high-profile opponents, Carter, who became St. Paul's first African American mayor in 2018, is sailing toward a second term at the city's helm.
On policing, housing and other issues, the mayor has staked out a relatively centrist position in liberal St. Paul. While the murder of George Floyd and the response to the ensuing unrest have politically damaged Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, Carter has seen his profile rise nationally as he talks about race and policing in American cities.
Still, Carter has found himself at odds with a City Council moving left, as well as facing criticism about his response to rising crime.
Some point to the "community-first" public safety programs he frequently touts and question why St. Paul saw 34 homicides in 2020, which tied 1992 for the city's deadliest year on record. Other residents say Carter is not doing enough to reform law enforcement or prevent gentrification.
"What I've said since the beginning is these programs aren't magic wands that are going to instantly transform the city of St. Paul," Carter said of his public safety proposals. "This is long-term work."