St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter on Thursday announced that he will hire 80 new police officers in 2022, months after Chief Todd Axtell urged city leaders to bolster staffing in a department he's described as increasingly stretched thin.
Thirty of those positions will be partly funded for three years by a $3.75 million grant from the U.S. Department of Justice. The city will use its federal pandemic aid from the American Rescue Plan Act to cover most of the rest of those officers' salaries and benefits.
Funding for the other 50 recruits will come mostly from the city's general fund as other officers retire or leave the force, Finance Director John McCarthy said.
"We are pleased to accept this grant to support our neighborhood safety efforts," Carter said in a statement. "This grant, our ongoing Community-First Public Safety efforts, and the establishment of our new Office of Neighborhood Safety are big steps toward improving public safety outcomes in our city."
The mayor, who began a second four-year term in January, has faced simultaneous calls to rein in violent crime and take an alternative approach to public safety in the wake of George Floyd's murder.
In addition to the new Office of Neighborhood Safety, which will lead a number of new and existing violence prevention initiatives, Carter's administration has launched a homelessness response team and a program that will pair social advocates with 911 responders. The goal of these efforts, the mayor has said, is to address the root causes of crime.
Officer shortage impact
Axtell, who plans to step down from his role as chief in June, has repeatedly sparred with the mayor over the department's funding and staffing. The force is struggling to keep up with the surge in crime that St. Paul and cities across the country have faced since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, he has said, which has led to officers working more overtime shifts, cuts to community engagement and traffic enforcement, and scaled-back training.