The University of Minnesota will again cooperate with the Minneapolis Police Department on some public safety matters, resuming a relationship that the school severed days after the murder of George Floyd.
With crime a rising concern in recent months in areas around the school's Dinkytown campus, U President Joan Gabel said in remarks released Wednesday that the school would "begin an evaluative, phased approach to reinstating work with the [Police Department] for large events and specialized services."
"Law enforcement in the city of Minneapolis should reflect the public safety expectations of all members of our community," Gabel said. "We are encouraged by the many steps the city has taken to meet that expectation and look forward to future steps."
Minnesota's largest public university — with a main campus fully within the city of Minneapolis — scaled back its relationship with the department in late May 2020 after Floyd died while pinned to the pavement beneath the knee of then-officer Derek Chauvin. Chauvin was later convicted of Floyd's murder and imprisoned.
In a letter to students and staff after Floyd's death, Gabel wrote, "I do not have the words to fully express my pain and anger, and I know that many in our community share those feelings, but also fear for their own safety. This will not stand."
At the time, the university, which maintains its own police force, decreed that Minneapolis officers would no longer be used for football games, concerts or other major campus events. But the U said city officers would continue to work on joint patrols and specific investigations alongside university police.
Student leaders said Thursday they were frustrated that university officials made the decision without input from the student body and its leaders.
"It's frustrating to see the university continue a pattern of making decisions about campus and about student safety without taking into account student input and consultation," said Carter Yost, government and legislative affairs director for the Undergraduate Student Government, formerly known as Minnesota Student Association.