Minnesota legislators gathered in front of what had been Faisal Demaag's furniture store a few weeks after George Floyd's killing. Against a backdrop of crumbled brick and bent metal, they pushed a plan to send money to vandalized and destroyed businesses in a matter of weeks.
A year and a half later, Demaag's family business and other Twin Cities properties damaged by unrest have yet to get any state grants or loans. But organizations charged with giving out the government dollars in Minneapolis said that will change early next year.
The more than $20 million coming to Minneapolis and $7 million for St. Paul will land in communities that are at a different phase of rebuilding than they were when Democratic legislators first proposed a $300 million unrest aid package shortly after the destruction. But the need for state help hasn't faded, say business owners, foundations and community groups, and they are calling for legislators to pass another round of funding in 2022 given the state's massive projected $7.7 billion budget surplus.
"The $20 million, the way I look at it, there's a lot of businesses that got hurt and I don't think that's enough. Maybe it gets us in the right direction, but we need more support," said Demaag, whose family ran the Minneapolis store at the corner of Chicago Avenue and Lake Street for 27 years. "If we want Lake Street to come back as a cultural district, everyone needs to help us."
More than 1,500 businesses suffered an estimated $500 million in damage as fires flared, windows were smashed and buildings looted in the days after Floyd's murder. Many of the business owners lacked insurance or were underinsured. In the immediate aftermath, community groups and foundations donated to the rebuilding effort, absent any state or federal assistance.
"Had we only waited for government funding to come through, most of the businesses that are alive today would not have survived," said Russ Adams with the Lake Street Council, which raised $12 million for a recovery grant program. "They were hanging on by their fingertips."
Three Minneapolis communities will be eligible for the state dollars: the Lake Street corridor, West Broadway in north Minneapolis and the area around 38th Street and Chicago where Floyd was killed. The money can be used for a range of needs, from repairing property and construction to engineering, design and site amenities.
Buildings that weren't directly damaged by riots but contribute to the economic stability and recovery of those communities could also qualify for the money, said Kate Speed with Local Initiatives Support Corporation Twin Cities, which is working with the Minneapolis Foundation and Propel Nonprofits to distribute the money in Minneapolis.