Three months after demonstrators occupied the south Minneapolis intersection where George Floyd was killed, they say they're not going anywhere until the city meets a long list of demands.
The occupation of 38th Street and Chicago Avenue has posed a conundrum for city officials who are desperate to reopen at least a portion of the street to traffic. They say businesses inside are suffering, gunfire rings out at night and it's difficult for first responders to enter without the help of the neighbors who guard the barricades.
The city had announced plans to reopen 38th Street last month but backed off, avoiding a confrontation. City Council Member Andrea Jenkins, whose ward includes part of the intersection, said the city and the occupants find themselves "at an impasse."
"The intersection needs to be reopened. It's one of the largest transit hubs in the entire city," Jenkins said. "But there is the reality that there is this deep … reckoning that needs to happen in this country. In this entire country. The intersection at 38th and Chicago is the symbol of what is going on throughout America."
Concrete barricades surrounding the intersection prevent cars from driving through. Police officers do not enter the space — nor are they welcome. Visitors still trickle in during the day to glance at the memorials spread across the street, as if in a museum. At the northern barricade, a message is written on a wooden board: YOU ARE NOW ENTERING THE FREE STATE OF GEORGE FLOYD.
The people who occupy the space say they have become the caretakers, maintaining the memorials, hosting community events and handling domestic calls and other issues that occur within the zone. Chanting "no justice, no street," they say the city needs to agree on their calls for this struggling area of south Minneapolis, for Floyd and other victims of police violence.
"They either give in to our demands of justice or they're going to have to take the street over my dead body," said Marcia Howard, a high school English teacher who has become a constant presence at the intersection. "I owe it to these kids who are now adults to pour into them something that looks like justice."
No timeline to open street
Earlier this summer, Howard and other neighborhood leaders asked business owners and residents in the area what changes they would like to see in their neighborhoods.