In adopting a budget that moves $8 million out of next year's police budget, the Minneapolis City Council made its most assertive move yet to change the city's public safety system following George Floyd's death.
Their final, unanimous vote Thursday just after midnight cleared the way for the city to create new mental health crisis teams, expand mental health training for 911 call-takers, and boost programs aimed at preventing violence without police.
Many who spoke at a five-hour public hearing before the vote said they feared the plan would ultimately leave the police department stretched too thin amid a spike in violent crime. Others said they thought it was a good first step but didn't go far enough to boost funding for housing and social services.
In the process, the council made one concession to Mayor Jacob Frey: By a 7-6 vote, they upheld the current authorized size of the force, 888, rather than lowering it to about 750, closer to the minimum required by the city charter.
Frey had threatened to veto the budget if the council lowered the limit, even though the force is so depleted by retirements, resignations and officers on leave that the change would have no practical effect on the number of officers on the street next year.
Council members who supported the plan to trim the police budget viewed their vote as a victory and a step toward fulfilling a pledge nine of them made to work toward ending the department after Floyd's death.
"Every resident in our city deserves to make it home safe at the end of the day. It's easy to talk about what the future of public safety should look like, it's much harder to put your money where your mouth is," Council Member Jeremiah Ellison said in a statement.
The council's plan, he said, "takes this conversation out of the realm of 'what if' and makes that vision a reality."