Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis police boost numbers for the first time in 5 years
MINNEAPOLIS — In “major shift,” MPD boosts officer numbers for first time in half-decade.
Minneapolis is seeing its first boost to police numbers in five years, city officials said. In 2024, MPD saw a 133 percent increase in applications and 76 new hires.
“This is a major shift, and obviously it’s a welcomed one,” said Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey.
Mayor Frey and Police Chief Brian O’Hara said the influx of hiring last year means 36 additional police officers out on the streets. The chief said this is a good sign, one that wasn’t there when he took the job three years ago.
“Police officers in Minneapolis would tell me ‘if somebody asks me about this department, I’d tell them don’t come here, go somewhere else. Everybody’s leaving, people hate us,’” said O’Hara.
City officials said the change in attitude comes after historic raises of more than 20 percent for officers, and aggressively recruiting diverse candidates within the city.
“We’ve been very intentional about bringing in young people from communities that have not been represented here well before. Today, the overwhelming majority of applicants are people of color,” said O’Hara.
It was last week, the Minneapolis City Council approved a consent decree with the Department of Justice, after a DOJ report found that MPD unlawfully discriminated against people of color, among other issues in the department.
“It’s going into the north side, it’s going to Cedar-Riverside, it’s going to the south side and finding people that truly want to not just be part of the change, but care deeply about protecting and serving the communities that they already love,” said Frey.
Residents can expect quicker response times, and more cops out in the community building relationships, which, in turn, will help solve crimes, Frey said.
“We need to get back to where we were in 2020. We need to take every single shooting in this city and treat it as if it’s a murder. We need to get officers back walking the beats in neighborhoods in every precinct, in every corner of the city. We need to get cops checking in on businesses,” said O’Hara.
“I’m confident that, you know, as we get the numbers up, we will be able to do better,” said O’Hara.
As of last week, MPD said there are 579 sworn officers. That’s down from 922 in March 2019.
O’Hara said he expects to recruit the number of officers funded in the city budget within two or three years. It will be some time, the chief said, for MPD to reach 900 officers again.
Minneapolis, MN
4 leading Minneapolis mayoral candidates debate policies, vision
MINNEAPOLIS (FOX 9) – As the last full week of campaigning gets underway, four leading candidates bidding for Minneapolis mayor in the November election faced off on Monday at Minnesota Public Radio headquarters in St. Paul.
Voters hear from candidates
What they’re saying:
With just over a week to go until election day, more voters are paying attention. And they got another chance to hear from four of the top candidates. This is how they described what type of leader they plan to be.
“Collaborative and pragmatic,” said Jazz Hampton, Minneapolis mayoral candidate.
“Earnest and compassionate,” said Mayor Jacob Frey, incumbent.
“Bold and partnership,” said Omar Fateh, Minneapolis mayoral candidate.
“Visionary and collaborative,” said Reverend DeWayne Davis, Minneapolis mayoral candidate.
The debate
The backstory:
Incumbent Mayor Jacob Frey and three of his strongest challengers took the stage in this nearly hour-long event Monday afternoon.
There were a few tense moments between Frey and state Sen. Omar Fateh, who Frey called his “primary challenger.”
Two serious candidates, Reverend DeWayne Davis and attorney Jazz Hampton also took part in this debate.
There are 15 candidates in this race. It is a ranked-choice election, so voters are asked to select three candidates in order of preference.
Frey calls out competitors
At one point during the debate, Frey called out the three candidates for forming a coalition against him.
What they’re saying:
The debate included a lightning round of questions on public safety, gun violence, housing, downtown development, city revenue, and property taxes.
It culminated with each candidate sharing their vision for the city.
“The partnership with our public schools is critical. We have a program called Stable Home Stable Schools, which has successfully housed over 6,700 kids in our Minneapolis public school system and beyond. But we can make sure that this partnership goes even further,” said Frey.
“We have to figure out how do we make all of this work for everybody here, not only to save ourselves in this sense, but also to forecast to the country what’s possible and what we know we can be,” said Davis.
“It includes having an ambitious youth agenda supporting our kids, making sure we have youth jobs and having youth programing. It includes ending poverty wages in the city of Minneapolis forever. We can make that happen,” said Fateh.
“I’m excited to do that work, and that is my big vision partnering with Hennepin County to make more buildings open to before-and-after school programs, ensuring that it’s financially viable. Also, driving down crime in the process,” said Hampton.
What you can do:
Minneapolis voters can cast their ballot for mayor by 8 p.m. next Tuesday, Nov. 4.
The Source: The debate was hosted and moderated by MPR News and The Star Tribune.
Minneapolis, MN
Annunciation memorial bows will become students’ works of art
A benefit concert also is being held in St. Paul for the families affected by the shooting. The concert is set for 7:30 p.m. Oct. 30 at the Cathedral of St. Paul.
The concert is free and open to the public. Attendees are encouraged to make a donation to the “Annunciation Hope and Healing Fund,” run by the Catholic Community Foundation of Minnesota.
According to the Cathedral of St. Paul, the donations will “benefit rebuilding efforts, families directly affected by the tragedy, and organizations supporting community recovery and safety.”
The Cathedral and St. Cecilia’s Children’s choirs, the Minnesota Orchestra, and the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra will perform.
Minneapolis, MN
Counterpoint | My response to the ‘Precarious State’ critics
Then there is the “not my problem” theme. “I live in the suburbs” or “greater Minnesota” so Minneapolis is not my problem. We saw this in Aaron Brown’s column, in which he did a “what about my issues” for greater Minnesota (“We do live in ‘A Precarious State,’ but place-baiting won’t solve that,” Oct. 8). Greater Minnesota has serious issues, too, and deserves a documentary just like the metro area, except there is only so much time in one documentary.
But most concerning is what former legislator Pat Garofalo called the “strategy of denial.” Brown’s column reflected this — how he strolled safely from the University of Minnesota’s Twin Cities campus to downtown Minneapolis. Eric Roper did a column for the Star Tribune (“Doomsday docs aside, Mpls.’ lush urbanity makes it a special place”) that literally talked about walking down a passageway of sunflowers in Minneapolis. With a picture of sunflowers and sunshine. He said:
“I’ll be biking up a protected bike lane and whiz past charming homes near quaint clusters of small businesses. I’ll be running around the lake and see sailboats framed beneath the downtown skyline. I’ll be at the annual alley dance party with my neighbors, a little toasted.”
The message was clear. Minneapolis has “lush urbanity,” not the crime and decline shown in the documentary. Well, only if you read through the literal picture of sunshine and flowers, then the picture of beautiful, well-maintained homes, then past the picture of happy people at a street festival, then pictures of joyous people wandering around downtown on a warm Saturday night, and then past the people lounging by the river did you get to the picture of drug dealers, people passed out on the street, trash, filth and garbage right on his protected bike lane. My friend in the Phillips neighborhood understood the real message – what is happening in your part of the city doesn’t matter because it isn’t what I experience. This was mirrored by many commenters from Minneapolis.
You see the same strategy of denial from columnist Evan Ramstad in the Star Tribune (“Crime isn’t our biggest problem,” Oct. 17). First, Ramstad brings up the question of who funded the documentary. Then he notes it has gone viral in business and right-leaning circles. Apparently he thinks moderates and the left are not watching it, which is depressing if true, because the issues in the documentary are real.
Crime is the one issue Ramstad talks about. He states:
-
New York5 days agoVideo: How Mamdani Has Evolved in the Mayoral Race
-
World1 week agoIsrael continues deadly Gaza truce breaches as US seeks to strengthen deal
-
News7 days agoVideo: Federal Agents Detain Man During New York City Raid
-
News7 days agoBooks about race and gender to be returned to school libraries on some military bases
-
Technology1 week agoAI girlfriend apps leak millions of private chats
-
Politics1 week agoTrump admin on pace to shatter deportation record by end of first year: ‘Just the beginning’
-
Business1 week agoUnionized baristas want Olympics to drop Starbucks as its ‘official coffee partner’
-
News1 week agoTrump news at a glance: president can send national guard to Portland, for now