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A proposal that asks voters to replace the Minneapolis Police Department in the wake of George Floyd s death will head to the City Council for consideration next week.
A City Council committee voted 5-1 Thursday to advance the proposal following a discussion about whether it would fulfill promises to increase accountability for police and gather community input as they seek to build a new public safety system.
Council Member Linea Palmisano, the lone dissenter on the council s Public Health & Safety Committee, said she feared the latest proposal was too similar to ones that had failed in the past and would only further blur lines of accountability for police.
Proposal to replace the police department heads gets preliminary OK from Minneapolis Council startribune.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from startribune.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Jay Ettinger, Minneapolis resident and business owner, reacts to the decision on ‘Fox & Friends.’
Several dozen Minneapolis residents attended a virtual public hearing Thursday to contest and discuss the proposed plan to replace its current police department, but after several hours one outcome is certain: the debate promises to continue.
The proposal, from three members of the city council, calls for a new Department of Public Safety which would integrate the police with the city s other public safety units. It would also remove a requirement to maintain a minimum number of police officers based on the city s population.
The Minneapolis Star-Tribune reported Friday that almost 100 people spoke at the virtual public hearing, and were largely split on the plan. The proposal by City Council Members Phillipe Cunningham, Steve Fletcher and Jeremy Schroeder submitted at the end of January, is similar to one that was blocked in August of 2020. At that time Minneapolis
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The latest gauge of public opinion over a plan to replace the Minneapolis Police Department revealed a deeply divided city, with nearly 100 speakers at a public hearing Thursday offering passionate and competing views.
The City Council invited the public to sound off on its latest plan to ask voters in November whether they want to create a new public safety department. But the beginning of the three-hour hearing was dominated by opponents, who said the proposed charter amendment was vague and didn t do enough to fix the problems that led to the killing of George Floyd last May.