Facing backlash from neighborhood organizations, Minneapolis officials will recommend scaling back a proposal that would have cut off city funding to groups deemed unrepresentative of their communities.
Late last week, the city released hundreds of public comments about Neighborhoods 2020, an initiative that would fundamentally change the way the 70 neighborhood associations look and operate once their current source of municipal funding runs out next year. Under the proposal, organizations could have lost out on city money altogether if they didn't have boards that were demographically representative of their neighborhoods within 18 months.
After taking in the feedback, the city will loosen deadlines for neighborhood associations to diversify their leadership boards, said David Rubedor, director of the city's Neighborhood and Community Relations (NCR) department.
Racial diversity and participation from renters in neighborhood groups has historically lacked, with the city only meeting 33% of its "owner vs. renter" and 50% of its "people of color" goals last year. In their comments, many groups urged the city to remove that requirement, claiming boards would seek people of color just to meet a quota and lead to tokenism of minority board members.
"People wanted to reach that goal but ... they weren't exactly sure how," Rubedor said. "We've taken that in and [are] looking at more of a progressive approach."
According to Rubedor, all neighborhood organizations will receive $35,000 in annual funding after a panel that reviewed the public comments suggested they would need at least that much to meet the new demands.
The final recommendations will be released Friday and presented to a City Council committee on May 6, Rubedor said.
The initial proposal was released in January and feedback was collected by e-mail, letter and during community meetings through March. While dwarfed by the 10,000 comments collected for the 2040 comprehensive plan last year, the roughly 300 comments submitted about Neighborhoods 2020 reflected the gravity of the proposed changes for these associations.