Minneapolis City Council members on Friday pitched their first substantial budget cuts to the Police Department following George Floyd's death — and signaled that additional changes are in the works.
The proposals, which together total just over $600,000, are far from final. They must survive another public hearing, additional council votes and review by the mayor.
If ultimately approved, the revisions would fall far short of the $45 million that some activists have asked the city to cut from the Minneapolis Police Department's $193 million budget. Other residents have said they want the city to maintain the department's budget, or even increase it.
The city is trying to cut roughly $156 million from its $1.6 billion budget as it tries to compensate for the financial losses that came from the coronavirus pandemic.
Last week, Mayor Jacob Frey proposed relying on cash reserves, some furloughs, up to 40 layoffs and a series of budgetary transfers to plug the budget hole.
The city said it had already cut roughly $8.6 million from the Police Department's budget when it implemented a citywide hiring and wage freeze. Frey suggested cutting only $50,000 more, from a timekeeping system and the system that tracks pawnshop transactions.
During a public meeting Friday, council members got their first chance to offer revisions. Members Cam Gordon and Alondra Cano both pitched cuts to the Police Department's budget.
One measure, introduced by Cano, would move $500,000 from the Police Department to the city's Office of Violence Prevention.