Cuts to energy and racial equity programs were restored to Minneapolis' 2015 budget Wednesday evening after a lengthy and sometimes emotional debate between members of the City Council.
Mayor Betsy Hodges' $1.2 billion proposal passed just after 11 p.m. following a series of 7-6 split votes on more than a dozen motions to move money around. In the end, only one council member voted no.
The council cut away even further at Hodges' proposed 2.4 percent levy increase, dropping it to 2.1 percent by eliminating two new communications positions. They also restored two major priorities for activists: $75,000 that had been previously cut from a new clean energy partnership with utility companies and $150,000 to the city's minority leadership program.
Those programs were re-funded through reductions to the Convention Center's marketing fund and a reduction in planned spending on a Civil Rights Department disparity study.
The vote capped a monthslong budget process that turned divisive in recent weeks, as council members sparred over the best way to fund programs aimed at eliminating large disparities between white and minority residents.
On Wednesday, council members and many of the approximately 60 people who spoke in a public hearing before the vote spoke passionately about the need to address racial equity in Minneapolis. Many speakers warned the council — both in speeches at the podium and chants that echoed through council chambers — that many of its members ran on equity platforms and would be held accountable for their votes in the next election.
"Do not turn your backs on us," said speaker Cathy Jones, who urged funding for programs focused on clean energy and minorities. "Some of you ran on a campaign of equity. You need to do the job you said you would do."
Council members in both voting blocs told the crowd they believed they were doing the right thing for the city.