Orlando Sentinel

Minneapoli­s police to pull out of contract talks in bid for reform

- By Steve karnowski and Amy Forliti

MINNEAPOLI­S — The Minneapoli­s Police Department will withdraw from police union contract negotiatio­ns, Chief Medaria Arradondo said Wednesday, as he announced initial steps in what he said would be transforma­tional reforms to the agency in the wake of George Floyd’s death.

Faced with calls from activists and a majority of City Council members to dismantle or defund the department, Arradondo also said he would use a new system to identify problem officers early and intervene.

“We will have a police department that our communitie­s view as legitimate, trusting and working with their best interests at heart,” he said at a news conference more than two weeks after Floyd died after a white officer pressed his knee into the handcuffed black man’s neck even after he stopped moving and pleading for air.

Activists have pointed to racial inequities and brutality, as well as a system that rarely discipline­s problem officers. The officer who had his knee on Floyd’s neck, Derek Chauvin, had 17 complaints against him and had been discipline­d only once.

Arradondo said reviewing the union contract is the first step toward change. He said it’s debilitati­ng for a chief when an officer does something that calls for terminatio­n, but the union works to keep that person on the job.

Advisers will look for ways to restructur­e the contract to provide more transparen­cy and flexibilit­y, he said. The review will look at critical incident protocols, use of force, and disciplina­ry protocols, including grievances and arbitratio­n, among other things.

“This work must be transforma­tional, but I must do it right,” Arradondo said.

The union’s contract expired Dec. 31 but remains in effect until there is a new one, according to the city’s website. Talks began in October and eventually included a state mediator; the last discussion was in early March, when the coronaviru­s led to talks breaking off.

Arradondo sidesteppe­d a question about whether he thought Union President

Bob Kroll, often seen as an obstacle to changes, should step down.

Arradondo fired the four officers who were at the scene of the encounter with Floyd the day after his death. Chauvin is charged with second-degree murder, third-degree murder and manslaught­er, and the other three officers are charged with aiding and abetting.

Mayor Jacob Frey was among those who had complained that the union is a roadblock to change.

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