Enterprise-Record (Chico)

MEETING DETAILS

- By Mohamed Ibrahim

Time: 1 p.m.

Date: Monday, March 8, 2021

YouTube livestream at https://youtu.be/-5cvsuILrI8

The committee will not be able to respond to questions or comments entered in the YouTube chat feature.

Email a comment on an agenda item or make a public comment before or after the meeting by emailing sewercomit­tee@townofpara­dise.com. Emails received at this address will be forwarded to the Advisory Committee members by 5 p.m. Monday.

MINNEAPOLI­S >> During a group’s recent meeting at the now-vacant Speedway gas station near where George Floyd died, children roasted marshmallo­ws on a fire pit while adults discussed topics ranging from activism to snow removal.

“Black joy is a form of protest,” said Marcia Howard, one of the group’s organizers, referencin­g plans for celebratin­g Arctic explorer Matthew Henson as part of Black History Month.

But the agenda on this chilly Thursday morning in February quickly segued to more immediate concerns: Who would pick up skis and broomball sticks for an event being planned at a nearby park? And what’s to be done about the snow piling up at the site’s greenhouse that preserves plants left in Floyd’s memory?

New reality

Such is life at George Floyd Square, the place where former Minneapoli­s police Officer Derek Chauvin pressed his knee into Floyd’s neck for about nine minutes. Although many in the community consider the place where the Black man died to be a sacred space, it also has presented some headaches for the city.

The square sprang up organicall­y in the days after Floyd’s death. As people gathered to express their grief and anger, including leaving offerings, community members set up barricades of refrigerat­ors, trash cans and wooden pallets to block traffic. The city eventually replaced those with concrete barriers.

Amid concerns that the barricaded square was decimating businesses and making the neighborho­od less safe at night, city leaders recently pledged to reopen it after Chauvin’s murder trial. Jury selection starts Monday, and the trial is expected to stretch into April.

The residents and activists who serve as unofficial leaders and organizers of George Floyd Square say they won’t step aside unless the city meets their list of 24 demands. Among them: recall the county prosecutor, fire the head of the state’s criminal investigat­ive agency, and spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on programs to create jobs, combat racism and support affordable housing.

Reopen details murky

Since the city asserted it would reopen the square after Chauvin’s trial, the caretakers of the space have declined to talk in detail about negotiatio­ns to reopen it. Jeanelle Austin, a racial justice leadership coach and a lead caretaker of the memorial area, said the demands that fall within the city’s control aren’t unreasonab­le.

“The thing about it is that a lot of the different demands are asks from different people, and Black folks aren’t monolithic,” said Austin, who is Black. “So it’s really incumbent upon our city leadership to really look at the needs behind the asks, and really fulfilling those needs.”

A towering steel sculpture of a raised fist dominates the middle of the intersecti­on, a replacemen­t for the wooden sculpture that first went up. Murals memorializ­ing Floyd or marking the struggle against discrimina­tion have overtaken nearly every vertical surface. Warming houses are available at the barricades, and so is hand sanitizer in a nod to COVID-19 safety precaution­s.

 ?? JIM MONE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? George Floyd Square in Minneapoli­s.
JIM MONE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS George Floyd Square in Minneapoli­s.

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