South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

A Minneapoli­s neighborho­od’s vow to check its privilege already being tested

- By Caitlin Dickerson | The New York Times

hen Shari Albers moved three decades ago into Powderhorn Park, a tree-lined Minneapoli­s neighborho­od known as a haven to leftist activists and bohemian artists like herself, she went to work sprucing it up.

She became a block club leader, organizing her mostly white neighbors to bring in playground­s and help tackle long-standing issues with crime.

On many nights, she banged on the car windows of men who had come to solicit prostitute­s outside her door, she said. She kept meticulous notes when dozens of men would gather in a circle for gang meetings in the park across from her house. After each episode, she called the police.

But times have changed. After the death of George Floyd at the hands of the police, Albers, who is white, and many of her progressiv­e neighbors have vowed to avoid calling law enforcemen­t into their community. Doing so, they believed, would add to the pain that Black residents of Minneapoli­s were feeling and could put them in danger.

Already, that commitment is being challenged. Two weeks ago, dozens of multicolor­ed tents appeared in the neighborho­od park. They were brought by homeless people who were displaced during the unrest that gripped the city. The multiracia­l group of roughly 300 new residents seems to grow larger and more entrenched every day. They do laundry, listen to music and strategize about how to find permanent housing. Some are hampered by mental illness, addiction or both.

Their presence has drawn heavy car traffic into the neighborho­od, some from drug dealers. At least two residents have overdosed in the encampment and had to be taken away in ambulances.

The influx of outsiders has kept Albers awake at night. Though it is unlikely to happen, she has had visions of people from the tent camp forcing their way into her home. She imagines using a baseball bat to defend herself.

Not being able to call the police, as she has done for decades, has shaken her.

“I am afraid,” she said. “I know my neighbors are around, but I’m not feeling grounded in my city at all. Anything could happen.”

The video of Floyd’s

death and the outcry over racial injustice that came after has awakened many white Americans to a reality that people of color have known their whole lives: The scores of police killings they have seen in the news in recent years were not one-off incidents but part of a systemic problem of the dehumaniza­tion of Black people by the police.

In the city where the movement began, residents are not surprised that it is being taken especially seriously in Powderhorn Park, just blocks from Floyd’s deadly encounter with the police. For decades, the community has been a refuge for scrappy workingcla­ss activists with far-left

Sheldon Stately Sr., who grew up in the neighborho­od, now lives at the homeless encampment in Powderhorn Park. The influx of outsiders worries Shari Albers even as she fears what police could do to minorities.

politics. The biggest day of the year, locals often boast, is the May Day parade celebratin­g laborers.

Although it is one of the most diverse neighborho­ods in Minneapoli­s, with Black residents making up about 17% of the population, white people make up the largest group. About one-third of the population is Latino.

Since the camp appeared, the community has organized shifts for delivering warm meals, medical care and counseling to people living in the park. They persuaded officials to back off an eviction notice served shortly after the campers arrived.

But many in the neighborho­od, who were already beleaguere­d from the financial stresses of the coronaviru­s, now say they are eager for the campers to move on to stable housing away from the park.

“I’m not being judgmental,” said Carrie Nightshade, 44, who explained that she no longer felt comfortabl­e letting her children, 12 and

9, play in the park by themselves. “It’s not personal. It’s just not safe.”

On Friday, she sat in a shared backyard with four other women who live in neighborin­g houses. The women, four of whom are white, had called a meeting to vent about the camp.

Angelina Roslik burst

into tears, explaining that she had spent the past four years fleeing unstable housing conditions and was struggling more than she cared to admit with the chaos the camp had brought into the neighborho­od. Linnea Borden said she had stopped walking her dog through the park because she was tired of being catcalled.

“My emotions change every 30 seconds,” said Tria Houser, who is part Native American.

The women agreed to let any property damage, including to their own homes, go ignored and to request a block party permit from the city to limit car traffic. Rather than turn to law enforcemen­t if they saw anyone in physical danger, they resolved to call the American Indian Movement — a national organizati­on created in 1968 to address Native American grievances such as police brutality — which had been policing its own community locally for years.

But some people in the neighborho­od have already found their plans to avoid calling police harder to execute than they had imagined.

On the night of June 18, Joseph Menkevich found a Black man wearing a hospital bracelet passed out in the elevator of his apartment building two blocks from the park. Menkevich, who is white, quickly phoned a community activist, but she did not pick up. He felt he had no choice but to call 911, but requested an ambulance only, not the police.

Ultimately, a white police officer arrived at the scene. The officer checked the situation out briefly and then returned to his car.

“It didn’t resolve in a way that I had hoped,” Menkevich said. “All they did was offer to bring him back to the hospital. He refused, so they kicked him out on a rainy night.”

The impulse many white

Powderhorn Park residents have to seek help from community groups rather than from the police is being felt in neighborho­ods across the country. But some are finding the commitment hard to stand by when faced with the complex realities of life. While friends, neighbors and even family members in Powderhorn

Park agree to avoid calling the police at all costs, it has been harder to establish where to draw the line.

Mitchell Erickson’s fingers

began dialing 911 last week before he had a chance to even consider alternativ­es, when two Black teenagers who looked to be 15, at most, cornered him outside his home a block away from the park.

One of the boys pointed a gun at Erickson’s chest, demanding his car keys.

Erickson handed over a set, but it turned out to be house keys. The teenagers got frustrated and ran off, then stole a different car down the street.

Erickson said later that he would not cooperate with prosecutor­s against the boys. After the altercatio­n, he realized that if there was anything he wanted, it was to offer them help. But he still felt it had been right to call the authoritie­s because there was a gun involved.

Two days later, his position had evolved.

“Been thinking more about it,” he wrote in a text message. “I regret calling the police. It was my instinct but I wish it hadn’t been. I put those boys in danger of death by calling the cops.”

What about the fact the boys had put his life in danger?

“Yeah I know and yeah it was scary but the cops didn’t really have much to add after I called them,” he replied. “I haven’t been forced to think like this before. So I would have lost my car. So what? At least no one would have been killed.”

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