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Officials defend Rybak public safety package as ‘significant’ increase

August 22, 2006

The “nearly $200 million” package of public safety initiatives Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak heralded last week in his 2007 budget message was designed to assuage concerns over rising crime levels in the city. And, while that figure sounds impressive, a closer look reveals what appears to be a more modest plan.

According to Tara Barenok, the mayor’s director of budget information and coordination, the public safety package actually totals about $191.5 million and includes $8 million in new anti-crime funding. That’s an increase of 4.5 percent over 2006 spending, a figure that will barely keep pace with inflation, which stood at 4.15 percent in July.

The public safety package includes $3.4 million for 43 additional police officers and $1 million for surveillance cameras. The remainder of the $4.6 million will be divided between the Safe Routes to School program ($100,000), domestic violence prevention ($100,000), homelessness outreach work ($100,000), 911 computer dispatch training ($100,000), youth violence programs ($200,000), graffiti remediation ($100,000), demolition of vacant buildings ($500,000) and new firefighters ($200,000). An additional $2.1 million of the increase is dedicated to inflationary wage and benefit hikes.

So actual new public safety program spending is $5.9 million, or a 3.3 percent over current levels.

City officials argue that, given the financial constraints under which the city has been operating in recent years, any increase in public safety spending is significant.

“It’s a miracle,” said Rybak spokesman Jeremy Hanson. “It’s still 43 cops and a million dollars in technology. And just maintaining the size of public safety is a significant amount of growth.”

City Council Member Paul Ostrow, who chairs the Ways and Means/Budget Committee, also sees reasons to celebrate. Adding a dozen firefighters to allow the Fire Department to achieve the “mandatory standard of coverage” throughout the city is a “critical” step, he said.

“We need to push as hard as possible on the budget,” he added. “I continue to believe that the number of sworn officers we need in the city of Minneapolis exceeds even the number that the mayor’s budget proposes.”

The budget is “consistent with the council’s priorities,” he added, but cautioned that “our margin for future years is very, very narrow at this point.”

Council Member Betsy Hodges called the proposed budget increase “enormous,” noting that, “There’s nothing else getting that level of increase.”

And like her colleague Ostrow, Hodges has some concerns about the city’s contingency funds, but added, “I don’t think we’re on the brink of disaster.”

Minneapolis Police Department spokesman Lt. Greg Reinhardt declined to comment on the budget figures, noting that “the business plan of the budget has not been completed.”

The City Council will began debating the budget in September and finalize the spending plan in December.


Submitted by Mark Koscielski (not verified) on August 22, 2006 - 14:12.

Once again B like in B and S like in S. Tara Barenok said “that this plan barely keeps pace with inflation” Wouldn’t it be nice if the police pay would barely keeps pace with inflation? It’s doesn’t. Now lets look at this thing about more cops. As I said before the Governor gave more LGA (Welfare) so we could get 71 more cops, plus the 43 cops in this budget, total 114, sound good uh!, Well it’s not. This year alone so far, we lost about 30 cops and more will be leaving us this year and next. We will be lucky to have the same amount of cops a year from now.

Safe Routes to School Program? What the hell is this? Let me guess here, someone is being paid let say $ 50.000 to head up this program and he or she will need at lease 2 asst. say at $ 20,000 ea. So that will leave $ 10,000 to tell the little kids how to walk to school in a safe way.

Demolition of vacant building, cost $ 500.000? Why not sell them and have the new owner of them do it. WOW we could save $ 500.000 and get money from the sale.

CM Betsy Hodges said “the proposed budget increase is enormous, noting that there nothing else getting that level of increase” Well CM Bull Hog. There is something that is getting that type of increase, OUR PROPTEY TAXES!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on August 22, 2006 - 12:49.

Are those 45 cops in addition to the 60 cops added last year? So there will have been over 100 cops added in two years?