Tag Archives: politics

MPD 2-PAC Dec. Meeting, Part 2: Planning the Annual Dec. Buffet for First Responders

PLANNING FOR DECEMBER 24.

This is an annual Thank You to all our First Responders.  It’s a 10-hour buffet, created by residents, business owners and other shareholders in the 2nd Precinct.   2024 will be the 41st anniversary of the first event, which, I understand, started out as a block club program.

A couple of friends were walking around on Christmas Eve and suddenly realized that they were coming from a house full of family,  good food,  excitement. But the Second Precinct had all the lights on and heads walking back and forth and phones ringing and cars going in and out of the parking area.  People were working in there.    Somebody said, “You know, this isn’t right”.

So the next Christmas Eve, neighbors of the Precinct  brought a Holiday dinner to the Precinct so the people there didn’t have to miss everything.  The bright idea grew over the years until it got to be a deal. This year is the 41st anniversary.

We have only missed one year, 2020, because of COVID, but we were back in business in 2021, thanks to Larry Ranallo, who knew we couldn’t have it at the precinct.  There was no place to do social distancing  for 150 people in that small building, so Larry offered his Event Room in the Moose Grill and Bar.

Officers came in one precinct shift at a time. They had already been in close contact, so they all ate together but distanced from officers from other areas. We had our event and it’s good.  

We solicit donations of food and help only from people and businesses in the Second Precinct.   However, any First Responder who is scheduled to work on December 24, who walks in the door, will be welcomed and  fed. That includes people from the fire department, the police department, EMTs, and others.    

We deliver to the people I call “shut ins” — they are people who can’t leave their stations during their shifts.   These are the 911 operators, and others who can’t take time to travel to the 2nd for a meal.  That’s fine. On the 24th, we will deliver their food to them.

The event starts at noon, although if somebody comes in early, they will be fed. It ends at 10, but if somebody comes in at 10:30, they’re going to be fed.

We need  people to pick up food donations, from Dec. 18th to the 21st, and again on the 23rd and the 24th.    Those gifts will be delivered to the kitchen staff at the Moose (356 Monroe St NE)    We need drivers to take food to the “shut ins” on the 24th, especially in the middle of the afternoon.   It’s best if all drivers have someone riding shotgun and no one goes alone. 

We need people to set up the Event Room with our gear, greet the guests as they enter, make sure they sign in, and get them started on the buffet.   (Set up starts 8:30-ish.  Noon is zero-hour.)  Places must be wiped  & cleared after every guest.   Hosts are scheduled on 2-hour shifts, but you can sign up for as many shifts as you want.  We need some people with a little energy to pack up and clear out from 10 PM to done.  Usually we’re done in about 45 minutes and just sit and joke around before we head out.

If anyone has a question or suggestion, send it to emilieinmpls@gmail.com  

Dinner Plans Continued:  We deliver to shut-ins mostly in the afternoon, because most cops are out working then.  

QQ: Do we know who’s been contacted and who’s not been contacted? We don’t want to be hitting up multiple people calling the same places.

Quast: Anybody that’s on last  year’s list is being contacted, but the 2nd Pct has a couple hundred other restaurants that are very, very good.  The point is, if you like it, if it’s food you’d want to brag about, think about contacting them, but DO CHECK WITH ME FIRST.   I also don’t want the same place getting multiple requests.   

We are trying to tamp down on the sweets this year. Many generous people bring their seasonal goodies to the local Fire Station or Police Precinct.   A light dessert is nice at a sit-down event, but we need a few more main entrees.  

I have one other thing:  I hate food waste. Previous years, I was sending out carry outs for guests to take back to their stations.  I suspect some of those gifts weren’t really needed.  This year we’re going to send out reasonable amounts.

I have already contacted Second Harvest and they will coordinate with staff  at the Moose.  Any food that’s left over will be kept safely by the Moose staff until Second Harvest rolls in.   They’ll take it to where it’s needed so there will be no waste.

Again, we solicit.  If you have a restaurant you want to contact, contact me first. I will tell you if I know someone else already named that contact so we don’t have dups. My goal is to bring  these restaurants into the community a little bit more, to create a professional community. We’ve got professional cops.  We’ve got professional restaurant owners. Let’s see if we can make connections so we’re all pulling in the same direction.

Again, if you have any questions about what you could do, how you could help, contact me.   AND my new email is emilieinmpls@gmail.com 

Comment: I know you said to contact you, which I have, Emilie, but I think this might be of broader interest.  If we want to make cash donations, what’s the process for that? 

Quast:   Thank you!  Make the check out to:   Second Precinct Advisory Council

Mail it to :  MPD Second Precinctthe precinct. 1911 Central Ave. Northeast, Minneapolis 55418.

 And with that, it’s been a long evening, and I appreciate the hard work you did. Thank you so very, very much.  Take care.

Feb. Report, Part 2: State of the Precinct. Incl Youtube link

STATE OF THE PRECINCT

From the MPD Crime Dashboard, 2nd Precinct 28 day report.

Crime metric              2024         2023         3-yr. average

Assault                          63             59             65

    Incl. Domestic           10              8               9

Burglary B&E                26            27             28
Damage to prop.           77            64             55 

Homicide, non-neg         1               0               –
Homicide, negligent        0               0               –
Larceny theft               156           132           182

M.V. Theft                      76             91            78

Robbery                         16             44            12

   Incl.car-jack’               2               1              4

Sex offenses                   15              2              7

Stolen property off.           2               1             1 

Weapon Law Viol.             4               0             1

Shots fired calls               20             12           12

Gunshot wound vics.         1               0             1

QQ  Does damage to property include graffiti?

Inspector Torborg: Graffiti has exploded in the 2nd Precinct, especially down the Central corridor.  It’s frustrating because people tend to regard that as a minor crime, but they’re doing a lot of expensive damage to the Northeast.  It’s investigated by the Property Crimes Unit, which today includes one Lieutenant and one Investigator.   That’s it.

They’ve identified some suspects and are working with the County Attorney’s office because these are juveniles.    That makes it harder to determine what is the appropriate punishment.   In one case along the RR tracks by the 5th Street bridge, a juvenile from Prior Lake was spraying graffiti and urinating in public. There was a witness who captured pictures of the suspect.  It doesn’t rise to the level of crime that we book him in Juvenile Detention, but we do have to send a message that this IS a serious crime.

Unfortunately, with all the other things that are going on in Minneapolis, graffiti is pretty far down on the list of what we can respond to.    That lets people think it isn’t a serious crime and they can get away with it.   We’re back to a matter of resources available to get the work done.  [EQ: “Resources” means officers in squad cars, I think]

COMMENT:   Como has an ongoing program that wraps utility boxes.   These are getting tagged regularly.   The MFD provides the removal chemicals which work pretty well.    He always takes a picture of the graffiti and sends it to 311 — apparently some office is keeping those pictures as evidence.  

Inspector Torborg:  It really helps if you can get pictures of the people painting the graffiti.  

Inspector Torborg:  We caught a few juveniles painting the Lumber Co. on Central and transported them home.   Hopefully they’ll be getting some form of a ticket like damage to property and disorderly conduct.

Quast:  I’ve had a complaint that people want COURTWATCH back, and told them I’d ask if there is a timeline for bringing it back.

Atty Okoronkow:  Our office does not do lists of Targeted Prosecution any more.  The Dept. of Human Rights took this as an issue that they wanted stopped.   The First Precinct had a robust list and does not have a list at all any more. 

COMMENT: Met an officer at the car wash  and asked how things were going at the 2nd Precinct.    It turned out this was that officer’s last day and he was moving to the Highway Patrol.   He commented his MPD equipment didn’t work very well; Ford no longer makes the vehicle he was using.

Inspector Torborg:   We have about 60 Ford Explorer Police Packages.  That is add-on equipment, specific for Ford Explorers, but Ford is not delivering the vehicles or offering a timeframe when they can make that delivery.  It takes a long time to get them ready for the street.  Radios and other equipment have to be installed and the back has to be modified.  In the meantime, Dodge Durangoes will be taking their place.

COMMENT:   He also mentioned that recruiting is a challenge.

Inspector Torborg:  As of today, we have 505 officers.   144 of them are eligible for retirement.  We’ve been without a contract for over a year, and the officers’ pay is lagging behind what they can get elsewhere.  

Attenders chatted about contacting our CCMs, Payne, Wonsley and Rainville.

YOUTUBE Video:  https://youtu.be/2wCFuOi-AD0

Emilie Quast, member

MPD Second Precinct Advisory Council (2-PAC)

1911 Central Ave NE

Minneapolis MN 55418