Voters in Minneapolis Tuesday will decide the future of the city's police department.
Tuesday, Nov. 2 is Election Day. Find out where you are supposed to vote in Minneapolis.
Voters in Minneapolis will elect a mayor, new city council, tax and park board, plus decide on three key ballot questions.
The complaint was filed after Chief Medaria Arradondo denounced a ballot proposal that would replace the city's police department.
Patch asked candidates to answer questions about their campaigns and will be publishing candidate profiles over the coming weeks.
The program is being funded with $3 million from the American Rescue Plan Act, which was passed by Congress earlier this year.​
The police chief said the ballot amendment is dangerously vague and would not fix the issues with public safety in Minneapolis.
Minneapolis voters have 17 different candidates to choose from when it comes to the race for mayor in 20201.
If passed on Election Day, the amendment would dismantle the city's police department and replace it with a "Department of Public Safety."
Sen. Tina Smith — a Minneapolis resident — will vote "No" on the ballot question asking to dismantle the city's police department.
The ranked choice voting system, which the city adopted in 2009, allows voters to rank candidates in order of their preference.
Minneapolis uses ranked-choice voting, which allows residents to vote for up to three candidates.
Mail-in ballots will not count if they are received after Election Day in Minnesota.
The Hennepin County unemployment rate improved somewhat during the late summer.
The Star Tribune editorial board said Jacob Frey "refused to be intimidated" by protesters during the city's debate over public safety.
Former Minneapolis Police officer Derek Chauvin is currently trying to appeal his murder and manslaughter conviction.
More than 1 out of every 10 Hennepin County rental households are behind on rents as of early August, according to a new analysis.
A new poll shows that Minnesotans are divided when it comes to the results of the 2020 presidential election.
Minneapolis currently has a "weak mayor, strong city council" system of government. Voters can change that this fall.
Rent control is banned under Minnesota state law unless voters specifically authorize it in a general election.
This fall, Minneapolis voters will decide the future of the city's police department. Residents can choose to replace it or keep it as is.
More Minneapolis residents support a ballot measure to dismantle and replace the city's police department than oppose it, a new poll finds.
"God willing, my brother will live," Minneapolis City Council member Jamal Osman wrote Friday.