22-04-2025
State of the City: St. Paul mayor discusses fentanyl crisis, reviving downtown
St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter delivered his 2025 State of the City address on Monday, highlighting a range of housing efforts aimed at revitalizing downtown.
During his address, Carter also spoke about improving violent crime trends and called on community members to join in the fight against fentanyl and opioids.
According to Carter, data from earlier this month showed a 73% drop in non-fatal shootings and zero gun-related homicides so far this year.
Officers have seized 199 illegal firearms and auto thefts have dropped from 859 in early 2022 to 236 by this March, he said.
Carter attributed some of the city's strides in public safety to the St. Paul Police Department's new Non-Fatal Shootings Unit, which aims to stop cycles of retaliatory violence.
In just one year, Carter said, the solve-rate for non-violent shootings has nearly doubled from from 38% to 71%.
Carter also touted a new fire station that will open on the city's East Side tomorrow, responding to a long-standing disparity in fire-related deaths in East Side neighborhoods.
While many areas of public safety are improving in St. Paul, the community continues to face deep challenges related to the fentanyl and opioid crisis.
"This fentanyl crisis won't be solved with reaction alone," Carter said. "And it can't be solved with a playbook from history or from another city. Just like we did with gun violence, we must build new strategies together."
Minnesota recorded 840 opioid overdose deaths last year, Carter said. Just four months ago, a St. Paul teenager died from fentanyl exposure.
In the coming weeks, Carter said city leaders will announce plans for a city-wide fentanyl summit.
"This crisis demands all of us facing this common adversary and saving lives together," he said.
"Building lasting safety will always be our top and most important job," he continued. "But our most urgent job right now is meeting the moment downtown."
St. Paul is facing declining commercial property values and widespread office vacancies as remote work reshapes downtown.
"What happens downtown effects every neighborhood, every business, every family in our city," Carter said.
City leaders are working to advance various redevelopment projects with a goal of bringing at least 20,000 more residences to a former Ecolab tower, now called Stella, Sherman Associates is adding 170 new residences. The Landmark Tower has also been transformed, with leasing on new units to begin soon.
At a downtown property known as Grand Central Block, a 20-story apartment tower with 300 market-rate apartments and 10,000-square-feet of ground-floor retail is envisioned.
"This is what it looks like to design a city for people," Carter said, noting one-third of downtown office space is vacant while housing is over 90% full.
"The truth is simple: If we want more affordability, more access and more fairness, we need more homes," he said. "And we have to do everything we can to help get them built."