Sheila Nezhad

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Sheila Nezhad
Image of Sheila Nezhad
Elections and appointments
Last election

November 2, 2021

Bildung

Bachelor's

University of Minnesota, Morris, 2009

Absolvent

University of Minnesota, Hubert H. Humphrey School of Public Affairs, 2012

Personal
Birthplace
Fargo, N.D.
Profession
Policy organizer
Kontakt

Sheila Nezhad (Democratic Party) ran for election for Mayor of Minneapolis in Minnesota. She lost in the general election on November 2, 2021.

Nezhad completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2021. Click here to read the survey answers.

Elections in Minneapolis are officially nonpartisan, but the Minneapolis City Charter allows mayoral and city council candidates to choose a party label to appear below their name on the official ballot. Ballotpedia includes candidates' party or principle to best reflect what voters will see on their ballot.[1]

Biography

Sheila Nezhad was born in Fargo, North Dakota. She earned a bachelor's degree from the University of Minnesota, Morris, in 2009 and a graduate degree from the University fo Minnesota, Hubert H. Humphrey School of Public Affairs, in 2012. Nezhad's career experience includes working as a policy organizer at Reclaim the Block and a crew member at the Ricardo Levins Morales Art Studio.[2]

Elections

2021

See also: Mayoral election in Minneapolis, Minnesota (2021)

General election

General election for Mayor of Minneapolis

The ranked-choice voting election was won by Jacob Frey in round 2 . The results of Round are displayed below. To see the results of other rounds, use the dropdown menu above to select a round and the table will update.


Total votes: 143,974
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.

Endorsements

To view Nezhad's endorsements in the 2021 election, please click here.


Campaign finance

Endorsements

See also: Ballotpedia: Our approach to covering endorsements

This section lists noteworthy endorsements issued in this election, including those made by high-profile individuals and organizations, cross-party endorsements, and endorsements made by newspaper editorial boards. It also includes a bulleted list of links to official lists of endorsements for any candidates who published that information on their campaign websites. Please note that this list is not exhaustive. If you are aware of endorsements that should be included, please click here.


Click the links below to see endorsement lists published on candidate campaign websites, if available.


Noteworthy endorsements
Endorsement Frey (D) Knuth (D) Nezhad (D)
Elected officials
Gov. Tim Walz (D)
Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.)
Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.)[3]
Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison (D)
Minneapolis City Councilor Lisa Bender
Minneapolis City Councilor Steve Fletcher (D)
Minneapolis City Councilor Jeremy Schroeder (D)
State Sen. Erin Murphy (D)
Individuals
Former Minneapolis Mayor Sharon Sayles-Belton
Former state Rep. Jean Wagenius (D)
Organizations
AFSCME Council 5
IUPAT DC 82
Minneapolis Building and Construction Trades Council
Minneapolis Firefighters Local 82
SEIU MN State Council
Teamsters Joint Council 32
TakeAction MN
MN 350 Action
Minnesota DFL Environmental Caucus
OutFront Minnesota Action (2nd rank choice)
Sierra Club Minneapolis Political Committee
OutFront Minnesota Action (1st rank choice)
Run For Something 2021
Twin Cities DSA


Campaign themes

2021

Ballotpedia survey responses

See also: Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection

Candidate Connection

Sheila Nezhad completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2021. The survey questions appear in bold and are followed by Nezhad's responses. Candidates are asked three required questions for this survey, but they may answer additional optional questions as well.

Expand all | Collapse all

My name is Sheila Nezhad and I’m running to be your next mayor. I’m a community organizer, renter, queer woman, and daughter of an immigrant. My motto is “from the streets to the spreadsheets” because I believe the best solutions come from people who are leading change on the ground. I was born in Fargo to two teachers, my Persian immigrant father and Anishinaabe-Scandinavian mother. They instilled in me a love of public service and justice. I have spent over a decade working at the intersection of civil rights and public policy. Last year, I was out alongside the young people, parents, community elders, and faith leaders who were all demanding justice for George Floyd. In my work, I’ve trained hundreds of people on how to get involved in the city budget process and pushed the city to reinvest $8 million from the police budget into mental health services and violence prevention last fall. As mayor, I will invest the most in our safety and youth programming.

It takes policy knowledge and community connection to be an effective elected official, that’s why I am asking to be your #1 ranked choice for Mayor this November.

  • We deserve to thrive, not just survive. That means affordable housing, rent stabilization, wage theft protections, and environmental justice including shutting down heavy industry polluters.
  • Justice and safety are intertwined. That means establishing a new Department of Public safety, more resources for mental health, violence prevention, youth programming and youth jobs.
  • Power comes from the people, and policy should too! That means $10M for participatory budgeting so community can have a real voice in how our money is spent, and policymaking that starts from the group up.

Public safety. Safety is my area of expertise. I am a co-founder of Reclaim the Block and MPD150 and have helped lead hundreds of people in movements for racial justice and changing policing. Our city has reached a moment where public safety is at the forefront of many people's minds, and they are ready for meaningful change. For years, I have been fighting for a Minneapolis where we can all feel safe, everyone can have their basic needs met, and every person has someone to call when they need help. We deserve better options than violent policing and mass incarceration for public safety. The future of public safety should be guided by the principles of justice, self-determination, and the belief that no person is disposable. I helped write Question 2 and as mayor, will invest in real public safety, not violent policing. I am running for mayor because I want to change the structure of our city away from its history of white supremacy, and towards resources for community self-determination and justice.

My leadership style follows the teachings of Ella Baker, a powerful civil rights activist who cultivated leader-ful organizations. I believe that everyone should have a role in how our city is run, and building a better future isn’t just about one or two people, it’s about welcoming as many people in as possible, and crafting our solutions together.

My leadership style is rooted in community. Check out the MPD150 report, which I helped write in the community!

I was twelve years old when 9/11 happened. As a mixed-race Middle Eastern person, that day significantly impacted me and my family living in the U.S.

I shelved books at the public library for two years (my mom was a clerk there).

“Cantoras” by Carolina de Robertis is a book about a group of Uruguayan queer women in the 1970s who love and build family in defiance of the extreme military dictatorship that criminalized homosexuality. I love this book because it reminds me of my LGBTQ ancestors, and that joy and liberation can go hand in hand.

The mayor’s office is a perfect position for a community organizer. It is about bringing together various interests and stakeholders to take action toward a collective vision. A good mayor creates avenues for more voices to be heard, and champions solutions rooted in equity and justice.

I believe one of the most important roles for the mayor is guiding the future of public safety and policing. Currently, the mayor is in charge of the police department. If Question 2 passes, the mayor will play a major role in the transition to the new Department of Public Safety. I will use my expertise in safety beyond policing to guide our city toward more safety that’s rooted in racial justice.

The people. The people of Minneapolis are powerful, resilient, and creative, and it’s time for our elected officials to catch up.

Minneapolis is the epicenter of the discussion on policing and public safety. We will have to step into uncomfortable spaces, shift power away from the police federation, and help our city recover from the pandemic, while preparing for climate resiliency.

Our current law enforcement, under the sole control of the mayor, is under state and federal human rights investigation. Any public employee, including law enforcement, should act with accountability to their position and the direction of elected officials, and protect human dignity and self-determination.

Note: Ballotpedia reserves the right to edit Candidate Connection survey responses. Any edits made by Ballotpedia will be clearly marked with [brackets] for the public. If the candidate disagrees with an edit, he or she may request the full removal of the survey response from Ballotpedia.org. Ballotpedia does not edit or correct typographical errors unless the candidate's campaign requests it.



Campaign website

Sheila Nezhad's campaign website stated the following.

"

A Just Transition: A People’s Plan for Minneapolis

The term “Just Transition” came out of the climate and labor movements. It refers to a set of principles, processes, and practices to move from our extractive economy to a regenerative one. The organizers say, “The transition itself must be just and equitable; redressing past harms and creating new relationships of power for the future through reparations.” In Minneapolis, we get to choose what comes next. The pandemic and uprising taught us that we have collective power to build systems that work better to care for those who are most vulnerable. Just like we build wind turbines so we can shut down coal plants, we can build city government that treats Black lives as sacred, supports our ability to thrive, shares power, and finally gives everyone some peace.

From corporate control to people power

It’s time that our city builds policies and services that are led by and for all the people of Minneapolis, not just special interests that have the deepest pockets. We can chart a new course forward, expanding our democracy, protecting workers, and making reparations that are integral to a just transition.

Decision-making everyone can join

No initiative, no matter how sensible or strategic, will succeed if the community isn’t bought in. especially Black, brown, and Indigenous people at the table. My administration will focus on creating more access to City Hall and opportunities for communities to shape the policies that affect their lives - especially Black, brown and Indigenous community members.

  • Introduce participatory budgeting by proposing $10 million in city spending to be decided on by the community. This redistribution of power to the people is already being led in major cities across the U.S.
  • Be the first mayor to budget for paid positions and childcare for all Community Advisory Committees (CAC) members, so that all people can afford to represent their communities in important policy decisions
  • Increase investment in our city’s communications department, so that residents know what is happening, and what programs they can take advantage of to support themselves
  • Oppose the Mayoral Control Amendment to keep us from consolidating power into one leader, and underrepresenting BIPOC communities. Instead, hire more staff for each Councilmember’s office to improve constituent services

Reparations and Restoration

In order to repair the harm to our Black & Indigenous communities, we need Truth & Reparations. Our city was built on stolen land with stolen labor, and it’s time for justice, healing, and repair.

  • Start a Black-led reparations commission, similar to the work being done in St Paul
  • The victims of police brutality and their families deserve reparations from our city. I would propose Minneapolis make reparations for victims of police violence, following the example of the Illinois Reparations for Police Torture Victims Act.
  • Pursue a Land Back policy by creating an Indigenous-led restoration committee and work to care for our land and our community with sustainable practices.
  • Push for long term pathways to wealth-building for BIPOC communities like Tenant Opportunity to Purchase, and programs that make it easier for small businesses to buy their buildings.

Protecting workers Workers deserve fair wages, safe workplaces, and protection from workplace exploitation.

  • Fund more labor rights investigators help protect against wage theft, make sure everyone is earning at least minimum wage, with sick & safe time plus fair scheduling (at least 6 investigators)
  • Fund worker centers to help working class-people organize for better working conditions
  • Fight for pay equity for disabled workers, so that they are no longer exploited by unfair labor rules
  • Mandate hazard pay and employer-provided personal protective equipment for frontline workers in healthcare, retail, food service, janitorial services, etc.
  • Everyone deserves workplace representation. Make workplaces safer by supporting unionizing efforts.

From scarcity to abundance

Abundance means we have enough for everyone, and no longer feed the systems that only offer housing, access, and self-determination for a few.

Healing through public art

  • We can paint windows into the world we want to build through more funding for the arts, especially opportunities for young, BIPOC, and LGBTQ artists
  • I will push to replace the grey paint program for graffiti coverup with publicly-funded mural painting and a summer youth public art program

Housing with dignity

The pandemic taught us that so much more is possible in housing than we had seen. We saw that empty hotels can become dignified shelter, unemployment benefits can actually be enough to survive on, we can stop eviction & utility shut offs, and organizing allows us to build power with our neighbors.

Housing first policy

Minneapolis needs culturally competent, stable housing services. Right now it is difficult to find appropriate shelter and transitional housing spaces that use harm reduction, allow people to live with their chosen family, or with their pets. That is why I support a housing-first policy model, including

  • Provide wraparound services for formerly unhoused residents who are in permanent housing situations
  • End encampment evictions. Evictions divide residents who have developed relationships, and make it harder for outreach workers to follow up with people about housing placement, getting meds, and HIV & HEP-C test results.
  • Create more Single Room Occupancy housing and to provide people with more options for stable housing.
  • Expand contracts with groups that provide harm reduction services that support communities affected by the War on Drugs (housed and unhoused)

Renters’ Rights

Half of Minneapolis residents are renters, and 47% of renters spend more than a third of their income on housing. Rising rents are driving our city’s BIPOC residents into the suburbs, undermining the benefits of pro-density housing policy. We must create a city that is safe for renters and encourages tenants to lay down roots in their communities.

  • Support the Rent Control charter amendment so we can create a strong Rent Stabilization policy that keeps rent increases at 3%, and ties rent stabilization to the unit, not the tenant
  • Support a Tenant’s Bill of Rights, which would help protect renters from wrongful evictions, ensure safe housing conditions for residents, and fully fund city legal resources so tenants can access legal representation free of charge
  • Support the Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act, and work with tenant organizing groups to create funding for more cooperative housing ($30 million over 3 years could fund 200 homes in North Minneapolis!)

Revive Public Housing

Public housing should remain a public good. Housing should not be treated as a source of profit for millionaires or corporations, but something that is a guaranteed right to every resident of our city.

  • Support a Public Housing Tax Levy to fund repairs and building new housing
  • Say No to RAD & Section 18 programs, we need to Keep Public Housing Public
  • Explore public financing options to preserve, improve, and expand our public housing system, such as a public land trusts
  • Ensure MPHA becomes accountable to its residents. This means all communications are available in the many languages MPHA residents speak, and residents get more control over their living situations

Disability Justice

11% of Minneapolis Residents live with a disability. We must make sure that everybody has access to transportation, housing, and recreation, according to their own needs.
  • Redesign street infrastructure to include accessibility features like curb cuts, and assist local businesses in increasing ADA compliance
  • Work with the Minneapolis Parks and Recreation Board (MPRB) to provide more recreation activities for disabled residents in all areas of the city
  • Improve our transit system for those living with disabilities, including decreasing Metro Mobility trip times, and working with Met Council to create a more accessible transit system
  • When building new housing, require accessible housing units including using building materials appropriate for those with chemical sensitivities.
  • Provide emergency generators and respirator supports to people who rely on electricity for their healthcare

Programs, jobs, and stable housing for youth

  • Increase investment in youth activities and enrichment, including funding for hyper-local intergenerational programming so youth can build relationships with people in their neighborhood.
  • Support a community center for LGBTQ youth
  • Expanding youth jobs programs, including work in the park and employment programs like STEP-UP
  • Expand the Stable Schools Stable Homes program to all MPS schools, so all families experiencing homelessness & high mobility can safely live in our city, and students can have a more consistent and quality education experience.

From fear to safety

COVID-19 taught us that in order to stay “safe,” we must act as a community. We saw wide-scale collective care: those who sewed masks, delivered groceries, and took action to protect our elders and most vulnerable literally saved lives. COVID-19 also made bright the flames of injustice in our criminal legal system. Hennepin County Jail stopped detaining people accused of low-level offenses, and cut the jail population by 26%, only booking those who were accused of hurting another person. Which made us wonder, why were we incarcerating all those people in the first place?

In the aftermath of the murder of George Floyd, it became clear is that the people of Minneapolis are ready for change. Change that’s big enough to be meaningful can be scary. But like those who came before us who fought for the abolition of slavery, we have a mandate to fight for racial justice, equity, and for institutions that protect Black life from violence. We are changing the world together - and it’s time for city institutions to change with us.

Building real public safety

Past mayors, including Jacob Frey, have implemented dozens of police reforms in Minneapolis, such as body cameras, “community policing.” As of 2020, every officer had gone through anti-bias training. Despite that, the Minneapolis Police Department murdered George Floyd and is now under state and federal investigation for human rights abuses - abuses that many of you saw with your own eyes.

Safe communities start with making sure everyone has a home, enough food, and kids have safe places to play, learn and grow. And when emergencies or harm happens, we need safe options to come help.

New Department of Public Safety

We must fund more safety options, not heavily armed law enforcement, and the most effective way to do that Pass the #Yes4Minneapolis Charter Amendment. Under our current charter, due to lobbying by the police federation in 1961 , we spend a third of our city budget on the police department. Affordable housing, health care, youth programs, and city services like roads and trash cleanup have to fight over what’s left. A new Department of Public Safety will have:

  • Fully funded 911 & 311 dispatch systems. We will have 911 emergency responders including: EMS, mobile mental health professionals, fire, domestic violence advocates, and police, if necessary. 311 will expand as it provides resident assistance including support on: traffic & parking, property & damage complaints, and connection to city services like housing and labor protections
  • Fully funded, proven violence prevention services
  • Fully funded conflict-resolution and diversion programs that use restorative and transformative justice, following national leaders
  • New, fully funded youth safety coordinators who work with the schools and parks on services that support young people, prevent crime and help children who are experiencing violence
  • Integration of the Office of Violence prevention into the new department and expansion of services to include all survivors of gun violence
  • Survivor-led, survivor-designed services for those who have experienced sexual and domestic violence

Craft community-led safety strategies Craft community-led safety strategies Like our predecessors who changed America’s government structure to abolish slavery, give women the right to vote, and pass gay marriage, we get to build government structures that expand protections of human rights and human life. And we have to make sure every voice is included as we build it! As mayor, I will push for a census-style community engagement program where we knock on every door in Minneapolis to learn what safety means to you. We will use those comprehensive results to develop neighborhood safety strategies based in racial justice.

Stopping state violence

Decriminalization

It’s time for Minneapolis to decriminalize homelessness, drugs, drug use and sex work. As mayor, I will work with the city attorney towards decriminalization so we do not funnel more people into our already-bloated criminal legal system, nor continue to endanger residents through evictions, dangerous work conditions, or risk of overdose or HIV transmission.

We can push back against the racist American criminal justice system starting with the city attorney through:

  • Automatic expungement for dismissed cases. If you’re not found guilty, it shouldn’t be on your record, but right now that only happens through a months-long request process.
  • Immediately decarcerate. The city attorney should never ask for pretrial jailing in cases where the allegation doesn’t include harm against another person
  • Decriminalize dissent. The mayor should direct the police to stop arresting and sheriff to stop jailing those who are protesting police brutality and state violence

Don’t protect and bankroll police violence + surveillance

As mayor, I will push for policies that:

  • Follow public records law by being transparent about police actions and procedures.
  • Hold the line against surveillance technologies that target Black, brown, and Indigenous people, and create a pipeline to ICE.
  • Reinvest from militarized police: The police spend millions on activities that aren’t addressing real issues of violence and harm in our communities. 'We can reinvest police funding from surveillance, SWAT, riot gear, and the $3.1 million spent on the canine unit into the places our communities need it most.

Compassionate Protest Response

  • Protests happen because of grief & justice denied. As mayor, I will respond with compassion, solidarity, and healing resources.
  • Providing hot food and bathrooms to those who are protesting state violence.
  • Set up free mental health counseling at park and school buildings across the city
  • Fund free childcare and activities for kids who are also affected, and to give parents & caregivers a break to do their own processing & healing
  • Immediate resources to impacted communities to be used in ways that promote healing and self-determination
  • Clear direction that no employees of the city can use rubber bullets, tear gas, or arrests of those who are exercising their right to protest
  • Clear commitment to shift power and resources long-term to cultivate conditions of safety and racial justice and away from violent police

Addressing the core conditions that lead to violence & harm

We build safety by housing people, ending poverty, supporting youth, and teaching healthy relationship skills and consent. We cannot punish our way out of violence. Most crime is not random: it happens because people don’t get their basic needs met. The research has already been done, and as mayor I will push for policies and resources that advance these five proven strategies to stop violence.

From climate catastrophe to to community resilience

In 2020, our community got in the practice of sharing food, supplies, and developing ways to drive less and spend more time outside. In the year since, gardens have been planted and mutual aid networks have continued on, planting seeds of a green future through local supply chains, fully-liveable neighborhoods, and a green economy.

Green jobs

Some of the fastest growing jobs in America are in renewable energy & healthcare. To create the same amount of energy, renewable energy jobs employ 2-5 times more people than fossil energy sources. Meanwhile, jobs where residents care for their neighbors, like nurses & youth workers, have low emissions and create more resilient communities. As Mayor I want to plant the seeds for a Green Future by creating a local economy where people earn a living caring for the planet and for each other.

  • Support community-led environmental justice initiatives like the East Phillips Urban Farm
  • Use the 2024 Energy Partners Negotiation to establish more solar and wind energy programs in Minneapolis
  • Pilot a Municipal snow shoveling program that keeps our neighborhoods more accessible in wintertime and reduces salt use.
  • Investing in youth jobs that care for our environment, like street boulevard improvement projects, invasive weed removal, rain garden installations, and more

Food access

While most of the food we eat is produced outside of Minneapolis, there is still much we can do to reduce our food system’s impact and guarantee access to food as a right for all residents.

  • Coordinate with the Park Board, Hennepin County, and Minneapolis Public Schools to make unused lands available for food production, prioritizing access to BIPOC communities who have been historically kept out of food production and land access.
  • Advance economic justice by providing financial support to community-led food efforts like Appetite for Change, Divine Natural Ancestry, Twin Cities Food Justice, who are already working to improve nutrition access, reduce food waste, and act on climate change.
  • Make plant-rich diets more accessible to reduce air pollution, prevent future pandemics, improve nutrition, and act on climate change. The city can do this by defaulting greener in its city-sponsored food events, prioritizing using it’s contractual power to support local, BIPOC- and women-owned, plant-rich businesses.

End environmental racism

We must deindustrialize our Green Zones, so that BIPOC and working-class people have clean air and water. I lived next to the Roof Depot Site in 2018; the air pollution in East Phillips was so bad I had to keep my windows closed on the hottest days of summer. Some of our most diverse & low income neighborhoods have been subjected to the worst environmental pollution from a handful of industrial sites.

  • Work with the MN Pollution Control Agency to create a strong Air Quality permitting system that pressures industrial companies to leave Minneapolis
  • Use permitting fines to create an Environmental Justice fund for the North & Southside Greenzone communities to invest in green projects in their neighborhoods
  • Close Northern Metals and the HERC. Work with government agencies, labor unions, and local businesses to transition to a zero waste economy
  • Develop walkable neighborhoods with a full array of essential services like groceries, clinics, pharmacies, and schools.

Invest in clean energy, divest from pipelines

  • Use the Mayor’s position to continue calling for Governor Walz and President Biden to Stop Line 3
  • Move Minneapolis us towards municipal and cooperative ownership of our Energy System.
  • Make sure that renewable energy is accessible to all residents, especially Indigenous residents

Resilience & care economy Regardless of what challenges climate change creates for our city, we’re all going to take care of each other no matter what.

  • As our climate shifts to more extreme temperatures and weather events, we must make sure that everybody has access to cooling/warming stations, and homes with clean water and appropriate air filtration systems.
  • Bathrooms and water are a human right. I support Minneapolis building free public restrooms, which will help keep our city clean, and provide comfort to those who work and live outside
  • Build year-round for resilience and care through fully funded community Schools, which include expansive mental health resources, dental healthcare, doctors, and food distribution for students and their families

[4]


See also


External links

Footnotes

  1. Minneapolis Elections & Voter Services, "FAQ: Can I list a political party affiliation or principle?", accessed August 16, 2021
  2. Information submitted to Ballotpedia through the Candidate Connection survey on October 7, 2021
  3. Patch.com, "Rep. Ilhan Omar Announces Endorsements In Minneapolis Mayor Race," October 20, 2021
  4. Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.