Summary
Primary-source city government release of the preliminary impact assessment for Operation Metro Surge’s effect on Minneapolis. Published February 12, 2026, the day after border czar Tom Homan announced the imminent end of the surge. Documents at least $203.1 million in one-month impact across livelihood, shelter, food security, and mental health sectors, with 76,000 people needing urgent relief assistance. The assessment is explicitly labeled “very likely a significant underestimation.”
Key Points
- Topline figure: $203.1 million in impact in one month (approximately January 2026)
- Up to 3,000 federal immigration enforcement agents deployed to Minneapolis neighborhoods
- 76,000 people — “mostly immigrants, refugees, American Indian/Native American, and Black/African American and People of Color” — identified as needing urgent relief assistance
Full sector breakdown
| Sector | Subcategory | Figure (one month) |
|---|---|---|
| Livelihood | Lost wages (people afraid to leave home) | $47 million |
| Livelihood | Restaurant and small business revenue losses | $81 million |
| Livelihood | Hotel cancellation revenue (through summer) | $4.7 million |
| Shelter | Pre-OMS low-income renter households unable to afford rent | 35,000 |
| Shelter | Additional rent assistance needed since Dec 2025 | $15.7 million |
| Food Security | People experiencing food insecurity due to OMS | 76,200 |
| Food Security | Weekly cost of food to support citywide need | $2.4 million |
| Mental Health | School-age children needing services | 8,713 |
| Mental Health | Service provider client contact reduction (clients going “underground”) | 50% |
- City operational costs: More than $6 million on city staff payroll, police overtime, and operational expenses in one month. Sayre and team anticipate financial impact “could double if the surge continues.”
- The assessment was developed by staff and partners in the City’s Emergency Operations Center
- Labeled “OMS is a known protection crisis: a large-scale, complex situation that involves violence, detentions based on racial profiling and alleged human rights violations, preventing people from having the freedom to access basic life-sustaining services.”
Newsletter Angles
- This is the primary source that corrects the “$81B” error: The $81M figure in the livelihood section is specifically restaurant and small business revenue losses. Any earlier reference to “$81 billion” in business revenue disruption was an order-of-magnitude mistake.
- The $47M lost-wages-from-fear figure is editorially powerful: that’s not wages lost to deportation — that’s wages lost because people were afraid to leave their homes to go to work. The chilling effect translated directly into measurable economic damage.
- The 76,000 people needing urgent relief is an enormous number relative to a city of 430,000 — roughly 18% of Minneapolis residents flagged as crisis-affected in one month. That’s the human-scale number for a piece lede.
- The 50% client contact reduction in mental health services — people going “underground” — is a clean metric for the chilling effect on institutional support systems, not just economic activity.
- The assessment’s own disclaimer that it is “very likely a significant underestimation” gives a writer permission to cite these figures as floors, not ceilings.
Entities Mentioned
- City of Minneapolis — publisher
- Jacob Frey — Minneapolis mayor, provides quote
- Rachel Sayre — City of Minneapolis Emergency Management director
- Operation Metro Surge — subject of the assessment
- ICE — deploying agency
- Tom Homan — border czar who announced imminent end the day before release
- Minneapolis Police Department — source of much of the $6M operational cost
Concepts Mentioned
- Operation Metro Surge — the subject
- Sanctuary Infrastructure — implicit; the city is positioning itself as a “Welcoming City”
- Federal Enforcement Cost — the core analytical framework of the release
- ICE Public Opinion Shift — not mentioned directly but immediately relevant
Quotes
“The damage caused by Operation Metro Surge doesn’t disappear just because the operation is ending. Families were torn apart, small businesses lost millions and students had their learning disrupted. That impact is real. But Minneapolis has never let hardship define us.” — Jacob Frey, Minneapolis Mayor
“This preliminary assessment is by no means exhaustive, and these totals are almost certainly undercounts. The impacts we are seeing as a city will be felt for decades, even generations to come.” — Rachel Sayre, City of Minneapolis Emergency Management
Notes
Primary government source — authoritative for any piece citing Metro Surge economic impact. The breakdown table should be reproduced in full in the Metro Surge wiki entity page. The $81M / $47M / $4.7M / $15.7M / $6M figures add up to $154.4M directly; the remaining ~$48M of the $203.1M total appears to come from food security and mental health categories that use per-person rather than per-dollar accounting. Writers should probably cite “$203.1M total, including $81M in business revenue and $47M in lost wages” rather than double-counting.