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North St. Paul council extends one-year agreement with Minnesota BCA violent‑crimes unit

North St. Paul City Council · April 22, 2026

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Summary

The council voted to renew a one‑year joint powers agreement with the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension violent‑crimes unit, a partnership city leaders said gives the small North St. Paul department access to state forensic and investigative resources.

The North St. Paul City Council voted April 21 to renew a one‑year joint powers agreement (JPA) with the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension violent‑crimes unit, a move city leaders said preserves access to forensic analysts and statewide investigative authority.

Chief Rosales told the council the BCA unit provides resources the small department cannot sustain alone — including criminal intelligence analysts, forensic testing and firearms‑detection canines — and allows investigators to follow suspects and evidence across jurisdictional lines. "Maintaining this joint powers agreement is vital for North Saint Paul because it gives our small department big‑city resources to fight serious crime," Rosales said.

Rosales cited recent statewide results from the unit to underscore its capacity, saying the partnership has supported major arrests and large seizures; those figures were presented by the chief as illustrative of the unit’s broader reach. Council members asked whether the renewal term was standard; staff said the one‑year term matches what other cities use.

Council member (speaker 7) moved to approve the renewal and, after a second, the council approved the extension by voice vote with members answering "aye." The transcript records the motion, seconds and voice vote; it does not record a roll‑call tally.

Why it matters: North St. Paul’s police department has a small staff and limited in‑house forensic capacity. Council members and the chief framed the JPA as a way to share specialized investigative tools and liability with the state while keeping local streets patrolled.

What’s next: The extension covers one year; staff and the police department will continue to coordinate with the BCA as incidents arise and return to the council if amendments or longer terms are proposed.