If experience is any guide, new Hennepin County Sheriff Dave Hutchinson's honeymoon period can't last forever, but right now, everyone appears to be getting along swimmingly.
While getting lost on the way to this interview, I interacted with several Sheriff's Department employees. To a person, they made a point of saying how happy they are Sheriff Hutch is in that office. "Being in public service for a long time and being a street cop not that long ago, a street sergeant," said Hutchinson, "[I understand that] cops and deputies and employees just want to feel their work is important, and they want to be treated like [humans]. I'm the sheriff, I'm nobody special. I just treat people decent, with respect — 99 percent of the time you get it back."
On leave from his job as a transit cop, he said: "I also worked on the North Side community engagement team beat. Before that I worked in a small community in Washington County, Bayport. Working on the North Side made me realize how much I enjoy diverse communities and I think that helped me get elected. I connected with people who normally don't vote for sheriff. "
Easygoing — he calls himself "Hutch" — and self-deprecating, he spent part of our meeting kidding his communications director, Jeremy Zoss. After my last question, he gently asked, "Can we make fun of him some more?" nodding in Zoss' direction. They met when Zoss became a campaign volunteer, but they rib each other like siblings. "Sure, that's what I'm here for," said Zoss, whose duties also include not letting Hutch get an inflated sense of self.
Q: What are your priorities?
A: How we deal with the immigrant population that get arrested. Opioids are a big, hard topic [and] mental health. We are working day in and day out on solutions. I have such a great team. Their expertise is helping guide me to what the sheriff's office needs to be.
Q: How did you know you could defeat longtime Sheriff Richard Stanek?
A: Well, I didn't know at first. But as soon as I got out there on the campaign trail, I realized people had an energy about them, that they wanted a change. So I harnessed the energy with my volunteers, my friends and family, and we went out and worked harder than I think anybody has worked in local politics.