
December 11, 2008 1:12 PM CST
Green: Environmental businesses seen as growth opportunity for
Minneapolis
by
Burl Gilyard Staff Writer
|

Rick Siewert is converting
urban timber — such as this black walnut board cut from a
city-grown tree — into high-quality hardwood. (Staff photo:
Bill Klotz)
|
Meet Rick
Siewert, poster boy for the promise of “green jobs” that politicians
often chatter about.
Siewert’s father founded the Minneapolis-based Siewert Cabinet &
Fixture Manufacturing Inc. in 1965. Today, the company employs 48
people at in south Minneapolis along Minnehaha Avenue.
Last year, Siewert’s firm was certified by the Forest Stewardship
Council. That means the company’s products can boost LEED
(Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) ratings for building
projects.
“We try and stay ahead of the game as far as LEED goes,” Siewert
said.
Meanwhile, Siewert and his wife, Cindy, have started another
business: Wood from the Hood, a cleverly-named concern which turns
discarded urban timber into high-quality hardwood.
“We saw the waste going on,” Siewert said. “Something needed to be
done.”
“Right now, it’s a
small-time operation,” Siewert said of Wood from the Hood. But
Siewert believes that the operation can grow, which brought him to
the Chambers Hotel in downtown Minneapolis earlier this week for a meeting
where the menu featured granola, yogurt and networking.
There, city of Minneapolis
leaders and the Minneapolis Regional Chamber of Commerce convened
its first-ever formal meeting to tout Minneapolis-based “green”
businesses and encourage collaboration among the firms.
“I think we’re seeing the way that we’ve been living literally
running out of gas,” Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak told the small
gathering. “The economy of the
United States
is being reborn on a green platform. This is a revolution that
starts from the ground up.”
Rybak touted a new era of producing green products within the city
limits.
“This is a brain-power city and a brain-power state. We need to make
things in this city,” Rybak said. “It’s a wonderful thing to try to
make a green product. It’s not so wonderful to make it out in the
middle of a cornfield where someone has to drive 45 minutes to get
there.”
The city’s Community Planning and Economic Development (CPED)
department, working with the office of Council Member Scott Benson,
has been cobbling together a list of green businesses in the city.
As of this week, the unofficial tally stands at 165 businesses.
But what defines a “green” business?
City staffers acknowledge that the definition is evolving and the
list is a work in progress. The current tally includes retailers,
restaurateurs, architects, printers, nonprofits and others.
The state’s Green Jobs Task Force currently has a working definition
that broadly includes four categories of businesses: green products,
renewable energy, green services and environmental conservation.
“The ultimate definition that the city uses will parallel what the
state comes up with,” said Emily Stern, a senior project coordinator
with CPED.
“We’re trying to make the list as comprehensive as possible,” Stern
said.
Minneapolis-based investment bank Piper Jaffray Companies may not
seem like a natural candidate, but they’re on the list.
“They do have a business line that is investing in renewable
technologies and businesses,” Stern noted.
Other attendees at the meeting included a representative of
Houston-based Horizon Wind Energy, which in September opened a local
development office at the
Wyman Building in the Minneapolis Warehouse
District.
Green businesses are seen as a growth opportunity for the city. But
others see challenges for efforts to go green in today’s tough
economy.
Michael Anschel, a principal with Minneapolis-based design firm
Otogawa-Anschel Design + Build, said that his firm is seeing clients
who are wary of paying a little extra for green products. For
example, clients may opt for cheaper, imported wood instead of local
wood.
“People right now are not confident and they’re pulling back,”
Anschel said.
Mayor Rybak preached collaboration and teamwork among the
businesses, and encouraged attendees to visit his Facebook webpage
and send ideas directly to him.
“We want you to talk to each other,” Rybak said. “We want to be
buying local products.”
Other News Stories featuring Wood From The Hood include;
Finance and Commerce December 11, 2008
Fox 9 News