About Us
Jobs for Minnesotans was co-founded in 2012 by the Minnesota Building and Construction Trades Council representing more than 55,000 workers and the Minnesota Chamber of Commerce representing 2,300 companies and 500,000 employees. This coalition represents businesses, labor, communities and other supporters of job creation and investment in the state of Minnesota.
We serve as a platform for supporters to get involved and work together to promote critical industries with some of the largest potential for job creation in the state of Minnesota. Today our focus is on two primary industries — responsible mining and safe energy transportation via pipelines. As part of our work, Jobs for Minnesotans provides the public and key stakeholders with
Jobs for Minnesotans was co-founded in 2012 by the Minnesota Building and Construction Trades Council representing more than 70,000 workers and the Minnesota Chamber of Commerce representing 2,300 companies and 500,000 employees. This coalition represents businesses, labor, communities and other supporters of job creation and investment in the state of Minnesota.
We serve as a platform for supporters to get involved and work together in promoting critical industries with significant potential for job creation in the state of Minnesota. Our current focus is on the development of responsible mining projects. As part of our work, Jobs for Minnesotans provides the public and key stakeholders with information about the industries we support and the much-needed economic opportunities and direct and ancillary jobs they create that offer family-sustaining wages for the people of northeastern Minnesota.
Expanding on Minnesota’s natural resources heritage, the state has the opportunity to gain thousands of jobs for generations of Minnesotans by safely extracting minerals from one of the world’s largest known, untapped sources of copper, nickel, platinum, palladium, cobalt and gold located in northeast Minnesota’s Duluth Complex. We believe that we can both uphold Minnesota’s strong environmental standards while improving existing permitting processes that have hindered job creation and investment around responsible projects.
Jobs for Minnesotans Resources