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3.0. EDSR 05-18-2020
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3.0. EDSR 05-18-2020
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BUSINESS <br />Minneapolis small businesses finally will get <br />help navigating city-regulatory process <br />DECEMBER 18, 2016 — 5:35PM <br />NEAL ST. <br />ANTHONY <br />@ S TA N T H O N YS T R I B <br />Dan Swenson-Klatt, owner of Butter Bakery Café for 11 years, quit a <br />teaching job to start a hole-in-a-wall eatery on Grand Avenue S. in <br />Minneapolis. In 2012, he moved to expanded space nearby at 37th <br />and Nicollet Avenue S. in a new residential-retail development that <br />replaced a long-shuttered mortuary. <br />Swenson-Klatt, who invested retirement savings and debt in the <br />business, finally is comfortable. Butter Bakery, which survived a <br />street-overhaul job in its first summer on Nicollet, is cash-flowing. <br />Swenson-Klatt employs up to 20 full- and part-time workers and is <br />making his loan payments. Revenue is growing. <br />However, he hasn’t forgotten the rough early years. And he is a longtime supporter of <br />efforts by the Twin Cities Metro Independent Business Association, the Main Street <br />Alliance of Minnesota and Jewish Community Action to make Minneapolis an easier <br />place to start a business. <br />“It was confusing and frustrating,” Swenson-Klatt recalled of the months he bounced <br />from city office to city office trying to get approvals to open his original bakery and <br />breakfast spot. “I’d get one person who cared, one who didn’t and another who would <br />send me to somebody else. I often didn’t know what to do. Nobody showed me the big <br />picture of what I needed. <br />“I was college-educated teacher and helped open schools, so I know something about <br />start-ups. But there were so many levels and layers in getting a small bakery and <br />restaurant open ... you make a misstep and you end up in trouble. For example, nobody <br />at the city told me about [Minnesota] OSHA. They didn’t catch up to me until I was <br />opening at the current location. I got involved in this because I’ve seen other small <br />business owners take a run and give up. Or immigrants who don’t know the rules. We <br />can do better.” <br />Earlier this month, Swenson-Klatt joined in a show of unity with other small businesses <br />who had similar stories. They included KB Brown of Wolfpack Promotionals on the <br />North Side; Aisha Wadud and Crystal Larson, who have been hamstrung trying to move <br />their Nura Holistic Massage & Bodywork from south to north Minneapolis; Kayf Ahmed, <br />owner of Capitol Café; and Harvey Zuckman, who ran a family-owned electronics <br />business for decades. He never completely figured out the city licensing-and-zoning <br />matrix, but is good at calling his council member for help. <br />The gathering at City Hall was to celebrate with Mayor Betsy Hodges and several City <br />Council members an agreement to open a Minneapolis small-business “navigator” office. <br />It should help fledgling businesses with a soup-to-nuts checklist and hands-on coaching <br />to get them through a simpler, streamlined process. It shouldn’t cost the city much <br />because several people simply will be redeployed within the city development agency. <br />“The navigators are intended to be the functional one-stop shop,” said Deputy City <br />Coordinator Nuria Rivera-Vandermyde, tasked with setting up the office and a get-to-yes <br />mind-set in regulatory services. “Our navigators will help people navigate city <br />regulations and licenses, and help at different stages, and think through, for example, <br />whether they really need a [beer-and-wine] license, and that expense, or maybe just keep <br />it at a coffee shop. <br />“We’ll assist those who want to start a business understand how and make it easier. <br />Ultimately, we’re trying to help people prosper. That’s what we’re here to do for small <br />business.” <br />Not that the Minneapolis small-business economy is failing. In fact, the city has issued a <br />record number of licenses in recent years, albeit a disproportionate number have been <br />for liquor and food to expanding operators or new, well-capitalized businesses trying to <br />cash in on the booms in Uptown, Lyn-Lake, downtown and North Loop. <br />N E A L .ST.A N T H O N Y@ S TA R T R I B U N E .C O M <br />Minneapolis small business owners reacted at <br />City Hall to news this month that the mayor <br />and city council approved a "navigator" office
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