By Steve Sailer
06/08/2020
From the Minneapolis Star-Tribune:
Manufacturer that burned as Minneapolis protests turned violent plans to relocate from city
âThey didnât protect our people,â 7-Sigma owner says of city officials.
By Jeffrey Meitrodt Star Tribune JUNE 8, 2020A Minneapolis manufacturing company has decided to leave the city, with the companyâs owner saying he canât trust public officials who allowed his plant to burn during the recent riots. The move will cost the city about 50 jobs.
âThey donât care about my business,â said Kris Wyrobek, president and owner of 7-Sigma Inc., which has operated since 1987 at 2843 26th Av. in south Minneapolis. âThey didnât protect our people. We were all on our own.â
Wyrobek said the plant, which usually operates until 11 p.m., shut down about four hours early on the second night of the riots because he wanted to keep his workers out of harmâs way. He said a production supervisor and a maintenance worker who live in the neighborhood stuck around to keep watch over the business. He said they became alarmed when fire broke out at the $30 million Midtown Corner affordable housing apartment complex that was under construction next door.
âThe fire engine was just sitting there, but they wouldnât do anything,â Wyrobek said. âThatâs the frustrating thing to us.â
⌠The Star Tribune recently obtained the cityâs first survey of property damage, which shows that nearly 1,000 commercial properties in Minneapolis were damaged during the riots, including 52 businesses that were completely destroyed.
Owners and insurance experts estimate the costs of the damage could exceed $500 million. That would make the Twin Cities riots the second-costliest civil disturbance in U.S. history, trailing only those in Los Angeles in 1992, which were also sparked by racial tensions with police and had $1.4 billion in damages in todayâs dollars.
But what are 50 jobs lost when the city government will soon be hiring for Minneapolisâ post-police Anti-Racist Justice Squads?