They arrived with hope, and many of them left with new jobs. Would-be employees at the new U.S. Bank Stadium showed up Tuesday for the first day of a three-day job fair at which up to 2,500 jobs could be filled for positions from housekeeping to security, retail and guest services.
When the doors opened at 9 a.m., about 60 people were queued up at the Minneapolis Convention Center. Candidates came wearing everything from suits and ties to dress shirts and slacks, baseball caps and jeans, skirts and hijabs.
Most of the jobs at the $1.1 billion stadium are either part time and/or seasonal. There are exceptions: Chicago-based Monterrey Security is filling 600 of those jobs, including 100 full-time positions. All the security jobs are union and pay between $10 and $15 and hour.
Many of the other positions involve food and beverage service. Most are union; part-time jobs don't include benefits. Of the concessions and guest services jobs, only the banquet supervisor position is full time.
In an interview, SMG General Manager Patrick Talty, who books and markets the facility, said the stadium will be a fun workplace with a theme of "Skol Service" that will reward and recognize employees. "It's an opportunity to be part of something special that people like," he said of the sports events and concerts that will take place in the 66,200-seat stadium.
SMG is hiring ticket takers, ushers, guest services workers and tour guides. He said the jobs pay more than minimum wage, but contracts were still being negotiated.
By late morning, a room for those hired was buzzing with dozens of people, filling out tax and background check forms, getting security badge photos, then posing for a celebratory "draft day" photo. The event had a Vikings mock draft day theme. Vikings cheerleaders and the team's mascot prowled the hallways.
Melita Eyton, 25, of Lakeville, already works 30 hours a week as a bartender at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, but she's going to supplement that income with a bartending job at the new building.