With homemade signs firmly in hand, a small band of citizen-activists has pushed bird-safe glass at the new Minnesota Vikings stadium from an afterthought to a cause célèbre.
The grass-roots environmentalists and bird aficionados were stirred to action by what they view as an unjustifiable decision to use clear glass on the stadium that won't divert birds from deadly collisions. Since they showed up in force at a Minnesota Sports Facilities Authority (MSFA) meeting last fall, the birders demanded and got attention, but so far no changes.
"There are so many things that can be done — it's just mind-boggling why they have not done any," said Ann Laughlin, a member of the newly created Minnesota Citizens for the Protection of Migratory Birds.
In rejecting their pleas, the Vikings and the MSFA have asserted that it was too late to order new glass, that bird-safe etched glass would hurt the airy aesthetic of the stadium and that it would cost too much.
Michele Kelm-Helgen, chair of the MSFA, said she's working with Maplewood-based 3M and Matthew Anderson, executive director of state chapter of the Audubon Society, toward a solution. 3M is trying to develop a product that would be both transparent and protective of birds.
"We're getting close," she said. "It's been frustrating that we don't have anything to announce yet."
Still, with the glass expected to start going on the $1 billion stadium this month, most activists say they have received a chilly reception from the Vikings, who haven't met with them, and the MSFA. Undeterred, at least a couple of the grass-roots crew members regularly speak during open forums at the MSFA's monthly board meetings. The volunteers promise they're in it for the duration.
"We're tenacious. We're not going to give up," said Wendy Haan, also with the fledgling migratory bird group. "We're going to be picking up those [dead] birds and shaming" stadium officials and the Vikings.