For a high school graduate who wanted nothing to do with college, Greg Stepka says, the limestone pit at Bryan Rock Products in Shakopee was a perfect refuge.
He started in 1981 at $11.36 an hour and now makes almost triple that amount — plus full health insurance and pension benefits.
"I've been in the pit for 32 years," Stepka said. "I think I've got a pretty good gig."
As activists rally at the State Capitol for a moratorium on Minnesota's emerging frac sand industry, business and labor groups say delays imposed by St. Paul could stifle the creation of hundreds of good jobs like Stepka's. The frac sand boom that has spread from Wisconsin into Minnesota, they say, should be welcomed as good news for struggling middle-class families.
"Everyone talks about the need for jobs, jobs and more jobs," said Jason George, legislative director for the International Union of Operating Engineers Local 49. "Well, here they are. What are they going to do?"
The jobs issue was close to the surface last week, when Gov. Mark Dayton signaled his opposition to a moratorium. Dayton's press secretary, Katharine Tinucci, said the governor wants a balanced approach that creates and retains good-paying jobs while also protecting citizens and the environment with "sound regulations."
A handful of Minnesota companies could soon be hiring, including three that have mined gravel and stone for decades and are now investing more than $100 million in new projects to mine and process silica sand, a critical ingredient in the nation's oil and gas "hydro-fracking" boom. A fourth company, Unimin Corp., is fully established in the frac sand business and just completed a major expansion in LeSueur County.
George said the growth of sand mining would quickly create 200 to 300 trade union jobs in small towns and rural areas, helping to fill a blue-collar employment deficit that worsened during the recession. Minnesota's construction, logging and mining sector lost 12,900 jobs from 2010 to 2011 — the most by any state in the union, according to the Associated General Contractors of America.