HOFFMAN, Minn. — Muriel Krusemark grew up here, so she can point to any business on Main Avenue and tell its history, which is her own. The plumber's shop sits where the meat market once operated. The galleria was a furniture store and before that, a bakery. The new shop on the corner? An arcade.
But a decade ago, there wasn't much to point to. Storefronts sat vacant. "All of this," said Krusemark, 73, gesturing to three buildings, "was empty."
Then Krusemark returned to town. Since the retiree took a part-time gig as Hoffman's economic development coordinator in 2007, businesses have filled the city's main drag — two modest blocks bordered by silver grain silos. With doggedness and good humor, Krusemark has helped this small city 25 miles southwest of Alexandria fight economic forces that have emptied out similar Main Streets across Minnesota and the country. The gobbling up of small farms. The closing of schools. The arrival of big-box retailers in distant, larger cities.
Krusemark doesn't try to lure hot, 100-employee companies to Hoffman, pop. 681. Instead, her day-to-day work sustains small projects that are a big deal to residents.
She checks people in and out of Motel 1, the one-room hotel on Main. For months, she cooked the meals served at the farmers market, her brainchild. Most days, she closes out the till at the Main Street Galleria, a marketplace inspired by her trip to Wadena, Minn.
"These are not stories you'd hear from the economic developer in Minneapolis," said David Fluegel, executive director of the Southwest Regional Sustainable Development Partnership. "But for a city the size of Hoffman, in my estimation it just doesn't get any better than Muriel."
'I'll speed it up!'
Einar Gudjonsson was painting the back room of his new shop when Krusemark came through the front door with a cascading "Hello, hello!"
He told her his last steps: Painting, putting in carpet, hanging the sign: Midwest Hotel Furniture Liquidators.