Minneapolis City Council members will soon be contacted by up to 30,000 job-hungry labor union members, all eager for the construction work a new Minnesota Vikings stadium could bring.
Gov. Mark Dayton will lead a rally at the Capitol on Tuesday for the proposed stadium and may hit the road later this month for similar rallies across the state.
That's just the beginning as business leaders, labor, lobbyists and stadium supporters launch an all-out blitz to push the $975 million project over the goal line in the coming weeks.
"Now is when it gets serious," said Charlie Weaver, executive director of the Minnesota Business Partnership, which represents the state's largest corporations.
"We need to get some people to yes," said Todd Klingel, president of the Minneapolis Regional Chamber of Commerce. "The wheels are already turning."
At stake are the hopes of many that the stadium will trigger a boomlet of development on the eastern edge of downtown, bringing jobs and fresh economic activity as well as securing the Vikings for a generation. But opposition remains strong, particularly among those who object to the state and city footing more than half the costs for yet another tricked-out sports arena.
On Friday, Tina Smith, Gov. Mark Dayton's chief of staff and a former chief of staff to Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak, was making personal phone calls to swing votes on the Minneapolis City Council, where several members maintain that any diversion of taxes should go before city residents for a referendum vote.
Supporters admit passage could be an uphill climb but say they are getting to work immediately.