Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis says LumberStack, a home-based wood salvage and recycling business, is illegal. Owner Jeremy Marshik wants to change the law.
Jeremy Marshik quit his unfulfilling sales job two years ago and started fishing good lumber out of construction dumpsters around town. He’d find everything from old-growth beams to universal 2-by-4s in like-new condition, haul it to his Kingfield neighborhood on his cargo bike and sell it out of his garage.
Soon “LumberStash” became a full-time business, and Marshik hired three other people in south Minneapolis to sell salvaged lumber out of their homes, too.
“Because my parents are farmers, they always fixed their own stuff and used what they have on hand, and I grew up with that mentality,” said Marshik. “I want tons of people to know that this is an option because it’s a great way to make money and save lumber from the landfill.”
But there’s a hitch in Marshik’s plan: His business is illegal.
LumberStash violates a number of codes prohibiting people from running lumberyards out of their homes. According to city ordinances, home businesses can only be conducted within an enclosed area, must not be visible to the public and cannot involve retail unless it’s closely related to a service, like selling hair products as part of a home salon.
In June, someone contacted 311 to report Marshik: “Property owner is running a lumberyard from driveway. Owner collects salvage lumber and dumps it in his driveway for people to pick through. It started as a few pieces and has escalated to large piles of scrap lumber. Is this allowed or legal per zoning? Can it be stopped?”
The complaint triggered inspections and Marshik was written up. He’s since launched a Change.org petition to change city ordinances, arguing that renting a commercial space would make it too expensive to sell the wood cheaply and defeat the scalability of the model, which he hopes more people will adopt to combat wood waste as the region intensifies housing production. The petition has nearly 1,500 signatures.
“The old fences and decks and much of the other lumber we salvage is very useful and somewhat valuable, but you would never find it in a store because it’s not worth enough to take up the valuable floor space,” he said.
What do the neighbors think?
Alley neighbor Jane Spicer, a retired teacher who makes tote bags out of old billboard material, had nothing but good things to say about LumberStash. “I just think what he’s doing is extraordinary and he’s been nothing but clean, generous, upbeat and wonderful.”
Patrick Cochrane, who lives one house to the south, said he’s never been personally inconvenienced by LumberStash nor heard any other neighbors complaining about it. “We’re totally supportive of it,” he said. “It’s a great thing.”
Katherine Harter and David Hepenstal, who live two houses to the west, used old-growth lumber from LumberStash to build their raised bed garden and recycled fencing to side their sauna.
“He’s educated people, including me,” said Harter. “He’s showed me the difference between an old-growth piece of lumber and something you’d buy today, how you can look at the end cap and you can see how tight and dense that wood was when it was cut 100 years ago from a 300-year-old tree. I have a new understanding of what we’re throwing away.”
“His environmental values are sincere,” added Hepenstal.
Andrew Bell, who lives immediately across the alley from Marshik, has a full view of LumberStash’s operations from his kitchen window. It brings a “smidge” of traffic to the alley, Bell said, but it’s low-key enough that he doesn’t think anyone driving by could tell it was the home of a small-scale recycler. Once, Marshik taught Bell’s son and the rest of his Boy Scout troop how to take apart a wood floor for reuse.
“It would be an entirely different story if Jeremy was a jerk,” said Bell. “But it’s so opposite that … He’s always asking me things like, ‘Hey man, am I waking you up or pissing you off or anything like that?’ And I’m like, ‘No,’ and I live right next door.”
Jim Heider, who owns Royal Grounds Coffee across the street, has picked up a 2-by-4 from Marshik now and then as needed. He said he had no problem with LumberStash, speculating that if it attracted more people to their neighborhood, it would probably give his coffee shop a boost.
Downstream Changes
After receiving the 311 complaint, the city inspector sent Marshik a notice of violation. Further inspections found no lumber lying out in the open, so the inspector closed the case.
Marshik continues to operate LumberStash, and while there haven’t been any more complaints, there could be. He’s worried that without a license to run LumberStash legally, others won’t have the peace of mind to work with him or adopt his model for themselves.
Marshik’s petition asks the City Council to work with LumberStash and find a way to permit it. Council Member Andrea Jenkins, who represents the Eighth Ward where Marshik lives, responded to a message from the Star Tribune but did not follow up to grant an interview.
But the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency has taken notice of LumberStash. As far as the agency’s Built Environment Sustainability Administrator Melissa Wenzel is concerned, it’s an innovative grassroots idea for addressing waste. According to the EPA, she said, we as a nation generate twice as much construction demolition debris as we do household trash, and the majority of that demolition waste bound for landfills and garbage incinerators is in perfectly good condition for reuse.
What Marshik is doing isn’t a brand new concept, said Wenzel. Two big nonprofits in the Twin Cities also do measured deconstruction to preserve used building materials for resale: Habitat for Humanity and Better Futures, a workforce development program for people coming out of prison. But LumberStash is unique in how it has spread at a hyperlocal neighborhood level, employing similar-minded people who use their homes to salvage lumber, Wenzel said.
“I think it can make an impact in so many different ways,” she said. “Also I find that what Jeremy’s model looks like is very scalable in any part of the state, country, globe.”
Josh Ferri, a custom builder who owns Lake Side Decking in Minnetonka, has been trying for a long time to move toward more sustainable building practices. He said it used to kill him to have to demolish old decks and dump everything in the trash. But then he found LumberStash about a year ago, and now he pays Marshik to do the disassembling and recycling.
“It allowed me to get ahead of schedule on my demo, because Jeremy’s company does the demo for us,” Ferri said. “It also gave me and my clients a little peace of mind knowing that everything that was being demoed wasn’t ending up in a landfill. It was being recycled and reused and getting another life, which ended up with a third, hidden advantage, which was that it saved us money on dumpster fees and transporting fees.”
Ferri said one of his goals for this year is to make his decks 100% recyclable.
Minneapolis, MN
Truck driver dead after crash sends Metro Transit bus into home in south Minneapolis
It happened early Monday morning in Minneapolis.
One person is dead and another is hospitalized after an early-morning crash in south Minneapolis on Monday that sent a Metro Transit bus into a home.
It happened at around 4 a.m. at 10th Avenue South and East 38th Street, just a few blocks east of George Floyd Square.
A spokesperson for Metro Transit police tells 5 EYEWITNESS NEWS that a truck was speeding down 10th Avenue when it hit the back of the bus, ripping a tire off the bus and sending it into the front of a home.
The driver of that truck died, according to Metro Transit police, while the driver of the bus was taken to a hospital but is expected to be OK.
Officials say nobody besides the driver was on the bus at the time, and the home the bus hit was also empty at the time.
Investigators are still at the scene, working to clean up all of the debris and determine exactly what led up to the crash.
5 EYEWITNESS NEWS is at the scene and working to learn more. Download the KSTP app and follow 5 EYEWITNESS NEWS on social media for the latest updates.
Minneapolis, MN
Atlanta Dream survive thriller in Minneapolis, edge Lynx 91-90 to open 2026 WNBA season
The Atlanta Dream trailed by double digits, fought back twice and still needed Angel Reese’s game-saving block in the final seconds to survive.
Atlanta opened the 2026 WNBA season with a 91-90 victory over the Minnesota Lynx on Saturday night, powered by Allisha Gray’s 24 points, Te-Hina Paopao’s pull-up jumper with 12 seconds remaining, and a performance that left little doubt about what this team intends to do this season.
Reese’s block on Emese Hof’s layup attempt in the closing seconds sealed one of the most dramatic opening-night wins before 10,821 fans at Target Center.
When Minnesota pushed its advantage to 13 points in the second quarter and the Dream looked like they were in serious trouble, Allisha Gray took over. The veteran guard finished with a game-high 24 points on 7-of-18 shooting, going a near-perfect 9-of-11 from the free throw line to go along with eight rebounds, three assists and two steals.
Gray’s ability to get to the line and convert kept Atlanta within striking distance throughout a game that could have spiraled out of control multiple times. She scored 11 points in the third quarter alone as the Dream chipped away at Minnesota’s lead.
Rhyne Howard was equally important on both ends, finishing with 15 points, five assists and three steals. Jordin Canada ran the offense efficiently with 12 points and six assists, and Paopao added six points and four assists in a composed performance off the bench.
With Atlanta trailing 85-87 and the clock winding down, Naz Hillmon stepped back and drained a 22-foot three-pointer with 2:44 left to tie the game and silence the fans in the Target Center. It was the shot of the night, and arguably the play that won Atlanta the game.
Hillmon finished with 15 points on an efficient 6-of-10 from the field, adding seven rebounds in 33 minutes. She was the Dream’s most reliable scorer off the bench and delivered her best basketball when Atlanta needed it most.
Rookie Madina Okot also impressed in her WNBA debut, scoring eight points on 3-of-6 shooting with four rebounds in just 10 minutes, showing the poise and physicality that earned her a roster spot out of training camp.
Angel Reese’s first game in a Dream uniform was complicated. She shot 4-of-11 from the field, committed five turnovers and picked up a first-quarter technical foul that gifted Minnesota a free point. At one point in the first half, she missed three consecutive shots on the same possession.
But Reese also grabbed 14 rebounds, nine on the offensive glass, blocked three shots, came up with two steals, and made the most important play of the game when it mattered most. Her block on Hof’s layup in the final seconds was the kind of athletic, instinctive play that changes games and defines seasons.
That is the player Atlanta acquired this offseason. On opening night, in the most pressure-packed moment of the game, she showed exactly why.
Minnesota had every opportunity to win this game and couldn’t finish it. Olivia Miles finished with 21 points on 6-of-14 shooting and eight assists to go along with eight free throws made. Kayla McBride scored 20 points and hit the go-ahead three-pointer with 1:11 left that looked like it might be the dagger.
Courtney Williams added 14 points and six assists, and the Lynx shot 50 percent from the field, a number that should have been good enough to win.
But 15 turnovers and an inability to execute in the game’s final minute proved too costly. Minnesota had chances to put Atlanta away in the fourth quarter and couldn’t. The Dream made them pay every time.
Atlanta continues its opening road trip Tuesday against the Dallas Wings before returning home for the May 17 opener against the defending champion Las Vegas Aces at State Farm Arena. Minnesota hosts Atlanta again on May 27.
Minneapolis, MN
Woman dead after argument leads to shooting in Minneapolis
MINNEAPOLIS (FOX 9) – A shooting in south Minneapolis left a woman dead Saturday night.
Fatal shooting on Pillsbury Avenue South
What we know:
According to Minneapolis police, officers responded to a report of gunfire near Pillsbury Avenue South and West 25th Street around 5:30 p.m.
A woman was found at the scene with life-threatening gunshot wounds. She was taken to the hospital where she later died.
Police believe that an argument inside an apartment led to gunfire.
The suspected shooter fled the scene before police responded.
What we don’t know:
Police did not say what led up to the shooting or if they made any arrests.
The woman has not yet been identified.
What you can do:
Anyone with information on the shooting can call 1-800-222-TIPS (8477) or click here to submit a tip.
The Source: A press release from the Minneapolis Police Department.
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