The Amazon bus arrives before dawn each day in the Cedar-Riverside area of Minneapolis, delivering workers from a night of packing orders at the company's Shakopee warehouse. Around the corner, day-shift employees climb aboard another coach headed south.
More buses and shuttles dispatched by employers will crisscross the city throughout the day. They will ferry workers to pack gift cards in Rogers, make frozen food in Chanhassen and box cereal in Lakeville.
For Minnesota companies facing an unemployment rate as low as it has been in 16 years, finding workers has rarely been so difficult. At the same time, an increasing number of blue-collar jobs are moving outward to burgeoning job centers near the metro's edge, upending a downtown-centric transit system that once reliably served factories in Minneapolis and St. Paul.
That's forcing companies like Amazon and General Mills to offer rides of their own to woo workers from urban neighborhoods.
It's a costly solution for the few companies that can afford it, and the travel takes a toll on workers.
"I love Amazon to death. It's just this commute. Getting back and forth just kills everybody," said Bobby Huggins, who walks from his north Minneapolis home and takes the light rail to catch the 4:45 a.m. Amazon bus. He doesn't get home again until 7 p.m.
The challenge is particularly acute for companies seeking shift workers whose schedules don't align with whatever transit is available. Compounding the problem, there are more metro-area job postings than people to fill them.
"What happens if businesses don't stay, expand or locate here because they cannot find workers for their jobs?" asked Caren Dewar, executive director of Urban Land Institute Minnesota. ULI recently dubbed the distance between low-wage jobs and where their workers live, coupled with gaps in the transportation network, a "regional economic imperative."