EVELETH, Minn. – Workers in a call center on Minnesota's Iron Range don headsets each day knowing their employer's core business: Get Democrats elected.
For years, prominent Democratic candidates and political groups have used the obscure center tucked among hills and pines to canvass and raise money from small donors. DFL organizations, state and national, have paid the phone bank's current and former owners about $80 million over the last decade, campaign records show.
The call center relocated to Eveleth in 2006 thanks in part to a $625,000 loan from a unique state agency called the Iron Range Resources and Rehabilitation Board (IRRRB). It doles out about $40 million each year, much of it from a tax on taconite, in the name of bolstering and diversifying the Range economy.
In its first incarnation, the call center on the Range failed to meet job targets, but the IRRRB gave the company, Meyer Associates, more time to repay the loan. It shut down anyway last year. The IRRRB let Meyer's owner walk away and wrote off the $250,000 Meyer owed, records show.
Then a former Meyer executive reopened the phone bank under the name of his new company. The deal allowed him to pay $50,000 for equipment that had been purchased with $500,000 in IRRRB money. The largest political client for the call center remained the same: a group called Dollars for Democrats.
Officials at the IRRRB say jobs, not politics, are behind its dealings with the two firms.
"There's still 100 people working there," said former state Rep. Tom Rukavina, a DFLer who served on the IRRRB board for years and once hired Meyer to make calls for his own campaign. "That to me is a success story. Any time I went in that office people clapped and thanked me that they had a job."
Few Republicans know about Meyer or its links to the Democratic Party and the IRRRB. When told about it, they say it confirms their view of the IRRRB as a DFL slush fund.