La Raza Radio, burned out of its building by the riots and arson that scorched E. Lake Street in May, last week opened new offices and studios in Richfield.
This is a loss for Minneapolis. CEO Maya Santamaria is a leading Latina businesswoman in the city. Her career began after Augsburg University as an anthropologist at the Science Museum of Minnesota 25 years ago. She eventually started an event promotion business and the El Nuevo Rodeo nightclub, which was in the Oddfellows Building that was destroyed in the riots.
''We were a block from Third Precinct [police station] that got burned down," Santamaria recalled. "It was all very intense. Something that started as protest against the police over treatment of African Americans became violence against Latino and other businesses, including Black businesses. The Latino community really felt it in terms of the damage and looting.
"Latino businesses turned around that span of Lake Street and worked with the Lake Street Council to make it the Downtown Longfellow neighborhood. Many of the business owners had every penny in those businesses. And all of a sudden, poof they are gone. It was my life's work. Destroyed."
Santamaria got the Twin Cities' leading Spanish-language radio station up and running within a week, thanks to donated space at KFAI Radio in the Cedar-Riverside neighborhood near the West Bank of the University of Minnesota.
However, there's not much commercial space on depleted E. Lake. Santamaria's real estate agent found ample space for a studio and offices on 76th Street and Lyndale Avenue in Richfield, which boasts a growing Latin population and a welcoming local government.
The cost to move in and improve the space is more than $100,000.
For Santamaria, who helped start La Raza about 20 years ago and bought it in 2013, this has been a horrible year for business amid the pandemic hit to advertisers.