A new Minnesota office aims to catch up with other states that are marketing outdoor recreation as an economic boost for creating jobs and drawing visitors.
Twenty other states nationwide have set up similar outdoor recreation offices in the last decade. The new Minnesota office is part of Explore Minnesota, the state’s tourism arm, and seeks to foster collaboration among state agencies and better support the industry to attract visitors and business to the state’s lakes, rivers and forests.
“The people of Minnesota are so passionate about the outdoors,” said Randolph Briley, the state’s new deputy director of outdoor recreation, who is leading the work. “But when we share our economic numbers and jobs numbers, we tend to be in the middle. There’s plenty of room for us to grow and expand.”
Minnesota ranks 18th in the nation for outdoor recreation’s economic output. The industry brought in $11.7 billion in 2022, up from about $9 billion in 2017, and it employs nearly 94,000 people, 3% of Minnesota’s workforce. Briley hopes the state can advance to one of the Top 10.
Last year, Gov. Tim Walz announced the first-of-its-kind partnership between four agencies — the Department of Employment and Economic Development (DEED), Department of Natural Resources (DNR), Explore Minnesota and Iron Range Resources and Rehabilitation (IRRR). Briley is the sole full-time employee of the outdoor recreation office, meeting frequently with liaisons from the other agencies.
He said Minnesota needs to better compete with states, including Michigan, Utah, Colorado and Wisconsin, which started its outdoor recreation office in 2019.
“Minnesota has a terrific foundation and we just want to help take it to the next level,” Briley said. “We know Minnesota can compete with some of the top states in the nation when it comes to outdoor recreation.”
His work directly ties into Explore Minnesota’s new goals to change national perceptions about Minnesota and bolster travel year-round, as well as inspire more Americans to relocate to Minnesota, which has more jobs than workers.