State government is already one of Minnesota's largest employers, and its ranks are about to multiply as it adds a legion of new workers to help enact an expansive agenda the DFL-controlled Legislature passed this year.
The hiring starts amid the tightest labor market in a generation.
"It's reasonable to assume that we are going to hire at least a couple thousand people over the next couple of years," said Minnesota Management and Budget Commissioner Jim Schowalter, whose agency leads state hiring efforts. "That's going to be a major lift and an opportunity to get a more diverse workforce, hire more veterans and really stock our talent pool."
The state needs to add more than 400 new employees by 2026 to run Minnesota's paid family and medical leave program. A commissioner and more than 200 workers are wanted to oversee the legalized marijuana market. Hundreds more will be required to run new or expanded education, housing and energy programs.
"It's got to be one of the biggest, most impactful sessions in terms of the creation of new state jobs that I've ever seen," said Minnesota Business Partnership Executive Director Charlie Weaver, who served in two former governors' administrations. "And it does come at a time when we've only got 2.8 percent unemployment rate in Minnesota, where the competition is already fierce."
Clashing over government growth
The state's next two-year budget will grow from roughly $52 billion to almost $72 billion. The nearly 40% jump will fuel the hiring burst, expanding a current state workforce of about 41,000 people, not including those working for colleges and universities.
Agencies are still poring over the new budget to figure out how many employees they'll need, but new hires will be required in almost every one of the state's two dozen cabinet-level agencies. Much of the new state spending is one-time, so some jobs will be temporary.
The Office of Cannabis Management will create about 100 state jobs, but more than 100 additional hires will be spread out across a dozen departments to help with regulation and enforcement.