Owner of Pipestone's historic Calumet Inn appeals closure

Fire code dispute between city and 1887 hotel to head to state for appeal.

April 22, 2020 at 1:29PM
The historic Calumet Inn in Pipestone, Minn., is the subject of a fierce fight between its owner and local officials who have shut down the landmark hotel, built in 1887. ORG XMIT: MIN1809051629341006
FILE-The historic Calumet Inn in Pipestone, Minn., is the subject of a fierce fight between its owner and local officials who have shut down the landmark hotel, built in 1887. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)

The new owner of the historic Calumet Inn in the southwestern Minnesota city of Pipestone is appealing to the state Department of Labor and Industry the city's decision to close the 1887 hotel.

The hotel has remained closed since March 10 in a dispute between the city and owner Tammy Grubbs over fire code violations. This week people in the community protested the city's decision with a downtown rally fit for the age of coronavirus: Protesters held signs while standing 6 feet apart and tapped each other in to make sure no more than 10 people were gathered at a time.

"They're just making this stuff up to try to drive her out of business," said Greg Erickson, a Minneapolis attorney who is representing Grubbs. "They haven't given us any explanation on why they had the authority to do it. Now they're putting additional conditions on reopening. They just continue to come up with more reasons to keep her closed even though they had no authority to shut her down in the first place."

The city's mayor and acting mayor did not reply to requests for comment.

The dispute began after a routine fire inspection in November. The state deputy fire marshal gave Grubbs 90 days to fix a number of fire code violations, but he e-mailed the report not to Grubbs but to the previous owner.

Grubbs didn't receive the report until March 6. A city building officer visited the building and ordered it closed a few days later.

Grubbs also said the city is closing the building using incorrect information. For example, Grubbs said the city claimed the building needed to fix ceiling problems in a storage room and a laundry room, but the building couldn't remain open when the issues were fixed because interior walls in the kitchen and lounge were from 1887. But those walls had been replaced in the 1980s, Grubbs said.

The city is also requiring Grubbs to hire a structural engineer to evaluate whether the roof has proper load-bearing capacity because the building has a new air-conditioning unit. But the roof is new, and the new air conditioning unit is 1,500 pounds lighter than the old one, Erickson said.

"Something's behind this," Grubb said. "Something is definitely not right here."

Reid Forgrave • 612-673-4647

about the writer

about the writer

Reid Forgrave

State/Regional Reporter

Reid Forgrave covers Minnesota and the Upper Midwest for the Star Tribune, particularly focused on long-form storytelling, controversial social and cultural issues, and the shifting politics around the Upper Midwest. He started at the paper in 2019.

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