Jeremy Marshik quit his unfulfilling sales job two years ago and started fishing good lumber out of construction dumpsters around town. He’d find everything from old-growth beams to universal 2-by-4s in like-new condition, haul it to his Kingfield neighborhood on his cargo bike and sell it out of his garage.
Soon “LumberStash” became a full-time business, and Marshik hired three other people in south Minneapolis to sell salvaged lumber out of their homes, too.
“Because my parents are farmers, they always fixed their own stuff and used what they have on hand, and I grew up with that mentality,” said Marshik. “I want tons of people to know that this is an option because it’s a great way to make money and save lumber from the landfill.”
But there’s a hitch in Marshik’s plan: His business is illegal.
LumberStash violates a number of codes prohibiting people from running lumberyards out of their homes. According to city ordinances, home businesses can only be conducted within an enclosed area, must not be visible to the public and cannot involve retail unless it’s closely related to a service, like selling hair products as part of a home salon.
In June, someone contacted 311 to report Marshik: “Property owner is running a lumberyard from driveway. Owner collects salvage lumber and dumps it in his driveway for people to pick through. It started as a few pieces and has escalated to large piles of scrap lumber. Is this allowed or legal per zoning? Can it be stopped?”
The complaint triggered inspections and Marshik was written up. He’s since launched a Change.org petition to change city ordinances, arguing that renting a commercial space would make it too expensive to sell the wood cheaply and defeat the scalability of the model, which he hopes more people will adopt to combat wood waste as the region intensifies housing production. The petition has nearly 1,500 signatures.
“The old fences and decks and much of the other lumber we salvage is very useful and somewhat valuable, but you would never find it in a store because it’s not worth enough to take up the valuable floor space,” he said.