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Courage To Hope-Episode 82-Michael Courage To Hope-Episode 82-Michael
ABC News
(SEELEY LAKE, Mo.) — A slice of paradise in Montana is suffering economic disruption, but it isn’t a result of any political battles or environmental change. Instead, Seeley Lake’s problem lies in its lack of a centralized sewer system.
The Missoula County community’s reluctance to come up with a plan to replace its septic system means no affordable housing can be built for working people. While high-end septic systems can service multi-family dwellings, local officials explain that they’re not cost effective for the type of housing developers would seek to build in the area. The solution? Only a sewer system will do.
That lack of accommodation means Seeley Lake’s biggest employer — Pyramid Mountain Lumber — can’t attract enough workers to continue, and is closing the family-owned business which has been operating for 75 years.
“To make the announcement to the crew was probably the toughest thing; I’ve got friends, family, you know, generations, good friends that work here. I had to tell them we’re going to shut the doors,” Todd Johnson, a third-generation lumber mill worker whose grandfather started the mill in 1948, told ABC News.
“I’ve never drawn a paycheck from any other business in my whole life. I started here in sixth grade,” Johnson said. “This is all I’ve ever known.” Johnson has since worked his way up to become general manager.
Missoula County was once home to multiple sawmills and a thriving lumber industry. Pyramid Mountain Lumber is the last one, so its shuttering will mark the industry’s end in the area.
“There hasn’t been an apartment, duplex or fourplex built in this town in over 30 years,” Johnson said. “When you’re talking about entry-level housing for more blue collar workers…it’s not available.”
Pyramid isn’t the only local business affected by the worker shortage. Rovero’s Hardware is “running on a skeleton crew” as its busiest season approaches, general manager Kyle Marx noted.
“No affordable housing here,” he said. “Rentals have diminished since COVID hit, and everybody came up here, bought every rental darn near that was available and turned them into vacation rentals or moved up here themselves.”
Dee Baker, who owns antique store Grizzly Claw Trading Company, said it’s a long-term issue.
“There could be low-income housing built, but the people in the town cannot come to an agreement [for a sewer system] with Missoula County,” Baker said. “And it’s been going on for years and years.”
The situation was borne from local reluctance to pay for a centralized sewer system that would allow Seeley Lake to expand, and a fear that such a major infrastructure change would alter the community’s character, according to Missoula Board of County Commissioners chair Dave Strohmaier.
“The irony is that the lack of the infrastructure is … a big reason why Pyramid Mountain Lumber cannot find the housing for their employees and the employees to keep it going, and hence change is upon us,” Strohmaier said.
Johnson offered a glimpse of how much the town would lose once the lumber business closed.
“Our payroll just here to our employees is over $6 million a year,” he said. “You take that out of this economy, it’ll change the fabric of the town. There’s no doubt.”
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