Perham Pet Food Maker Tuffy's to Build $60M Facility Near Twin Cities - Twin Cities Business Magazine

Perham Pet Food Maker Tuffy's to Build $60M Facility Near Twin Cities - Twin Cities Business Magazine

Longtime Perham-based pet food maker Tuffy’s Pet Foods Inc. is expanding to the Twin Cities area.

On August 7, the company will break ground on a $60 million pet treat facility in Delano. The new plant will have the capacity to produce about 25,000 tons of dog and cat treats each year, says Charlie Nelson, president of Tuffy’s parent company KLN Family Brands. The 170,000-square-foot facility is slated to be completed by November 2020.

The company has chosen to build the new facility near the Twin Cities to gain access to much-needed workers, Nelson says.

“Currently, we as a community have more jobs than people,” he says. “Workforce is tight in our area.”

At the outset, the company aims to hire about 50 new employees at the Delano plant. Within the first two years, KLN will hire more than 100 additional workers, Nelson says. The company currently employs about 500 workers between its existing facilities in Perham. (KLN operates a pet food plant and a candy plant in the city.)

KLN’s focus in Perham is on whole-meal pet foods, while the new facility will produce primarily soft treats for cats and dogs, as well as training treats. Nelson notes that the company’s Perham plant is at capacity.

“We are limited with capabilities in Perham,” he says. “We thought this was a good opportunity to really start fresh.”

KLN officials hope the Delano facility will enable the company to “considerably” ramp up pet treat production. The company has contracted with CRB to build the new facility.

Charlie Nelson’s father Kenny Nelson founded Tuffy’s in 1964. A 2018 inductee into the Minnesota Business Hall of Fame, Kenny Nelson started his candy company – Kenny’s Candy – about two decades later.

The Delano facility won’t be Tuffy’s first expansion. Four years ago, the company opened a new 130,000-square-foot manufacturing facility in Perham.

Between its pet food and candy facilities, KLN counts about one million square feet of production space, Charlie Nelson says.

At next week’s groundbreaking, KLN will host representatives from the University of Minnesota Masonic Children’s Hospital and children’s cancer organization Pinky Swear Foundation. The company’s partnership with Masonic Children’s Hospital influenced its decision to locate near the Twin Cities, Nelson says.

The company is in the process of funding a full-time service dog for the hospital, he notes.