North Dakota
Friends and colleagues recall influence and impact of former North Dakota Lt. Gov. Lloyd Omdahl
GRAND FORKS – Lloyd Omdahl had many outstanding and endearing qualities, his friends and colleagues said, but chief among them were a strong advocacy and knowledge of state and local government, dedication to his family, a deep Christian faith, his kindness and delightful sense of humor.
Omdahl, 93, died peacefully Sunday, April 14, while in comfort care at Valley Senior Living on Columbia. His son and daughter were at his bedside. His wife, Ruth, died last November.
A memorial service will be held at 2:30 p.m. Saturday, May 18, at Hope Covenant Church, Grand Forks, with a reception to follow. Visitation is planned for 2 p.m., also on May 18 at Hope Church.
Omdahl served as North Dakota’s lieutenant governor from 1987 to 1992 with Gov. George Sinner, and as state tax commissioner from 1963 to 1966. He was a longtime professor in UND’s political science department and served as director of the school’s Bureau of Governmental Affairs.
Former U.S. Sen. Heidi Heitkamp, D-N.D., of Mandan, first met Omdahl when, as an 18-year-old UND student, she enrolled in his state and local government class.
“I thought he was one of the most dynamic, interesting professors … ” she recalled. “It really was Lloyd Omdahl and his influence that led me to think that state and local government mattered. There were a lot of us who ran for statewide office who were inspired by Lloyd Omdahl, and I think that was true (for) both Democrats and Republicans.”
When Omdahl ran for Congress, she and other UND students campaigned for him, she recalled. “Campaigning for Lloyd Omdahl was my first direct political activism.”
Omdahl was “committed to educating and growing a group of North Dakotans to assume leadership in our state,” Heitkamp said. “And I like to think I’m part of the Lloyd Omdahl legacy.”
He was “incredibly funny, he was very, very funny – but always pointed and never mean-spirited,” she said.
Courtesy of UND
Omdahl wrote “the most significant book on the Nonpartisan League … (which) will be a very, very important book for anyone to understand the political history of North Dakota. … He was very much a scholar and student of state and local government.”
She lauded Omdahl for his interest in “not just partisan politics for the sake of winning, but how do you bring people together to get things done.”
“Lloyd Omdahl was my mentor and my friend,” Heitkamp said, “but, mainly, he was my teacher. And North Dakota lost a great North Dakotan.”
North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum issued the following statement Monday, April 15: “From his dedicated service as North Dakota’s lieutenant governor and tax commissioner to his decades as a UND educator and newspaper columnist, Lloyd Omdahl was a constant presence and passionate voice in North Dakota government and politics for over 60 years.
“We are deeply grateful for his service and commitment to the citizens of North Dakota, as well as his many contributions to our state’s Scandinavian heritage, in which he took great pride. Kathryn and I extend our condolences and prayers to his family, friends and former colleagues.”
Retired District Judge Joel Medd, of Grand Forks, said Omdahl was “instrumental” in his career.
“I was a student of his” at UND, Medd recalled.
Omdahl also provided a recommendation when Medd applied to the UND Law School; at the time, Medd was serving in the military in the Vietnam War.
Omdahl was also responsible for his appointment, filling a vacancy as district judge for Grand Forks in October 1979, he said. “He recommended me to Gov. Art Link.”
Medd ran for the judgeship in 1980 and credits Omdahl with helping him to win the race over his opposition, he said.
“He was a wonderful guy, a great friend to me and a great friend to so many,” Medd said. “He was a fantastic professor,” who followed his students’ lives long after they graduated.
Omdahl frequently invited Medd to speak about the judiciary to his political science classes at UND.
Espousing his viewpoints in his newspaper columns, Omdahl “was not afraid to take on controversial issues – guns, abortion, religion,” Medd said. “(He held) well-researched opinions.”
Omdahl was very active in humanitarian efforts, including the Feed My Starving Children project, headed by Franklin Graham, president of Samaritan’s Purse.
“Some of my favorite pictures are those of us, in our hairnets, packing food” for the program, Medd said.
Omdahl has written a book that is in the publication process, but not yet released, Medd said. The subject matter deals with the treatment of women throughout U.S. history.
“He was very much for equal treatment of women,” said Medd, noting that Omdahl’s daughter will likely follow through with finalizing the book’s publication.
His friend “always wanted to get things done,” Medd said. “He was interested in helping people. … He was somebody who wanted to do things. When he moved into assisted living, I called him the ‘Energizer bunny.’ ”
In a recent talk for Franklin Club members, Omdahl spoke about a “civilized society,” Medd said. “He got to be philosophical in his later life.”
Leadership in difficult times
Omdahl was lieutenant governor “at a very very difficult time in state history – a deep recession, almost an agricultural depression at that time,” said former U.S. Sen. Kent Conrad, D-N.D., of Washington, D.C., who has known Omdahl for at least 60 years. “He and (Gov.) Bud Sinner navigated us through that very very difficult time in a very professional way.”
Omdahl also made dramatic changes in the state, including the introduction of kindergarten and public television, Conrad said. “Lloyd was a leader and he was a visionary. He saw what could be in North Dakota. He was somebody that believed North Dakota, with its agriculture and energy resources, could be a shining light for the rest of the country. And, subsequently, there have been times when we led the nation in economic growth. Lloyd Omdahl played a very fundamental role in building that foundation.”
Omdahl was also “a lot of fun to be with, because he had such an engaging personality,” Conrad said.
Omdahl was devoted to his wife, Ruth, who suffered from dementia in her final years, Conrad said. Residing in a memory care facility, “she probably wasn’t sure who Lloyd was. But he would go visit her three times a week, and he would take her chocolates, because he knew she loved chocolate.
“You know, you think about the loyalty, the love that that exemplified for him, even after she wasn’t sure who he was, that he would go see her faithfully and take her a treat.”
‘An extraordinary man’
Former U.S. Sen. Byron Dorgan, of McLean, Virginia, said Omdahl had “a major impact on North Dakota government in a very positive way. Even more than that, (his teaching at UND) was so powerful.
“The fact is that so many people wanted to get into his courses, they had to restrict them. I think he was one of the most popular professors that I’ve ever known at the University of North Dakota. Quite remarkable.
“In addition he began to write opinion columns, and send them throughout the state. He was really smart, really capable and had a really interesting wit about him as well. … He was just an extraordinary man.”
Dorgan presumed that “there are probably thousands of students, who would have come away from (his classes) having a much greater understanding about what government is. We are all government, the government is ours. And Lloyd taught that with fervor. …
“Time never got past him,” Dorgan said. “Although he was well up in age, he continued to think and work and express opinions on a wide range of very important issues.”
‘Deep religious faith’
State Sen. Tim Mathern, of Fargo, said, “Omdahl was a master at running the North Dakota Senate” for the years he served as lieutenant governor.
“He had a way with the rules to assure that a tie between Republicans and Democrats did not let us stalemate like today’s Congress.”
Omdahl’s greatest achievement for the state was “his melding of political science and journalism,” said Mathern.
Omdahl also “possessed a deep religious faith,” he added. “He never carried it on his sleeve, but it guided his ethics in all of his profession.”
Retired UND professor Ken Dawes, of Grand Forks, who worked in the state’s Department of Human Services while Omdahl was lieutenant governor in the 1960s, was a fellow UND faculty member. He taught in UND’s Department of Social Work.
Dawes especially admired Omdahl’s “objectivity,” he said. “Even though he was identified as a Democrat, he could be objective about issues.”
An active community member, “he was always organizing people, but doing it in a nice way,” he said.
Omdahl was “just delightful to visit with because of his sense of humor,” he said. “He truly loved what he was doing.
“All I know is, we’re going to miss him. I just wish there were more people like him.”
North Dakota
North Dakota leaders unveil enhanced oil recovery plan for Bakken
BISMARCK, N.D. (KFYR) – North Dakota leaders unveiled an initiative aimed at getting more oil out of the Bakken, using enhanced oil recovery and CO₂.
Senator John Hoeven said the effort is getting a boost from $36 million from the Department of Energy for “Crack the Code 2.0,” a $157 million initiative with state and industry funding.
Hoeven said the goal is to use CO₂ for enhanced oil recovery, calling it “an important, usable, valuable commodity” and saying, “We’re linking our coal plants with our oil and gas producing companies to do it.”
Funding will be used to develop technology to make enhanced oil recovery profitable and viable, and then implement it in North Dakota oil fields in a number of pilot projects.
Hoeven said current recovery rates in the Bakken are limited.
“We’re only producing about 10 to 12% of the oil out of that shale,” he said, “But with EOR, advanced oil recovery techniques, we can double it. We can take it from 10 to 12% up to 25% or better.”
Hoeven said the effort is also tied to electricity demand, saying North Dakota will “produce more electricity for a company that wants to do AI, that wants to do data centers, needs more and more electricity,” and that “it isn’t just about oil and gas.”
North Dakota Petroleum Council President Ron Ness said the pilot projects are expected to start soon.
“We hope to see these pilots putting their technologies into the ground sometime late this year, first quarter of next year,” said Ness.
“So I would expect by this time next year, we’re going to maybe potentially begin to see what are some of the results early on,” Ness added. “And again, this is going to take multiple, multiple swings at this thing. It’s not going to just happen. If it was easy, we’d be doing it. Nobody’s done it anywhere in the world. This is where we’re going to crack the code.”
Copyright 2026 KFYR. All rights reserved.
North Dakota
North Memorial and South Dakota-based Sanford Health merging
Three years after a deal with Fairview was called off, South Dakota-based Sanford Health is getting into the Twin Cities market with a new merger.
On Friday, the health system announced that it will combine with North Memorial Health.
Fairview, Sanford call off planned merger
Under the merger, Sanford says the organization will invest $600 million to strengthen the Robbinsdale hospital and double the Maple Grove hospital’s size.
Sanford is the largest rural nonprofit health system in the country, with 58 hospitals and roughly 56,000 employees across the Dakotas, Iowa, Wisconsin, Wyoming and the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. North Memorial operates two hospitals in Robbinsdale and Maple Grove, along with several other clinics, employing more than 6,500 people.
If completed, the health systems plan to keep some local leadership in place, including North Memorial CEO Trevor Sawallish, and two North Memorial board members will serve on the combined system’s board. However, the overall company will be led by Sanford CEO Bill Gassen.
The companies say they expect the merger to close later this year, as long as regulatory processes don’t cause delays.
Sanford’s previous attempt to merge with Fairview was called off in 2023, eight months after initially announcing the planned merger. Many Minnesotans raised concerns about that transaction, including Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison, although some of that was due to the University of Minnesota’s partnership with Fairview and the possibility of an out-of-state company running the state’s flagship medical school.
As with most mergers, concerns are still likely to arise about possible cutbacks and the impact on the state’s healthcare quality. However, the deal seems more likely to be completed than Sanford’s past attempts.
Reaction
SEIU Healthcare Minnesota & Iowa, who represents over 1,000 workers at North Memorial, called the news “worrisome.”
“At a time when healthcare costs are skyrocketing for Minnesota families and frontline healthcare workers are getting squeezed by short staffing levels, this latest attempt at consolidation brings many concerns. It is especially concerning because previous merger attempts by Sanford Health to come into Minnesota have failed due to their values and corporate behavior,” the union said.
SEIU also called on Ellison “to use all of his office’s powers within the law to provide oversight into this proposed merger and ensure the interests of Minnesota’s workers and patients are protected.”
Ellison’s office is asking the public to submit information through an online Community Input Form.
“As we have done and are currently doing with other healthcare transactions, we are conducting a thorough review of this potential acquisition to ensure it complies with the law and is in the public interest,” Ellison daid. “Proposed health care consolidation requires careful examination. As long as I am Attorney General, I will use the full range of regulatory tools to protect Minnesotans’ access to quality, affordable healthcare.”
The Minnesota Nurses Association released a statement saying it is “deeply concerned” by the merger announcement, warning it “could have far-reaching consequences for patients, healthcare workers, and the communities they serve.”
This is a breaking news story. Follow 5 EYEWITNESS NEWS on social media and on the KSTP app below for more updates.
North Dakota
North Dakota scores third-highest average IQ nationally
BISMARCK, N.D. (KFYR) – Here’s something North Dakotans can take pride in: North Dakota has the third-highest average IQ in the nation, tying with Vermont at 103.8. That is 3.5 points above the national average.
The state with the highest average is Massachusetts at 104.3 and the state with the lowest average is Mississippi at 94.2.
Ninety-four percent of North Dakotans graduate high school, making it the state with the sixth-highest graduation rate in the nation.
Copyright 2026 KFYR. All rights reserved.
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