Connect with us

North Dakota

'New Twins' for Uncle Sam

Published

on

'New Twins' for Uncle Sam


The Jamestown area was pretty proud when North Dakota achieved statehood on Nov. 2, 1889.

“Uncle Sam’s New Twins” was the headline for The Jamestown Alert on Nov. 7, 1889, the first weekly edition of the Alert that ran after statehood.

“By official proclamation, North Dakota and South Dakota are at last provided with snug quarters in the household of the United States,” said a sub-headline.

I’m not sure what is meant by the “snug quarters in the household of the United States,” but that is how reporters wrote the news back then.

Advertisement

The article went on to say that the Dakota Territory had been seeking statehood under one form or another for eight years before it was granted by a stroke of the pen in The White House by Benjamin Harrison on a Saturday afternoon.

The proclamation was not publicly announced until Nov. 4, 1889 which was a Monday.

When it was made official, there was a lot of scrambling going on.

An election held in October had ratified the North Dakota Constitution and elected the first set of state officials. Once the president signed the papers making North Dakota a state, those officials could be officially sworn into office.

There were some questions raised about the process of transitioning from residents of a territory to residents of a state.

Advertisement

An article in the Alert reassured homesteaders that it was indeed legal to file the claim papers for a homestead using a territorial address and get the final proof conveying the title of the land to them with a state address.

And there were some detractors around the nation to North Dakota getting a star on the United States flag.

The Chicago Herald and St. Paul Globe both editorialized that the residents of the new state were too poor and destitute to join the union as full-fledged states.

The St. Paul Globe went as far as sending wagons through the streets of the Minnesota capital city to gather clothes for the poor of newly formed North Dakota.

In all, four states were admitted to the Union in 1889. North and South Dakota on Nov. 2, 1889. Harrison shuffled the papers so no one knows which was signed first, although North Dakota is considered the 39th state and South Dakota the 40th.

Advertisement

A week or so later, Harrison signed proclamations admitting Montana and Washington to the union.

Author Keith Norman can be reached at

www.KeithNormanBooks.com





Source link

Advertisement

North Dakota

Morton County did not violate North Dakota’s open records law when the County Auditor, within a reasonable time, informed the requester that the requested records were not in the County’s possession.. – North Dakota Attorney General

Published

on


Morton County did not violate North Dakota’s open records law when the County Auditor, within a reasonable time, informed the requester that the requested records were not in the County’s possession..

February 27, 2026

Media Contact: Suzie Weigel, 701.328.2210

BISMARCK, ND – Karen Jordan requested an opinion from this office under N.D.C.C. § 44-04-21.1 asking whether Morton County violated N.D.C.C. § 44-04-18 by failing or refusing to provide records.

Conclusion: It is my opinion that Morton County’s response was in compliance with N.D.C.C. § 44-04-18.

Advertisement

Link to opinion 2026-O-06

###



Source link

Continue Reading

North Dakota

ND Supreme Court Justice Daniel Crothers retiring, stepping onto new path

Published

on

ND Supreme Court Justice Daniel Crothers retiring, stepping onto new path


BISMARCK, N.D. (KFYR) – The North Dakota Court System threw a reception for a retiring member of the state Supreme Court.

Justice Daniel Cothers is leaving after serving for more than 20 years.

He plans to step down on Feb. 28.

Before Crothers became a judge, he served as a lawyer and as president of the State Bar Association of North Dakota.

Advertisement

Mark Friese is set to replace Crothers starting March 9.

“He knows what is important and what to keep focused on. Justice Friese will be an exceptional replacement to me on the bench,” said Crothers.

Crothers plans to keep up on teaching gigs and spend time at his family’s farm as he steps into retirement.



Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

North Dakota

North Dakota ambulance providers losing money on every run, according to survey

Published

on

North Dakota ambulance providers losing money on every run, according to survey


By: Michael Achterling

FARGO (North Dakota Monitor) – North Dakota ambulance service providers lost nearly $500 on average for every patient transported to a medical facility last year, according to a survey.

The recent survey of three dozen providers in the state, conducted by PWW Advisory Group, was the result of a study created by House Bill 1322 passed during the 2025 legislative session.  The group presented the results to the Legislature’s interim Emergency Response Services Committee on Wednesday.

The average revenue generated from an ambulance transport was about $1,100 during 2025, but the expenses were nearly $1,600, said Matt Zavadsky, an EMS and mobile health care consultant with PWW, based in Pennsylvania.

Advertisement

“They are losing money every time they respond to a call,” Zavadsky said during the meeting. “That financial loss has to be made up, typically, by local tax subsidies, fundraisers, bake sales, or all too often, service reductions to try and match expenses with the revenue they can generate.” 

He said the problem cannot be fixed by billing reform alone because the revenue generated isn’t enough to fund the cost of readiness, such as personnel, equipment and supplies, among other items.

The survey highlighted 74% of ambulance provider expenses went to personnel costs, but equipment costs have also increased in recent years.

Zavadsky said survey respondents plan to invest about $12.9 million into vehicle and equipment purchases over the next five years, averaging to about $358,000 per provider. However, the cost of a new ambulance has risen to between $275,000 to $480,000 per vehicle. Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, a new ambulance could cost up to $250,000, he said.

There are more than 100 ambulance service providers in North Dakota. The 36 survey respondents represented a diverse group of providers from city and county services to district-owned, hospital-based and private providers, he said. The average patient transport distance is 34 miles, according to the survey.

Advertisement

Zavadsky said the survey respondents reported 53% of their total revenue was generated from fees for service with the remaining 47% coming from local tax subsidies, state grants and other fundraising.

“What you guys are experiencing in North Dakota and what is happening in the local communities … is not the fault of the local communities, not the fault of the state, this is just our new normal,” Zavadsky said.

Rep. Todd Porter, R-Mandan, owner of Metro-Area Ambulance Service which serves Morton and Burleigh counties, said Medicare patients reimburse ambulance providers at a much lower rate than private insurance and Medicaid patients. He added Medicare patients make up about 60% of the call volume in the Bismarck-Mandan area.

“If we’re being underpaid for 60% of our call volume, then we have to make it up some place,” Porter said.

He said some providers can make up that difference in reimbursement with tax dollars, but not all providers have that option.

Advertisement

“We do other contracted work for nursing homes, hospitals, funeral homes in order to make up that difference,” Porter said. “This is a federal government problem. This is a CMS (Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services) problem that we’ve known about for years.”

Porter also said ambulance services are not reimbursed for responding to a call with a Medicare patient that doesn’t require a transport to a hospital. According to the survey, about 17% of all ambulance calls don’t require transport to a medical facility.

The survey also showed about 2,300 of the nearly 33,600 patient transports billed last year ended up in collections after being more than 90 days delinquent, totalling $2.7 million, Zavadsky said. The average total of a claim sent to collections was about $1,100.

Zavadsky estimated the total of unpaid claims for more than 100 providers across North Dakota was about $5.8 million in 2025. Some providers don’t have procedures to pursue delinquent billing in collections, he said.

Rep. Jim Grueneich, R-Ellendale, chair of the committee, said the committee will take a deeper look at the data presented on Wednesday and may have recommendations, and possible draft legislation, to address the issue in the 2027 legislative session.

Advertisement



Source link

Continue Reading

Trending