North Dakota
Letter: Keeping North Dakota’s children safe
To the editor,
When the sirens fade, school still starts the next morning, with some children carrying more than just a backpack. When children witness something potentially traumatic at home, it does not just stay there; it follows them into the classroom. Handle with Care connects schools, law enforcement and the community to ensure that educators know when a child needs understanding, not questions, so support, safety and learning come first.
Handle with Care (HWC) is a school-community partnership program that enables law enforcement to notify school districts when they encounter a child at a traumatic scene with a short, confidential statement: “Handle ___ With Care;” no other information on the situation is provided, only the student’s name. By alerting only the educators and staff that work with the child, it allows them to be able to provide support, a safe environment and keep all information confidential.
Research has proven that trauma can undermine children’s ability to learn, form relationships, and function appropriately in the classroom. When we don’t interrupt trauma, we see kids who are more at risk of absenteeism, expulsion, dropping out and additional long-term negative outcomes. And quite the opposite is true when we implement supportive programs, like Handle with Care.
Families Flourish ND (FFND) drives this program forward across North Dakota. FFND recognizes the importance and impact of the Handle with Care program and has strong allies. In seeing the impact of the communities who are implementing HWC to fidelity, we see the strong potential it carries for every community, large and small, across the state. We work to bring it to every community by meeting with various educational groups, task forces, and community agencies. Educating on the value and the impact. These are North Dakota’s children, and they deserve it.
Frankie Piatz
Bismarck, North Dakota
Piatz is an intern with Families Flourish ND.
North Dakota
SBHE to Review Ray Richards Alterations
(KNOX) – The North Dakota Board of Higher Education is being asked to weigh in on the reconstruction of Ray Richard’s Golf Course in Grand Forks. The upgrades and deferred maintenance improvements are the result of the pending DeMers Avenue/42nd Street Underpass project.
UND sold 6.5 acres of the nine hole course to the North Dakota Department of Transportation for the grade separation. During the road construction the golf course will be realigned and reduced to a par 34 course. UND will also address underground utilities and irrigation systems. The total cost is around 4.5 million dollars.
The course will close for the 2026 and 2027 seasons. The goal is to reopen in 2028. SBHE is expected to approve the design at its April 30th meeting.
Crews are expected to begin preliminary work on the $90 million dollar underpass project this week. The initial phase will have minimal impacts to traffic on both 42nd Street and DeMers Avenue. Larger impacts are expected later this summer.
North Dakota
Windy conditions fuel shop fire in rural Mapleton
MAPLETON, N.D. (Valley News Live) – Casselton Fire responded to a shop fire in rural Mapleton on Saturday afternoon, according to Casselton Fire Chief John Hejl.
Casselton Fire was dispatched to the scene at 3:30 p.m. Saturday. Windy conditions escalated the fire before crews arrived, Hejl said.
Firefighters used defensive and offensive lines to control the fire upon arrival.
Casselton Fire was assisted by Cass County Sheriff’s Office, Casselton Ambulance, West Fargo Police Department, Davenport Fire and Mapleton Fire.
Copyright 2026 KVLY. All rights reserved.
North Dakota
Finley, North Dakota without water after watermain leak.
A do not use water advisory issued by the City of Finley, North Dakota. April 2026.
FINLEY, N.D. (KFGO) – The city of Finley, North Dakota has been without potable water since Friday due to a suspected water main leak. Steele County Emergency Management says it is unclear how long it will take to restore water services in the city.
The North Dakota Department of Environmental Quality says the available water in Finley has been deemed unusable for drinking, cooking, bathing and washing dishes or laundry.
The water system will need to be flushed and samples that say the water is safe will need to be collected for the water advisory to be lifted.
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