North Dakota
Applied Digital plans to expand in Ellendale, ND

ELLENDALE, N.D. — Applied Digital Corp. plans to expand its footprint in Ellendale, North Dakota, according to Nick Phillips, executive vice president of public affairs and real estate acquisitions for the company.
Applied Digital completed a blockchain facility in Ellendale in 2023, and its current 380,000-square-foot, high-performance computing facility is expected to begin operations later this year. That will be followed by two additional 900,000-square-foot expansions, Phillips said.
John M. Steiner / The Jamestown Sun
“The first building that’s going up right now is about a $1.3 billion investment for us, and we’re anticipating another $4 billion,” he said. “That’s our investment for the buildings, the transformers, the chillers, all of the mechanical equipment. We anticipate our customer will invest approximately another $15 billion, so this is about a $20 billion total capital investment on our 320-acre site.”
Applied Digital hosted Gov. Kelly Armstrong and officials from the state, the City of Ellendale and Dickey County on Wednesday, March 19, to learn about the company’s operations in North Dakota. The event included a tour of Applied Digital’s data center, which is currently under construction, and Ellendale Acres.
John M. Steiner / The Jamestown Sun
Ellendale Acres is a housing community that was developed with a partnership between Applied Digital, the City of Ellendale, the state of North Dakota and Headwaters Development to build 20 homes and a 38-unit apartment complex.
Armstrong also signed House Bill 1539 at the event in Ellendale. With the signing of HB 1539, on-site backup electric generation that exceeds 50 megawatts and is not connected to the power grid will no longer be subject to the North Dakota Public Service Commission’s Siting Act, according to a news release from the Office of the Governor. The change in law takes effect Aug. 1.
John M. Steiner / The Jamestown Sun
“This will allow data centers and other businesses to add on-site backup generation more easily with local approval while still complying with environmental protections,” the news release says. “In testimony on the bill, Applied Digital, which also has a facility in Jamestown, said backup power generation will protect workers and equipment from unintentional harm caused by unexpected disconnection from the power grid and will allow the data center’s large load to operate off-grid in emergency situations, improving the reliability of the grid for other customers and the grid’s operators.”
Applied Digital designs, develops and operates next-generation data centers across North America to provide digital infrastructure solutions to the high-performance computing industry, Phillips said.
In North Dakota, Applied Digital has blockchain sites that support cryptocurrency mining about 7 miles north of Jamestown and 1 mile west of Ellendale.
John M. Steiner / The Jamestown Sun
Armstrong told The Jamestown Sun that Applied Digital’s project in Ellendale can happen in North Dakota because of the state’s great fiber buildout, business environment and energy.
“When you have a town like Ellendale in this area of rural North Dakota that has really been struggling just to stay alive for the last 20 years, it’s a tremendous opportunity not just for this community but for the economy of south-central North Dakota,” he said.
Ellendale Mayor Don Flaherty said Applied Digital gives the City of Ellendale an ability to move forward and do things for the community that weren’t possible five to 10 years ago.
John M. Steiner / The Jamestown Sun
“Now I can stand in front of you today and I can say with the things that are happening right now, I see Ellendale being a shining light in this area of North Dakota well into the 22nd century because of the things that we’re going to do and the strength that we’re going to bring back to our community because of this,” he said.
Phillips said Applied Digital expects to be a top 10 property taxpayer in the state in the next year or two.
Ellendale Acres partnership
Applied Digital expects to employ 350 full-time employees at the Ellendale site, and those people will need places to live in the community, Phillips said.
“In terms of local infrastructure, one of the things that we’ve needed to do is we’re trying to convince folks to move here, to live here in Ellendale, and that’s very important for us,” he said.
John M. Steiner / The Jamestown Sun
Currently, about 450 workers are in Ellendale for construction of the 380,000-square-foot, high-performance computing artificial intelligence data center, Phillips said.
“I’m told that number (of workers) is going to go up drastically as the next two buildings get farther underway,” he said.
Flaherty said Ellendale’s peak population was either 1,800 in the late 1950s or early ’60s or 1,500 in 2000, depending on what artificial intelligence Google search engine was used. Ellendale’s current population is over 1,100, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
Flaherty said Applied Digital coming to Ellendale is the “first domino to fall.” As a result, he said more people will want to do business in Ellendale.
John M. Steiner / The Jamestown Sun
“We’re going to have spouses of people who are going to work at the data center who are going to say, ‘Hey, I want to start this kind of business,’ or ‘I’ve had this kind of experience and I want to bring that to here,’ ” he said.
To help the Ellendale community, Applied Digital partnered with Headwaters Development and the Bank of North Dakota to build 20 new homes — eight four-bedroom and 12 two-bedroom — and a 38-unit apartment complex utilizing the state’s Rural-Workforce Initiative to Support Housing (R-WISH) pilot program. The housing development is called Ellendale Acres and is located in south Ellendale.
The R-WISH pilot program utilizes up to $10 million of Bank of North Dakota capital to complement the work done by the North Dakota Housing Finance Agency and the North Dakota Housing Initiative Advisory Committee, according to Bank of North Dakota’s website. The maximum amount from the R-WISH fund is the lesser of 30% of the project costs, $3.5 million or the matching contribution from the company.
Applied Digital contributed $3.5 million toward the program to build housing in Ellendale. Headwaters Development will own the homes and apartment complex and rent them to Applied Digital employees.
John M. Steiner / The Jamestown Sun
Armstrong said Applied Digital’s project and helping with Ellendale’s housing challenge is a holistic view of economic development. He said a local community and its elected officials need to promote and welcome business.
“You need a company that wants to be there,” he said. “You get private equity and then you get the Bank of North Dakota to step in. It really is kind of an all-above approach. They (Applied Digital) can’t build that facility if anybody who works there has nowhere to live. So they’ve engaged in the community in a really meaningful way. I think it’s a model for how you would do a large-scale project in a place like Ellendale.”
Ryan Sailer, president of Headwaters Development, said Ellendale Acres is a big accomplishment that had great collaboration to make it happen. He talked about the challenges and hurdles to bring housing to rural communities.
He said construction costs have increased for housing in rural communities. He also said it’s difficult for rural communities to get contractors and subcontractors to build housing the magnitude of Ellendale Acres.
He said the rental prices are lower in rural areas compared to urban areas, which caps the mortgages.
“As developers, we’re bringing in more equity which often isn’t sustainable because we have investors that require a certain risk-adjusted rate of return, and they’re not willing to take the risk,” he said.
He said if employers want to expand or a city wants to bring in employers, housing is needed for their employees.
“You almost have to come up with a combined solution to figure out how to do it somewhat all at once, to make it sustainable and viable,” he said.
Armstrong said Senate Bill 2225, which establishes the Housing for Opportunity, Mobility and Empowerment (HOME) grant program in the North Dakota Department of Commerce, is a complementary program to the R-WISH pilot program.
“Not every community that has a housing need has an Applied Digital coming in,” he said. “The R-Wish program only works because Applied Digital has bought in, the financing guys, Headwaters has bought in, and the bank (Bank of North Dakota) has bought in. There are places across North Dakota whether it’s Richardton or Hillsboro and between that also need housing that don’t have something like this (Applied Digital) at scale.”
If SB 2225 is approved, the Commerce Department would award grants to political subdivisions to build infrastructure to support affordable market-rate housing. The grant program would be funded one time and ends on June 30, 2027.
SB 2225 would appropriate $50 million to the program. The Commerce Department would allocate $10 million for communities with a population of 5,000 or less, $20 million for communities with a population of 5,001 to 20,000 and $5 million for rural metropolitan areas located within 20 miles of city limits of a community with more than 20,000 people.
The program provides grant dollars for one-third of the infrastructure costs for residential development projects. The local political subdivision and the developer of the residential lots would each provide one-third of the costs for residential development projects.

North Dakota
North Dakota Senate passes bill on start of term limits; differs from bill passed by House

BISMARCK — The North Dakota Senate passed a bill on Friday, March 28, clarifying when term limits passed by voters in 2022 officially went into effect.
The date differs from the effective date passed by the House of Representatives after Sen. Janne Myrdal, R-Edinburg, a co-sponsor on House Bill 1300, amended it in committee.
The original bill, sponsored by Rep. Ben Koppelman, R-West Fargo, stated that “the time for calculating the number of years of service for members of the legislative assembly” with regard to term limits, did not start until after Nov. 7, 2022, the day the voters passed term limits.
This date would mean that any legislators elected in even districts in the 2020 general election would not have the clock start for term limits until they start their term after the 2024 general election, but those elected in the 2022 general election – the same election voters adopted term limits – would have the clock start when they took office for the 2023 legislative session.
“If you went to the ballot, or to the poll and cast a ballot that day for legislator X,” Koppelman said, “Then at the same time, you cast your ballot for or against the term limit, then a reasonable person — which is the standard we use in law, often — would say, ‘Yeah, I understood that if that passed, however I felt about term limits, that the guy I just voted for in alleged District 10 would now get eight years, starting now.’”
Contributed / North Dakota Legislative Assembly
Koppelman’s version of the bill passed the House in a 64-28 vote.
Myrdal’s amendment would set the effective date for the start of term limits as Jan. 1, 2023, meaning legislators elected in 2022 would not have their time in office count toward term limits until they take office following the 2026 general election.
She said that the Nov. 7, 2022, date is arbitrary and the Jan. 1, 2023, date is dictated by law under Article 15 of the North Dakota Constitution as the effective date for the ballot measure.
“The Election Day is an arbitrary date because it’s not a date set in stone,” Myrdal said. “Legislative interpretation from the language of Article 15 is that it’s prospective and the law says it went into effect on January 1, 2023, so I don’t think there’s a controversy there at all.”
Myrdal also said she felt the date was a better choice in the event of a constitutional challenge to term limits.
Her amended version of the bill passed the Senate in a 40-6 vote. It now goes back to the House for a vote of concurrence.
Koppelman disagreed with the Senate’s interpretation.
“It’s saying that, ‘Well, even though I voted for term limits and I voted for my (representative) in District 9, this time doesn’t count. So four years from now, when I vote for the person in District 9, then it starts, it starts the clock,’” Koppelman said. “So in essence, the odd number districts would get 12 years, and the even number districts would get 10 years … I think to add a whole other term on is not as reasonable of an interpretation for the Legislature, and I have much more concern of judicial scrutiny if we get challenged in court.”
He said that he believes if the House version had passed, it would not have been challenged in court.
Koppelman said he would encourage the House to send the bill to a conference committee to work out the differences between the two versions.
North Dakota
North Dakota Game and Fish biologists offer spring fishing previews in video series
The North Dakota Game and Fish Department has released its first four spring fishing previews. Bottom line: Things are looking pretty good out there going into another open water season. This week’s previews include the Northeast, North Central and South Central fishing districts along with Lake Sakakawea, Lake Audubon and the Missouri River System.
North Dakota
North Dakota legislative resolution marks first step toward federal protection for wild horses

MEDORA, N.D. — A resolution passed by the North Dakota Legislature is the first step in seeking federal protection to ensure the future of the wild horse herd at
Theodore Roosevelt National Park.
Legislators this week overwhelmingly
passed
Senate Concurrent Resolution 4006,
which urges Congress to pass legislation protecting the herd.
“It’s important because it puts North Dakota on record saying they’re important and should have full protection,” said Chris Kman, president of Chasing Horses Wild Horse Advocates of Dickinson, a leading proponent for keeping a viable herd.
Park officials proposed eliminating the wild horses from the park in a recent environmental review and are injecting the mares with birth control to prevent reproduction in the herd.
The resolution notes “significant concerns regarding the management of the wild horse herd by Theodore Roosevelt National Park and the long-term health and preservation of the herd” and urges Congress to enact legislation “establishing federal protections for the wild horses to ensure the herd’s long-term health and preservation.”
A herd of about 200 wild horses, grouped in separate bands, has roamed the south unit since before Theodore Roosevelt National Park was established in 1947. A study found
the ancestry of the herd likely traces back to the open-range ranching era of the 1880s,
when Roosevelt ranched in the Badlands.
Following public outcry,
park officials in April 2024 abandoned an environmental review
— which Sen. John Hoeven, R-N.D., flatly called a horse-removal process — and agreed to maintain a herd of horses but said they would reduce the size of the herd.
Six months later, in October 2024,
the park conducted a helicopter roundup of the horses.
During the roundup, all mature mares were injected with GonaCon, a birth-control drug the park has used aggressively since 2009.
Most of the mares have received multiple injections of the drug, which Colorado State University researchers found to be highly effective after two doses — and determined that
19 of 24 mares failed to regain fertility after two doses.
Patrick Springer / The Forum
As a result of the park’s use of GonaCon, horse advocates fear the park is deliberately creating a non-reproductive herd. Kman said Bruce McCann, the park’s chief of natural resources, told her late last year that the park is using GonaCon with the intent of creating a sterile herd.
The park has not responded to The Forum’s request for comment on the assertion that it is deliberately working to sterilize the herd.
Rangers were out darting mares in the park on Thursday, March 27. Park records show every mare was dosed with GonaCon last year, Kman said.
“GonaCon is not meant to be used every year, so what are they doing?” she said. “Eradicating the herd.”
Now that legislators have sent a clear message to Congress, Kman said she will ask the North Dakota congressional delegation to press the National Park Service to impose a moratorium on any further horse removals and the use of birth-control drugs.
“Federal legislation takes a long time, as you could imagine,” and likely would take several years to pass, if successful, she said.
Hoeven is preparing to take legislative action to protect the horses, spokesperson Alex Finken said.
“Last year, Senator Hoeven secured a commitment from the National Park Service to maintain wild horses at Theodore Roosevelt National Park, and he is working to introduce legislation to ensure the NPS maintains a herd of free-roaming horses on a permanent basis,” Finken said.
The herd, which the State Historical Society of North Dakota has said is historically significant, is threatened by the park’s usage of birth control, Kman said.
“The use of GonaCon absolutely has to stop,” she said. Births in the horse herd have dropped sharply, with 10 foals born last year, two of which died. There were more than 40 births in 2017, a number Kman said was too high. A healthy balance must be struck to maintain the herd’s genetic viability, she said.
As a result of the removal of young horses and the aggressive use of birth control, the horse herd is rapidly aging, Kman said. A 24-year-old mare named Tanker recently died, and many other horses are also reaching the end of their lifespan, Kman said.
“There’s a lot of older horses in the park that are going to be dying over the next few years,” adding urgency to the need for federal protection, she said.
There are precedents for federal protection of National Park Service horses, Kman said. The horses at Cape Lookout National Seashore on North Carolina’s Outer Banks and Ozark Scenic Riverways in southern Missouri are protected by federal law, she said.
Patrick Springer first joined The Forum in 1985. He covers a wide range of subjects including health care, energy and population trends. Email address: pspringer@forumcomm.com
Phone: 701-367-5294
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