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Curtis Brown named North Dakota Stockmen’s Association Rancher of the Year

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Curtis Brown named North Dakota Stockmen’s Association Rancher of the Year


The North Dakota Stockmen’s Association (NDSA) recently presented Curtis Brown with the 2023 Rancher of the Year Award during the NDSA’s 94th Annual Convention and Trade Show, “Welcome Home,” in Watford City, North Dakota.

Brown’s cattle-ranching story dates back to 1910 when his grandparents began building the family’s farming and ranching operation in Stutsman County near Montpelier. Brown’s parents, Richard and Beatrice Brown, and later, Curtis, who represents the third generation on the 113-year operation, and his wife, Laurie, followed in those footsteps.

“My dad raised Hereford-Simmental-cross cattle,” Curtis Brown said. “In the 1960s, he began crossing them with Charolais bulls, which was right around the time I was growing up.” They liked the vigorous, fast-growing calves and continued raising Charolais cattle.

Brown said his father had the most influence on him, helping him get his start on the farm and in the cattle operation.

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“When I was about an eighth grader, my dad gifted me a heifer,” he said. “When she calved, she had a heifer and I had to decide if I was going to keep the calf or sell the calf. I wanted to build my herd, so I kept her, and, every time after, if my cows had heifer calves, I put them back into my herd.”

After Brown graduated from high school in 1982, he purchased some Charolais females and began ranching alongside his father. In the beginning of his ranching career and at the start of his married life with his wife, land became available to purchase near the Browns’ farm.

“We started buying land and making the operation more sustainable for my dad and my young family to be a part of,” Brown said. “That has turned out to be one of the biggest and best opportunities that we have had over the years, and we are so fortunate we did what we did when we did it.”

In 1985, Brown began selling Charolais bulls private treaty. Then, in 2006, he started having a public auction. Today, it is held the fourth Tuesday of March at the C-B Charolais Sale Facility just south of the Browns’ ranch.

Brown raises Charolais cattle under the family’s ranch name, C-B Charolais. He also raises commercial cow-calf pairs, backgrounds the calves and has a heifer development program consisting of commercial females sold either as pairs in their annual sale or as bred heifers by private treaty.

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Curtis and Laurie Brown have two grown children, Troy (Jessica) and Heather (Lance) Dykins, and five grandchildren.

Brown’s son, Troy, works on the operation alongside him.

Brown served on the NDSA Board of Directors from 2010 to 2018. He was the NDSA Environmental Issues Committee vice chairman and the organization’s statewide rural transportation committee representative. He has also served on the NDSA Seedstock Council. In addition, he is a longtime member of the International Charolais Association and North Dakota Charolais Association.





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North Dakota

'New Twins' for Uncle Sam

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'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.

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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.

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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.

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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





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Arkansas professor makes case for school choice in North Dakota

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Arkansas professor makes case for school choice in North Dakota


FARGO — A professor of education policy says North Dakota is “ready to pop” when it comes to adopting a private “school choice” program.

Patrick Wolf, with the Department of Education Reform at the University of Arkansas, spoke about “School Choice in North Dakota” at North Dakota State University on Friday, Nov. 1.

He was a guest of the Challey Institute for Global Innovation and Growth as part of a fall speakers series.

Wolf said 34 states have implemented some form of private school choice, including Montana, South Dakota and Minnesota.

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“There’s one state there, North Dakota, that is a bit of a donut hole,” Wolf told the audience, as he referred to a map on a projected screen.

But he predicts the state won’t be an “outlier” for long.

Patrick Wolf, distinguished professor of education policy at the University of Arkansas, addresses students at North Dakota State University about school choice in North Dakota as part of the Challey Fall Series on Friday, Nov. 1 at NDSU’s Beckwith Recital Hall.

Anna Paige / The Forum

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The North Dakota House put forward a bill in 2023 to offset costs of private school tuition,

but Gov. Doug Burgum vetoed it and an attempt to overturn the veto failed.

House Bill 1532 would have set aside $10 million from the state’s general fund for an educational reimbursement program.

Wolf said Burgum’s inability to get a school choice program passed during his eight years as governor of a red state hurt the governor’s efforts to become presidential nominee Donald Trump’s choice as vice president.

“That was a strike against him,” Wolf said of the governor.

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In Burgum’s veto message at the time, he said while his administration supports school choice, the bill was not the comprehensive solution needed and it fell short especially for rural areas far from any existing nonpublic schools.

In opposing the bill at the time,

Nick Archuleta, president of North Dakota United,

said it was about using taxpayer dollars to allow private schools to choose the students they want to educate.

He also said rural schools would end up “subsidizing private education for urban families.”

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Kirsten Baesler, who is running for a fourth term as superintendent of public instruction, has said North Dakota should not fund school choice programs at the expense of public schools.

“This cannot be an either-or conversation,”

Baesler said in an interview last month with the North Dakota Monitor.

School choice programs come in four forms, Wolf said: school vouchers, tax credit scholarships, individual tax credits and education savings accounts, or ESAs.

South Dakota and Montana both have tax credit scholarships, with the latter also offering ESAs, while Minnesota has an individual tax credit to benefit parents who self-fund their child’s private schooling, according to Wolf.

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Tax credit scholarships were developed, he said, because some states have constitutional prohibitions against the government directly supporting religious organizations.

An ESA system, similar to a health savings account, would fit best in North Dakota, he said, because of its flexibility.

“They can accommodate rural areas that wouldn’t have a critical mass of students to go to a traditional private school, but also accommodate the existing private schools,” he added.

Wolf made a case for school choice by saying while the government has a responsibility to support every child’s education, it doesn’t have to control the delivery of education as a result.

He compared North Dakota to West Virginia, also a rural state with a handful of medium size cities, where an ESA program was adopted three years ago.

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Based on the states’ similarities, he said it’s estimated North Dakota would have approximately 1,100 participants in an ESA program the first year, about 2,700 the second year and a little less than 5,000 the third year.

There would be net costs to the state the first two years, but by year three, Wolf said the state would get back $1.11 in savings for every dollar spent.

He also maintains his research and that of colleagues shows private school choice programs can boost high school graduation rates, thus leading to lifetime income and health benefits for those individuals and communities as a whole.

He also said studies indicate test scores of public school students go up when those public schools are pressured by the launch of a school choice program.

Two private school leaders attended Wolf’s presentation.

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“He’s got a lot of evidence to put to bed some of the fears and misconceptions, stereotypes, of why we can’t possibly do school choice,” said Mike Hagstrom, president of JPII Catholic Schools.

Bob Otterson, president of Oak Grove Lutheran School, echoed that statement.

“What I think we heard today from Dr. Wolf is there’s actual research. It’s not just a feeling about what people have,” he said.





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Dedicated locals work to keep the ‘Frost Fire’ burning at northeastern North Dakota ski resort

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Dedicated locals work to keep the ‘Frost Fire’ burning at northeastern North Dakota ski resort


WALHALLA, N.D. — Patty Gorder had to do something.

For years, she had heard her husband, Dustin, bemoan the fate of the Frost Fire ski resort, located 7 miles west of Walhalla in the northeastern corner of the state.

Although both of the Gorders are avid snowboarders, Dustin was especially passionate about Frost Fire, a 173-acre, spruce-studded property located on the west slope of the picturesque Pembina Gorge.

The Grafton, North Dakota, native had grown up in northeast North Dakota and dreamed of owning a ski resort as a kid. He had worked on the snow-making crews at resorts like Moonlight Basin in Montana, so had become a local Old Man Winter for his expertise at creating snow. Now he serves on the board of the Pembina Gorge Foundation, which acquired Frost Fire from private ownership in 2017.

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The little resort is beautiful and carries charming names like “Upper Uff Dah Trail” and “Larry and Margie’s Day Lodge.” But over the past decade, it has been hit by one costly crisis after another. A new chair lift needed to be purchased and installed. The resort still had its original snow-making equipment from when it opened in the 1970s, so it repeatedly broke down. And then, right before the 2020 ski system, Frost Fire’s general manager resigned.

“Dustin came home and he was just devastated,” Patty recalled. “He was like, ‘I don’t know what we’re going to do,’ and I’ve never seen him like this, so I was like, ‘OK, I can help you guys.’ ”

Patty was already plenty busy. She owns the Namaste Massage and Yoga Spa in Grafton, over an hour away. Even so, she spent a couple years volunteering her time as Frost Fire’s general manager, while also running the spa. (Today, her general manager role is a paid position.)

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A general manager at a small, local ski park isn’t an office job. It means filling in at the bar and grill as the cook if the chef is on vacation. It means meeting with important investors one day and cleaning toilets the next.

And the problems didn’t magically melt away when Patty took over. Flooding, staffing shortfalls and a snow-related collapse of Frost Fire’s amphitheater roof have all created black-diamond-level difficulties for Frost Fire’s management.

Yet she remains optimistic. She and the foundation continually add new revenue sources, like yoga on the deck, special events and scenic chairlift rides to view the area’s fall foliage. They were able to hire workers through H-2B Visas — a federal program that permits U.S. employers to temporarily hire non-immigrants for seasonal work if they can prove the existing labor force isn’t sufficient.

After all, the area’s natural labor pool isn’t what it was when the resort opened. Pembina County’s total population in 2020 was 6,844, down from 10,728 in 1980, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. And most locals have full-time jobs, Patty said.

“H-2B made a huge impact last winter,” she said. “We’re finally set with good employees, we have an amazing marketing team and we had a good marketing budget to steer it all out. The new (snow-making) infrastructure finally came in. We had almost 7,000 skiers come in (last season). Our Canadians started to come across, which is amazing. We had the most amazing winter. It was unbelievable.”

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In this file photo, Dustin and Patty Gorder are photographed on the new deck of the lodge at Frost Fire Park Friday, July 29, 2022 overlooking the Pembina Gorge. Patty is the general manager of the park and Dustin is the trail master.

Eric Hylden / Grand Forks Herald

Now the Foundation has hired Pace Fundraising in Fargo to helm a multimillion-dollar fundraising campaign for a new, ADA-compliant amphitheater. A developer is working with the Foundation to add three “ski-in, ski-out” cabins on the property for this winter. And Foundation President Pat Chaput sees more upgrades on the horizon, including improvements to the 9,600-square-foot main lodge.

He believes the Gorders have played a big part in Frost Fire’s renaissance. As Frost Fire’s trail master, Dustin is “a wizard,” Chaput said.

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As for Patty, “she has contacts, she’s organized,” he said. “Probably the positivity and passion and knowledge are three things that I think sums her up. She’s just a go-getter.”

The little ski slope that could

Just as the passion of the Gorders helped to revitalize Frost Fire, so did the passion of another couple ignite that frosty spark in the first place.

Grand Forks teachers Richard and Judith Johnson believed building a ski resort amid the scenic splendor of Pembina Gorge was a formula for success. The Gorge offers a vertical drop of about 350 feet, which compares with many ski areas in the Upper Midwest.

They started building Frost Fire in 1974, in the midst of a nationwide ski-resort boom. Between 1960 and 1970, 925 ski resorts were built in the United States and Canada, and a fair share of those were smaller, family-owned enterprises, according to “The White Book of Ski Areas.”

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While most resorts constructed their lodges at the base of the mountain, the Johnsons built theirs right in the middle.

“The wonderful thing about this is that we’re in the Pembina Gorge,” Judith told the Grand Forks Herald in 2010, “and we wanted to see the gorge.”

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A September 13, 2024 view of the Frost Fire Lodge, cozily identified on the Frost Fire map as “Lyle and Margie’s Day Lodge.”

Tammy Swift / The Forum

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The Johnsons poured heart and soul into the resort. Their home was located just several hundred feet up the slope from the lodge, and their son, Jay, grew up there.

Frost Fire officially opened its doors on Christmas Day in 1976. Pat Chaput remembers it well. He was a high school senior who learned to ski on Frost Fire’s slopes. “Now I’m teaching my grandkids to ski there,” said the retired farmer/banker.

Chaput worked part time at Frost Fire throughout the ’80s. So did many of his peers. “It was good winter work for folks who were farming or whatever,” he said.

In Frost Fire’s heyday, busloads of Canadians crossed the border to ski there, then ate at a local steakhouse.

Frost Fire hosted 800 to 900 skiers per day, Chaput said.

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The Johnsons built an outdoor covered amphitheater in the 1980s, and the Frost Fire Summer Theatre Company started staging summer productions like “Fiddler on the Roof.”

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A snowboarder catches some air off a jump at Frost Fire Park.

Contributed / Michael Haug Photography

But over time, Frost Fire was affected by the same factors that have hit ski resorts — especially smaller, mom-and-pop operations — nationwide. Baby boomers who frequented the slopes in the 1960s and ‘70s visited the slopes less often.

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“Hundred-dollar tickets, transportation difficulties, shifting leisure pursuits, and a changing climate are often cited as key factors” behind the nationwide drop of interest in the sport, the National Forest Foundation website reported.

Richard passed away in 2015. Two years later, Judith sold Frost Fire for $1.67 million to the Pembina Gorge Foundation, a nonprofit that was officially incorporated to preserve the Walhalla attraction and develop it into a four-season destination, according to earlier Forum News Service reports.

The foundation replaced ski equipment, took care of deferred maintenance and, when the original chair lift could no longer be safely used, installed a new chair lift for $1.3 million. A deck was added onto the front of the lodge.

By now, the snow-making infrastructure was nearly 50 years old, but Dustin and crew worked to keep it running for the first few years. In the fall of 2022, it gave up the ghost completely. “We couldn’t make snow, so we lost the whole ski season,” Chaput said.

They were able to secure a U.S. Economic Development Administration grant for $2.25 million to purchase and install a new snow infrastructure in the summer and fall of 2023.

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Snow-making and snow-grooming are an important part of maintaining a ski resort. Dustin Gorder is the trail master at Frost Fire Park in northeastern North Dakota.

Contributed / Frost Fire Park

Many people assume that a snowy spot like North Dakota shouldn’t need the man-made stuff. “But natural snow is very different from man-made snow. With natural snow, you can have a ton of snow and the next day it’s gone,” Patty said.

Man-made snow contains more water and is heavier, which creates a denser, more resilient foundation for skiing, she added.

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Mother Nature complicated matters further. In spring of 2022, flooding washed out the new downhill mountain biking trails and ski trails, causing hundreds of thousands of dollars in damage. (The system of 12 ski runs and eight mountain bike trails has since been restored by Frost Fire employees and volunteers.)

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The Pembina Gorge Foundation added downhill mountain-biking trails to expand Frost Fire Park’s revenue potential. Riders can take their bike up on the chair lift and ride downhill to sightsee and navigate a number of natural and man-made features.

Contributed / Frost Fire Park

In 2023, snowfall was so heavy that it caused the roof of the Frost Fire Park amphitheater to collapse.

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“It’s been a whole lot of setbacks, I’ll put it that way,” Chaput said.

Keeping the Frost Fire burning

Even so, the “little resort that could” keeps chugging forward.

The Frost Fire Summer Theatre company still managed to stage “Oklahoma!” last summer in the Grafton High School — and continues to offer its ENCORE Youth Arts Camp, a popular program for students grades 3-12 to practice visual and performing arts.

A new developer, Oxford Realty, is working with the foundation to build three modern cabins right on Frost Fire’s runs. The 750-square-foot cabins offer lofts, hot tubs on their decks and expansive windows overlooking the ski areas, Chaput said.

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“They’re building them, they’re managing them, they’re doing everything,” he said. “I think it’s going to be a good draw.”

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The wildflowers, rolling hills and dense tree growth are a yearround attraction at Frost Fire Park.

Contributed / Frost Fire Park

They are optimistic about what the next ski season will bring. A La Niña winter is expected, which means lots of snow (good for skiing) and lots of cold (not so good for skiing). Patty prefers to focus on the potential positives, such as the excess snow covering the mountain bike trails. This creates “stash parks,” which naturally blend the technical components of freestyle snowboarding with the flowy lines of mountain freeriding.

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“So they become like these little natural terrain parks, which is super,” Patty said. “They’re really fun to ride.”

The foundation’s goal is to grow Frost Fire to the point where it significantly sparks economic development throughout the region.

“It’s an unknown gem, and we’re trying to get the word out and expand our reach. We’re really trying to turn this area into a destination for people to come up and explore and enjoy the outdoors and recreation,” he said.

But in order to do so, community members need to continue supporting all aspects of it — including its special events or bar and grill.

The Gorders continue to work at developing tomorrow’s skiers. Patty sends special offers to local schools to encourage administrators to bring their kids for ski days. She hopes the offers, which include perks like a free ski lesson, will expose kids to skiing and snowboarding early while making them more accessible to people from every background. 

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“I know that the product we’re delivering in the winter is exceptional,” she said. “We want people to know we have a really great place, not only from the time you come into rentals and ticketing … to having your hot cocoa or sitting by the fire. You’re not just another ticket. We are excited to know that you’re going to come back and be part of the Frost Fire family.” 

Learn more about Frost Fire at

www.frostfirepark.org.





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