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First Down Friday: Three top-five matchups in North Dakota, and another statement win for Horace

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First Down Friday: Three top-five matchups in North Dakota, and another statement win for Horace


DAVIES DOMINATES SECOND HALF, PULLS AWAY FROM SOUTH
FARGO — Grant Tschosik tallied two touchdowns and an interception to help Fargo Davies hold off Fargo South 41-17 in cross-class action. Down 21-10 at the half, South opened the third quarter with a touchdown drive to cut the lead to four. It was all Davies after that, though. Gage Brewer hit Malachi Werremeyer in the fourth quarter to make it 33-17 Eagles.

Fargo South faces another Class AAA school next week, hosting Bismarck St. Mary’s. Davies hosts the 25th Street Showdown against Shanley. You can watch that game live on

WDAY+

.

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FERGUS FALLS CELEBRATES HOMECOMING WITH WIN OVER PERHAM
FERGUS FALLS — Homecoming for Fergus Falls brought a packed house as the Otters welcomed the Yellowjackets from Perham. Fergus Falls came out firing in the first with Griffin Babolian taking an inside hand-off 25-yards for a touchdown. Babolian had two scores on the ground. In the third quarter leading by 21, Otters Quarterback Henry Bethel scrambles 41-yards for a touchdown to go up by four scores.

Perham battled back in the second half with two late touchdowns including an 80-yard pitch and catch with Blaiz Schmidt connecting with Gage Aanenson to find the endzone.

Fergus Falls fended off the Yellowjacket comeback with a 28-14 final score. Fergus Falls, now 2-3, are back home next week against Little Falls. Perham, also 2-3, head to their home turf with a matchup against Thief River Falls.

#3 SHEYENNE UPSETS #2 MINOT AT HOME
A top-5 matchup in Class 3-A in West Fargo. #3 West Fargo Sheyenne and #2 Minot. Magicians struck first with a 35-yard field goal just passing the crossbar. Later in the first, Mustangs Quarterback Caden Olson heaved a deep ball to Caleb Duerr for a 42-yard touchdown. Sheyenne comes up with the win 28-20.

Next week, the Mustangs head across town to take on rival West Fargo. Minot heads to Bismarck next week.

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SHANLEY’S OFFENSE FLEXES MUSCLES IN 49-POINT WIN
FARGO — Shanley football improved to 6-0 with a 69-20 win over Bismarck Legacy. Landon Meier threw three straight touchdown passes to build a 21-0 lead in the first quarter for the Deacons. Meier heaved one 60 yards to Fisher Hannesson to make it 14-0. The Deacon’s 69 points are the most they have scored all season.

Shanley visits Fargo Davies in the 25th Street Showdown next week. Watch it live on

WDAY+

.

MOORHEAD SPLITS HOMESTAND WITH 30 POINT WIN OVER ST. CLOUD TECH
MOORHEAD — A rematch from last year’s season opener, Moorhead hosting St. Cloud Tech. On the opening drive for the spuds, Taye Reich ran it up the middle while making Tigers miss for a 9-yard gain and a first down. It would only take a couple of plays for the Spuds to strike, Reich took it once again up the gut, this time it was a 8-yard touchdown run. Moorhead on the board first.

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After a couple of punts, St. Cloud found itself in the red zone, Noah Theis called his own number and snuck it in to tie the game. The Spuds would explode in the 2nd half scoring 27 points en route to a 48-13 win. Moorhead goes on the road to face Sartell next week.

NORTH CONTINUES ITS WINNING WAYS AGAINST RED RIVER
GRAND FORKS — The North Spartans traveled to Cushman Field for a top-five Class 2-A match-up against Red River. North only has one loss to the Riders since 2015, and that loss came last season. Starting in the first quarter, North was already up by a score. Spartan Peder Haugo fumbled the ball, and Red River recovered to head back the other way.

It only took three downs to deliver. Pearce Parks hit Logan Bjerke, and he took it all the way to the end zone for six. The extra point was blocked, 7-6 North. The Spartans were quick to respond. Off the kick return, Samuel Adams-Vandel broke free and took it all the way home for the touchdown. North would stay ahead and stay perfect 38-20.

North will continue their road trip next Friday to play Devils Lake at 6 p.m. Red River will travel south to play Horace next Friday at 6 p.m.

WEST FARGO HOLDS OFF ST. MARY’S 
WEST FARGO — A pair of one-win teams battle in West Fargo as the Packers welcome St. Mary’s for just the 7th time ever. The Packers packed the first punch as Leyton Hofland scored from 4-yards out. Two-point conversion was good putting the Packers up 8-0.

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On the next drive, an incomplete pass slipped out of the hands of Keyton Mcgregor and right into the hands of St. Mary’s Sam Fedorchak who took it to the house for a pick-six. West Fargo would hold on with a 34-27 final.

West Fargo stays at home next week against Sheyenne. St. Mary’s heads back to the metro with a matchup against Fargo South.

HORACE STUNS CENTRAL, WINS THIRD GAME
HORACE — The Horace Hawks picked up their third-ever varsity win and third win of the season with a 22-15 win over Central. Caden Johansen got the Knights on the board first with a 10-yard touchdown run. Horace answered late in the first quarter with a goal-line touchdown pass from Taylor Stefonowicz to Mason Johnson. Horace outscored Central 8-0 in the second half to hold on for the win.

Horace stays at home for another Grand Forks team, Red River next week. Central hosts Wahpeton Friday.

DICKINSON PUTS AN END TO JAMESTOWN’S WIN STREAK
DICKINSON — The Blue Jays were on the road out West this week for a top-five class 2-A match-up against the Midgets. The Midgets were down a score when Stephen Zawodny let it fly to Kaden Krieg for the touchdown to tie the game. Jamestown was quick to answer back. Ryan Kallenbach connected with Tyson Jorrison for the score to give the Blue Jays the edge.

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Dickinson didn’t lose hope. Braden Meschke barely broke the plane for the touchdown to knot the game, and they eventually would take the game by five points with a 29-24 final.

Dickinson will stay at home next Friday to host Turtle Mountain Community at 8 p.m. Next Friday, Jamestown will return home to play Valley City at 7 p.m. Watch that game on WDAY Xtra or stream on

WDAY+.

BARNESVILLE DROPS 52 IN THE FIRST HALF TO GET 17TH STRAIGHT WIN
BARNESVILLE — The Trojans quest for back-to-back perfect seasons continued this week with Warroad coming to town. With four minutes left in the second quarter and the running clock rule already in effect, there was a rare throw by Barnesville’s Zachary Bredman to Peyton Amundson who didn’t go down easy throwing stiff arms and when it was all said and done it was a 24-yard gain.

Next play, it was a double handoff to Ethan Larson who went untouched into the endzone to put Barnesville up 52-0 at halftime. No more scoring happened and The Trojans get the win, and will play Park Rapids Area next week.

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THOMPSON WINS THREE STRAIGHT, NORTHERN CASS CAN’T FIND FIRST WIN 
THOMPSON — Region one and two went head to head tonight. Thompson hosted Northern Cass, who was looking for its first win of the season. In the second quarter, tied at six apiece, the Jaguars can’t handle the snap, and the Tommies are able to jump on it first. It was a Thompson first down at the ten.

The Tommies were able to turn the fumble into a touchdown. Drew Overby made a quick pass to Josh Juve, who took it 10 yards to the end zone. Thompson wins three straight with the 29-20 win.

Northern Cass will continue its pursuit for its first win of the season next Friday at Oak Grove at 7 p.m. Thompson will host Langdon Area/Edmore/Munich next Friday at 7 p.m.

HILLSBORO/CENTRAL VALLEY DROPS THREE STRAIGHT, ELLENDALE/EDGELEY/KULM BUILDS A WIN STREAK
HILLSBORO — After being shut out the past two weeks, H/CV hoped they could turn things around against the Thunder. The Burros were down 21-0 in the third quarter. While trying to create some offense, Tyson Leshuk got sacked by Benet Giesler. H/CV was still able to collect the first down, eventually getting inside the red zone. Within ten, Leshuk dished it to Landon Olson, who broke through the tackles for the touchdown. That would be as close as they would get, falling to the Thunder 28-7.

E/E/K will return home to play Central Cass next Friday at 7 p.m. H/CV will host Grafton next Friday. Kick off is at 6 p.m.

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North Dakota

Pressures could lead to more closures at ND nursing homes

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Pressures could lead to more closures at ND nursing homes


BISMARCK — Federal requirements for nursing homes to have a registered nurse on duty 24 hours each day are expected to add pressure to an already challenging workforce situation for the 75 rural and urban facilities across the state.

A majority will have a hard time meeting the 24/7 requirement for RNs, according to the North Dakota Long Term Care Association.

Nikki Wegner, director of the NDLTCA, said most facilities across the state are currently well-staffed except for that RN requirement.

Cost pressures have already led to six facilities closing in the past 35 months, she said.

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“We’ve never had that before in our history, and the majority of them were because of staffing issues,” Wegner said.

Urban facilities have until May 2026 to comply with the federal requirements, while those in rural areas have until May 2027.

Rules have also changed, with areas like Dickinson, Devils Lake, Jamestown, Valley City and Williston no longer considered rural, meaning they’ll need to meet requirements sooner.

“I worry about how many facilities might have to close because they can’t meet the standards,” said Reier Thompson, president and CEO of Missouri Slope in Bismarck, which has long-term care for over 250 residents.

“What’s that going to do to access to care, especially in the more rural area, where people are traveling 100 miles from their hometown to a nursing facility, and maybe a spouse is commuting that a couple times a week?” he said. “It’s going to be hard, especially in winter.”

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Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, staffing full-time nurses and nursing assistants at long-term care facilities became a huge challenge. Many turned to short-term contract nurses, and costs soared.

The situation has begun to turn around for Jill Foertsch, administrator at St. Gerard’s Community of Care in Hankinson. St. Gerard’s has added new certified nursing assistants while reducing the use of contract nurses from eight just a short time ago to two.

“We have improved significantly,” Foertsch said.

That being said, finding enough RNs to meet the new requirement is going to be tough.

“We are not able to meet the 24/7 staffing mandate,” she said.

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The situation may mirror what happened during the pandemic, but contract RNs are in short supply and high priced, she said.

The one caveat is this time there’s no funding on the horizon.

“We will not be getting any help from the government like we did during COVID, and that’ll be what would most likely help us to shut down, because it’s just not sustainable that way,” Foertsch said.

The NDLTCA estimates contract nurses accounted for around $73 million of statewide nursing costs in 2023, up from around $24 million in 2020.

Staffing at nursing homes in the state is also now around 1,200 workers below what it was in early 2020 numbers, according to the NDLTCA.

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The NDLTCA estimated that only 35% of urban facilities and only 14% of rural facilities would currently meet the future 24/7 RN staffing requirement.

Right now, most facilities rely on a mix of RNs, physician’s assistants, nurse practitioners or physicians through phone or telehealth if an RN isn’t on duty beyond the normal daytime shift. Finding RNs to fill overnight and other shifts is going to be difficult.

No funding is earmarked for those shortfalls, the numbers of RNs are just not available, and no pipeline is in the works to increase the availability of RNs.

“We’re still in a workforce crisis, we still rely on a lot of contract nurses, and it’s expensive, and then you add the mandate on there to increase even more,” Wegner said, adding that the state needs at least 80 if not more RNs to fulfill the mandates.

Several states have already met stringent requirements for waivers from the rule, but Wegner isn’t hopeful North Dakota will qualify.

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Blake Kragnes, administrator at the 85-bed Knife River Care Center in Beulah, said his nursing home has been able to keep staffing at a good level, but the mandate of the 24/7 requirement for RNs is going to be tough to meet.

“When you look at the number of college grads graduating with a nursing and RN degree, it’s down, and that makes it complicated to meet a mandate that comes with no funding,” he said.

Kragnes is looking at how to increase recruitment and retention by connecting with area high schools to start people in a health care career that may lead them to full-time registered nursing status.

Foreign nurse visa freeze

One avenue most facilities are trying to use is immigration, but the U.S. State Department recently froze EB-3 visas used by foreign nurses for the rest of the fiscal year, leaving around 10,000 foreign nurses in limbo until resolved.

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A cap of 40,000 visas for foreign nurses has been in place since 1990, and legislation to increase the cap stalled in the U.S. Congress after its introduction in November 2023.

According to the Migration Policy Institute, international nurses account for around 16% of the nursing workforce in the country.

National health care nonprofit KFF, formerly known as The Kaiser Family Foundation, estimates that 1 in 6 of the 3.2 million RNs in the U.S. is an immigrant nurse.

Amy Kreidt, administrator of St. Luke’s Home in Dickinson, which operates an 88-bed long-term care facility, echoed Foertch’s comments by saying the mandate coupled with the high cost of contract nursing could put more rural nursing homes out of business.

“Right now we’re not (in danger of closing), but if we can’t start getting nurses here, we have to keep that as an option and review,” she said.

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St. Luke’s has had success with its foreign nurses, but the visa freezes and annual caps, along with the complicated immigration process, have led to it taking up to four years to get foreign nurses, Kreidt said.

“And that’s if it goes through relatively quickly, and it seems to always have taken that long, but now, with additional delays, it will continue to take that long and longer,” she said. “The contact is only three years long and it takes over four years to get them, so the numbers don’t add up.”

LeAnn Hokanson, vice president of resident services at Missouri Slope, said besides funding to cover nursing costs, there is a major need for both immigration and on expanding nursing programs.

“The (foreign nurses) that we’ve been interviewing most recently, they’ve been waiting and waiting and waiting,” she said. “Some of them wait for 10 years to get their call to have a facility interview them. It’s all stuck in that visa process.”

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A sky view of Missouri Slope in Bismarck, the largest nursing home in the state, serving around 250 residents.

Contributed / Missouri Slope

Kreidt has previously tapped into the nursing program at Dickinson State University, but with its entire full-time nursing faculty resigning on July 10, the future of that program is uncertain.

The situation also adds further uncertainty regarding the nursing pipeline for health care facilities across the state and region.

North Dakota’s new Office of Legal Immigration is looking to pilot a cap-exempt H-1B visa program in the next several months specifically for foreign nurses, according to a study it released in late May.

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This could help increase the numbers of RNs and nurse practitioners, though hurdles exist since the H-1B immigration process is more costly and facilities need to meet eligibility requirements.

This story was originally published on NewsCoopND.org

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This story was written by one of our partner news agencies. Forum Communications Company uses content from agencies such as Reuters, Kaiser Health News, Tribune News Service and others to provide a wider range of news to our readers. Learn more about the news services FCC uses here.

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South Dakota Democratic delegates unanimously endorse Harris as presidential pick • South Dakota Searchlight

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South Dakota Democratic delegates unanimously endorse Harris as presidential pick • South Dakota Searchlight


The South Dakota delegates to the Democratic National Convention met virtually Monday night and voted unanimously to endorse Vice President Kamala Harris as their nominee in the 2024 presidential race.

South Dakota Democrats hopeful, not yet ready to endorse Harris as presidential nominee

In voting to endorse Harris, South Dakota Democrats fell in line with other state and national Democratic leaders who quickly followed the lead from President Joe Biden, who dropped out of the 2024 race via social media Sunday afternoon and endorsed Harris as his successor shortly thereafter.

Democrats in Nebraska, Maryland, Florida, New Hampshire, Alabama, North Carolina and Virginia were among the states where Democrats backed Harris as of Monday evening. 

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Harris has also picked up endorsements from key leaders at the national level. California Gov. Gavin Newsom, mentioned as a possible Democratic contender himself, endorsed Harris quickly on Sunday. Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi endorsed Harris Monday. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries had not endorsed Harris as of Monday evening, but Jeffries said earlier in the day that Harris had “excited the House Democratic Caucus and she’s exciting the country.”

Late Monday evening, the New York Times, CNN and other national media organizations reported that Harris had secured the backing of more than the 1,976 delegates needed to win the nomination in the first round of voting at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago next month. The news came by way of a poll from The Associated Press, which broke the story.

The poll listed 2,668 delegates pledged to Harris and 54 undecided as of 10 p.m. CST Monday.

The Democratic National Committee will move forward with the process to formally nominate a presidential candidate Wednesday when its Rules Committee meets in a public virtual session amid ongoing efforts to set up a virtual roll call vote ahead of the convention next month in Chicago, according to reporting from States Newsroom.

South Dakota Democrats backed Biden with around 75% of the vote in the state’s June 4 primary. In a news release, the South Dakota Democratic Party announced that its 20 voting delegates to the August convention had voted unanimously to back Harris.

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“We thank President Biden for his leadership throughout his career and for choosing Kamala Harris four years ago to be his Vice President,” said Delegate Chair Jessica Meyers. “Harris has proven that she is more than equipped to take on the Presidency and we as a delegation are looking forward to casting the official vote for her.”

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North Dakota

Tuesday is Military Appreciation Day at the ND State Fair

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Tuesday is Military Appreciation Day at the ND State Fair


MINOT, N.D. (KMOT) – This is a reminder for servicemembers and their families that the North Dakota State Fair is continuing its long-standing tradition of honoring those who serve with a special Military Appreciation Day on Tuesday.

Military members and their families can enjoy lunch from 11 a.m. until 1 p.m. at the north festival tent.

The event is sponsored by the N.D. Beef Commission, N.D. Stockmen’s Association, and N.D. CattleWomen.

They can also enjoy free carnival rides from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m., half-off unlimited ride wristbands, and $2 off go-cart rides.

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