North Dakota
Hospice of the Red River Valley set to begin construction on North Dakota’s first hospice house
FARGO — After almost 20 years of labor, Hospice of the Crimson River Valley will quickly start building on North Dakota’s first hospice home.
It’s been a long time price of labor, however Hospice of the Crimson River Valley Government Director Tracee Capron instructed The Discussion board Friday, Could 20, that HRRV’s board, donors and employees got here to the conclusion that the time was proper to carry the imaginative and prescient to life. A groundbreaking ceremony for the hospice home will happen Thursday, Could 26, at 3800 56th Ave. S. in Fargo.
The hospice home, Capron defined, is a spot for households to collect with hospice sufferers in a tranquil, snug setting. Basically a “hospital in disguise,” the hospice home serves as a spot the place household and family members can collect in a spot that seems like residence reasonably than a sterile hospital atmosphere. “You’re taking a whole lot of the medical issues of a hospital and disguising them into a house,” Capron stated.
Normally, sufferers will be capable of occupy one of many hospice home’s 18 rooms for 5 days and 5 nights to obtain finish of life care. Capron described the hospice home as a “stepping stone” which permits sufferers to transition from hospital care again to wherever they name residence. The hospice home may also be used when care merely can’t be managed in a house atmosphere.
Whereas some sufferers might finally move away within the hospice home, for others it affords an opportunity to get their signs beneath management and stabilized to the purpose that they could return residence safely to reside out their last days. For individuals who qualify, a keep within the hospice home will come at no extra value due to insurance coverage or Medicare advantages.
Hospice of the Crimson River Valley has been contemplating making a hospice home for almost 20 years.
The explanation planning for the hospice home, which might be totally donor-funded, took so lengthy is as a result of Hospice of the Crimson River Valley needed to do it proper. That meant strengthening the nonprofit’s infrastructure and monetary basis. “We needed to make it possible for it’s sustainable lengthy into the longer term,” Capron stated.
The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated the timeline as effectively, Capron defined.
In the course of the peak of the pandemic, many sufferers needed to die alone with out having their family members by their facet. Had the hospice home existed then, that ache might have been prevented. “No person would have needed to die alone,” Capron stated.
Visitation restrictions throughout the pandemic minimize off the connection between sufferers and households. On the hospice home, this might have been prevented as a result of every room has non-public entry and direct entry to the outside. “Not having, specifically throughout COVID, entry to the individual that you’re keen on or your baby or your partner shouldn’t be acceptable,” Capron commented.
These difficulties introduced on by the pandemic solely solidified Hospice of the Crimson River Valley’s want to construct the hospice home, even when that has meant coping with building complications. “COVID completely pushed it,” Capron stated. “That was a problem, however the want has grown higher.”
For Capron, bringing a hospice home to North Dakota is greater than only a service to the neighborhood, it’s additionally a deeply private endeavor.
Capron beforehand labored in Ohio because the vp of care improvements at Group Hospice. Whereas there, she performed a task in opening a hospice home for Group Hospice. Years later, her household utilized that exact same hospice home when her son entered hospice care.
A veteran of hospice care, Capron knew precisely what to do as soon as she discovered of her son’s outlook. “You get the information that you’ve weeks left of your life,” she stated. “What do you do? You’ll be able to’t see your loved ones. Your loved ones can’t be there. What does that seem like?”
Her subsequent name was to the hospice home. Her household was arrange in a cushty, tasteful atmosphere the place household might simply be household. “I’m so grateful and grateful that I had that as a result of he had kids and his kids might have help. We might have help, however we may very well be there as household,” Capron recalled. “I may very well be his mother. I didn’t have to be a caregiver. His medical wants had been met in a ravishing atmosphere the place the youngsters felt snug and protected, not sterile.”
Capron is a believer that hospice care is about dwelling and making recollections regardless of a unfavorable medical outlook. It’s why when somebody requested her what the best second was throughout her son’s hospice therapy, she replied by saying each final certainly one of them. “That’s what you’ve got in a hospice home. You get to create these moments simply as a household. You don’t need to be the caregiver,” she stated.
Capron saved coming again to the phrase coronary heart when describing the hospice home.
The overlapping arms in Hospice of the Crimson River Valley’s emblem kind a coronary heart. Lower-out hearts adorn the home windows of Capron’s workplace. A mosaic of employee-painted hearts greets guests close to the reception desk.
The guts, Capron stated, additionally represents the Fargo-Moorhead neighborhood. “They assist different individuals, they care tremendously for his or her neighbors, they step as much as the plate for these in want,” she remarked.
That continued help is what’s lastly making the hospice home a actuality. Capron anticipated building would conclude on the finish of 2023 or the start of 2024.
As soon as it’s open, the hospice home can have 18 beds. Capron estimates the power might deal with 1,205 sufferers per yr, plus their households, who’ve entry to extra bereavement and grief assets.
In line with the purpose of making an at-home really feel, Capron stated the hospice home will mirror the prairies and lakes atmosphere that covers HRRV’s huge geographic footprint. Wooden options all through will provide a cabin-like really feel, whereas strolling paths, trails, an outside pond and fireplace pits will encourage sufferers and their households to benefit from the outdoor.
Inside, rooms will provide floor-to-ceiling home windows and enormous entryways so beds will be pushed exterior. Kitchen tables and chairs will give households a spot to share meals. Households may even spend the night time, with visitor rooms obtainable for gratis. Every wing will embody a shared household room and 4 seasons room, providing much more areas for households to congregate.
The “Village Row” space of the power will function a soda store for teenagers, a gaming room and a basic retailer.
For medical care, the hospice home can have a full crew of specialists, together with docs, nurses, nurse practitioners and different medical aides. “The fantastic thing about hospice is it’s an entire medical crew serving to a affected person,” Capron remarked.
Managing signs, she famous, is the simple half. What’s harder is caring for family members left behind, which is why the hospice home may also provide social staff, chaplains, grief and bereavement help, volunteers, neighborhood schooling courses and help teams.
The purpose of all of it, Capron defined, is to verify the ultimate recollections households make with their family members are optimistic. “It ought to be a ravishing, peaceable expertise,” she stated. “It may be and it ought to be.”
North Dakota
National monument proposed for North Dakota Badlands • SC Daily Gazette
A group of North Dakota tribal citizens and conservation advocates are calling on President Joe Biden to make roughly 140,000 acres of undeveloped federal land in western North Dakota a national monument.
The proposed Maah Daah Hey National Monument would preserve land recognized as sacred by members of the Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara Nation and other Native cultures, advocates said during a Friday press conference at the North Dakota Heritage Center and State Museum.
“Maah Daah Hey” means “grandfather, long-lasting” in the Mandan language.
With its close proximity to President Theodore Roosevelt National Park, the area is popularly remembered for its ties to the former president and cowboy culture.
The country should honor Native historical and cultural ties to the land as well, said Michael Barthelemy, director of Native Studies at Nueta, Hidatsa, Sahnish College in New Town.
“What we’re proposing, as part of this national monument, is a reorientation around that narrative,” Barthelemy said. “When you look at the national parks and you look at the state parks, oftentimes there’s a singular perspective — as Indigenous people, we kind of play background characters.”
The monument would include 11 different plots of land along the Maah Daah Hey Trail between the north and south units of Theodore Roosevelt National Park.
Badlands Conservation Alliance Executive Director Shannon Straight likened the proposal to “stringing together the pearls of the Badlands.”
The tribal councils of the Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara Nation, the Spirit Lake Nation and the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe have passed resolutions supporting the creation of the monument.
“It is important that the Indigenous history of the North Dakota Badlands is formally recognized,” state Rep. Lisa Finley-DeVille, D-Mandaree, said during the presentation. “If created, the Maah Daah Hey National Monument would also allow Indigenous people to reconnect to our ancestral lands.”
The land is managed by the United States Forest Service. Turning the 11 plots into a national monument would protect them from future development, according to the group’s proposal.
The land is surrounded by oil and gas development, maps included in the proposal show.
In addition to being an area of significant cultural heritage for Native tribes, it’s also home to sensitive ecosystems, unique geological features and fossil sites, the proposal indicates.
Dakota Resource Council Executive Director Scott Skokos said Friday the group has visited Washington, D.C., twice so far to speak with President Biden’s administration — including the U.S. Forest Service, Department of the Interior, United States Department of Agriculture — about the proposed monument.
“The reception has been pretty good,” Skokos said.
He said the group hopes to see action from Biden on the monument before he leaves office in January, but is also open to working with President-elect Donald Trump’s administration on the project.
“We believe this is a good idea, regardless of who’s president,” Skokos said.
Advocates said the designation would not impact recreational access to the land, and that cattle grazing would still be permitted.
In a statement to the North Dakota Monitor, U.S. Sen. Kevin Cramer, R-N.D., called the proposal “premature at best.” He said he was not convinced the proposal had sufficient local support from North Dakota residents and worried the project would “lock away land as conservation.”
“Any proposal should have extensive review as well as strong support from local communities and the stakeholders who actually use the land,” he said.
When asked for comment, the North Dakota governor’s office provided this statement from Gov. Doug Burgum, who Trump has chosen as the next Department of Interior secretary: “North Dakota is proof that we can protect our precious parks, cultural heritage and natural resources AND responsibly and sustainably develop our vast energy resources.”
To learn more about the proposal, visit protectmdh.com. The website also includes a petition.
Presidents can designate federal land as national monuments under the Antiquities Act of 1906. The first land to receive this status was Devils Tower in Wyoming, which Roosevelt proclaimed a national monument that same year.
Should Maah Daah Hey become a national monument, it’d be the first of its kind in North Dakota.
Like the SC Daily Gazette, North Dakota Monitor is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. North Dakota Monitor maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Amy Dalrymple for questions: [email protected]. Follow North Dakota Monitor on Facebook and X.
North Dakota
National monument proposed for North Dakota Badlands, with tribes’ support
A coalition of conservation groups and Native American tribal citizens on Friday called on President Joe Biden to designate nearly 140,000 acres of rugged, scenic Badlands as North Dakota’s first national monument, a proposal several tribal nations say would preserve the area’s indigenous and cultural heritage.
The proposed Maah Daah Hey National Monument would encompass 11 noncontiguous, newly designated units totaling 139,729 acres (56,546 hectares) in the Little Missouri National Grassland. The proposed units would hug the popular recreation trail of the same name and neighbor Theodore Roosevelt National Park, named for the 26th president who ranched and roamed in the Badlands as a young man in the 1880s.
“When you tell the story of landscape, you have to tell the story of people,” said Michael Barthelemy, an enrolled member of the Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara Nation and director of Native American studies at Nueta Hidatsa Sahnish College. “You have to tell the story of the people that first inhabited those places and the symbiotic relationship between the people and the landscape, how the people worked to shape the land and how the land worked to shape the people.”
The U.S. Forest Service would manage the proposed monument. The National Park Service oversees many national monuments, which are similar to national parks and usually designated by the president to protect the landscape’s features.
MPR News helps you turn down the noise and build shared understanding. Turn up your support for this public resource and keep trusted journalism accessible to all.
Supporters have traveled twice to Washington to meet with White House, Interior Department, Forest Service and Department of Agriculture officials. But the effort faces an uphill battle with less than two months remaining in Biden’s term and potential headwinds in President-elect Donald Trump’s incoming administration.
If unsuccessful, the group would turn to the Trump administration “because we believe this is a good idea regardless of who’s president,” Dakota Resource Council Executive Director Scott Skokos said.
Dozens if not hundreds of oil and natural gas wells dot the landscape where the proposed monument would span, according to the supporters’ map. But the proposed units have no oil and gas leases, private inholdings or surface occupancy, and no grazing leases would be removed, said North Dakota Wildlife Federation Executive Director John Bradley.
The proposal is supported by the MHA Nation, the Spirit Lake Tribe and the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe through council resolutions.
If created, the monument would help tribal citizens stay connected to their identity, said Democratic state Rep. Lisa Finley-DeVille, an MHA Nation enrolled member.
North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum is Trump’s pick to lead the Interior Department, which oversees the National Park Service. In a written statement, Burgum said: “North Dakota is proof that we can protect our precious parks, cultural heritage and natural resources AND responsibly develop our vast energy resources.”
North Dakota Sen. John Hoeven’s office said Friday was the first they had heard of the proposal, “but any effort that would make it harder for ranchers to operate and that could restrict multiple use, including energy development, is going to raise concerns with Senator Hoeven.”
North Dakota
Two people hospitalized following domestic assault and shooting in Fargo, suspect dead
FARGO — Two people were injured in a separate domestic aggravated assault and shooting Saturday, Nov. 23, and the suspect is dead from what appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound, the Fargo Police Department said.
Fargo police were dispatched at 2:19 a.m. to a report of a domestic aggravated assault and shooting in the 5500 block of 36th Avenue South, a police department news release said.
When officers arrived, they learned the suspect had committed aggravated assault on a victim, chased that person into an occupied neighboring townhouse and fired shots into the unit.
Another person inside the townhouse was struck by gunfire, police said. Both victims were taken to a local hospital for treatment of non-life threatening injuries.
Officers found the suspect’s vehicle parked in the 800 block of 34th Street North by using a FLOCK camera system to identify a possible route of travel from the crime scene, the release said.
Police also used Red River Valley SWAT’s armored Bearcat vehicle to get close to the suspect’s vehicle to make contact with the driver, who was not responding to officers’ verbal commands to come out of the vehicle.
The regional drone team flew a drone to get a closer look inside the suspect’s vehicle. Officers found the suspect was dead from what appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound, the release said.
This investigation is still active and ongoing. No names were released by police on Saturday morning.
Anyone with information about this incident is asked to call Red River Regional Dispatch at 701-451-7660 and request to speak with a shift commander. Anonymous tips can be submitted by texting keyword FARGOPD and the tip to 847411.
-
Business1 week ago
Column: Molly White's message for journalists going freelance — be ready for the pitfalls
-
Science6 days ago
Trump nominates Dr. Oz to head Medicare and Medicaid and help take on 'illness industrial complex'
-
Politics1 week ago
Trump taps FCC member Brendan Carr to lead agency: 'Warrior for Free Speech'
-
Technology7 days ago
Inside Elon Musk’s messy breakup with OpenAI
-
Lifestyle1 week ago
Some in the U.S. farm industry are alarmed by Trump's embrace of RFK Jr. and tariffs
-
World1 week ago
Protesters in Slovakia rally against Robert Fico’s populist government
-
Health2 days ago
Holiday gatherings can lead to stress eating: Try these 5 tips to control it
-
News1 week ago
They disagree about a lot, but these singers figure out how to stay in harmony