North Dakota
North Dakota lawmakers push to extend term limits 3 years after voters approved them
BISMARCK — Three attempts to extend lifetime term limits for state lawmakers have been introduced in the North Dakota Legislature just three years after voters passed a measure to establish them.
Voters approved the citizen-initiated measure in 2022
to place an eight-year term limit on state lawmakers in the North Dakota Constitution, including a section that prohibits any member of the Legislative Assembly from proposing changes to the rule.
The only way to change
term limits in the state Constitution
is through another citizen-initiated measure.
House Concurrent Resolution 3034
looks to remove the prohibition on lawmakers proposing constitutional changes related to term limits and would allow a senator or representative to serve for 12 cumulative years, or three terms. A legislator could return to the same chamber and serve another 12 years after a four-year break.
If passed, changes brought by the legislation would have to be approved by voters.
HCR 3034 also places 12-year term limits on state agency leaders — like the attorney general and secretary of state — while capping the governor and lieutenant governors’ terms at eight years.
Senate Concurrent Resolution 4028
lists the same term limits as HCR 3034 but includes a provision allowing some sections to be overruled if challenged in court without eliminating the entirety of the resolution.
Senate Concurrent Resolution 4008
would limit legislators to serving for 12 years, or three complete terms, but does not include limits for other state leaders.
In a hearing for SCR 4008, members of the Senate State and Local Government Committee discussed how the resolution could be vulnerable to legal challenges since it seeks to make constitutional changes to term limits.
Committee chair Sen. Kristin Roers, R-Fargo, asked Eric Winters, a U.S. Term Limits Foundation attorney who opposed the resolution, if he’d ever had clients “purposely do things to get things into the courts.”
Contributed
“You don’t recognize that this might be one of those (instances)?” Roers said before the committee endorsed the legislation.
Sponsor Rep. Jim Kasper, R-Fargo, said the loss of “institutional knowledge” to term limits is detrimental to the “intense” lawmaking process.
“The average person in North Dakota does not understand how hard it is to be a good legislator and how much legislators try to do the right thing,” he said.

Contributed
Nearly half of the legislators currently serving will hit their term limit by 2028,
a Legislative Council analysis of term limit impacts found.
The other half will hit their limit by 2030.
Kasper said term limits place more work on the Legislative Council, the office that facilitates the lawmaking process. It has the second-lowest number of permanent legislative staffers in the country compared to similar entities in other states.
Term limit proponents maintain lawmakers spending less time in office makes room for more perspectives while also preventing people from becoming career politicians in a state with a citizen-led Legislature.

Contributed
Sen. Jeff Magrum, R-Hazelton, said term limits inspire new ideas and collaboration between lawmakers, whereas before “it was almost as if they didn’t want to share the knowledge with fears of losing their position,” he said.
“If things look like they’re going backwards, then go get the signatures,” Magrum added. “Get it on the ballot and make your case to the people.”
SCR 4028 has a hearing scheduled for Thursday, March 6, at 1 p.m. in the Senate State and Local Government Committee. The hearing for HCR 3034 will be at 10 a.m. Friday in the House Government and Veterans Affairs Committee. A vote on SCR 4008 has not been scheduled.
North Dakota
Morton County did not violate North Dakota’s open records law when the County Auditor, within a reasonable time, informed the requester that the requested records were not in the County’s possession.. – North Dakota Attorney General
27 Feb Morton County did not violate North Dakota’s open records law when the County Auditor, within a reasonable time, informed the requester that the requested records were not in the County’s possession..
in Opinions
February 27, 2026
Media Contact: Suzie Weigel, 701.328.2210
BISMARCK, ND – Karen Jordan requested an opinion from this office under N.D.C.C. § 44-04-21.1 asking whether Morton County violated N.D.C.C. § 44-04-18 by failing or refusing to provide records.
Conclusion: It is my opinion that Morton County’s response was in compliance with N.D.C.C. § 44-04-18.
Link to opinion 2026-O-06
###
North Dakota
ND Supreme Court Justice Daniel Crothers retiring, stepping onto new path
BISMARCK, N.D. (KFYR) – The North Dakota Court System threw a reception for a retiring member of the state Supreme Court.
Justice Daniel Cothers is leaving after serving for more than 20 years.
He plans to step down on Feb. 28.
Before Crothers became a judge, he served as a lawyer and as president of the State Bar Association of North Dakota.
Mark Friese is set to replace Crothers starting March 9.
“He knows what is important and what to keep focused on. Justice Friese will be an exceptional replacement to me on the bench,” said Crothers.
Crothers plans to keep up on teaching gigs and spend time at his family’s farm as he steps into retirement.
Copyright 2026 KFYR. All rights reserved.
North Dakota
North Dakota ambulance providers losing money on every run, according to survey
By: Michael Achterling
FARGO (North Dakota Monitor) – North Dakota ambulance service providers lost nearly $500 on average for every patient transported to a medical facility last year, according to a survey.
The recent survey of three dozen providers in the state, conducted by PWW Advisory Group, was the result of a study created by House Bill 1322 passed during the 2025 legislative session. The group presented the results to the Legislature’s interim Emergency Response Services Committee on Wednesday.
The average revenue generated from an ambulance transport was about $1,100 during 2025, but the expenses were nearly $1,600, said Matt Zavadsky, an EMS and mobile health care consultant with PWW, based in Pennsylvania.
“They are losing money every time they respond to a call,” Zavadsky said during the meeting. “That financial loss has to be made up, typically, by local tax subsidies, fundraisers, bake sales, or all too often, service reductions to try and match expenses with the revenue they can generate.”
He said the problem cannot be fixed by billing reform alone because the revenue generated isn’t enough to fund the cost of readiness, such as personnel, equipment and supplies, among other items.
The survey highlighted 74% of ambulance provider expenses went to personnel costs, but equipment costs have also increased in recent years.
Zavadsky said survey respondents plan to invest about $12.9 million into vehicle and equipment purchases over the next five years, averaging to about $358,000 per provider. However, the cost of a new ambulance has risen to between $275,000 to $480,000 per vehicle. Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, a new ambulance could cost up to $250,000, he said.
There are more than 100 ambulance service providers in North Dakota. The 36 survey respondents represented a diverse group of providers from city and county services to district-owned, hospital-based and private providers, he said. The average patient transport distance is 34 miles, according to the survey.
Zavadsky said the survey respondents reported 53% of their total revenue was generated from fees for service with the remaining 47% coming from local tax subsidies, state grants and other fundraising.
“What you guys are experiencing in North Dakota and what is happening in the local communities … is not the fault of the local communities, not the fault of the state, this is just our new normal,” Zavadsky said.
Rep. Todd Porter, R-Mandan, owner of Metro-Area Ambulance Service which serves Morton and Burleigh counties, said Medicare patients reimburse ambulance providers at a much lower rate than private insurance and Medicaid patients. He added Medicare patients make up about 60% of the call volume in the Bismarck-Mandan area.
“If we’re being underpaid for 60% of our call volume, then we have to make it up some place,” Porter said.
He said some providers can make up that difference in reimbursement with tax dollars, but not all providers have that option.
“We do other contracted work for nursing homes, hospitals, funeral homes in order to make up that difference,” Porter said. “This is a federal government problem. This is a CMS (Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services) problem that we’ve known about for years.”
Porter also said ambulance services are not reimbursed for responding to a call with a Medicare patient that doesn’t require a transport to a hospital. According to the survey, about 17% of all ambulance calls don’t require transport to a medical facility.
The survey also showed about 2,300 of the nearly 33,600 patient transports billed last year ended up in collections after being more than 90 days delinquent, totalling $2.7 million, Zavadsky said. The average total of a claim sent to collections was about $1,100.
Zavadsky estimated the total of unpaid claims for more than 100 providers across North Dakota was about $5.8 million in 2025. Some providers don’t have procedures to pursue delinquent billing in collections, he said.
Rep. Jim Grueneich, R-Ellendale, chair of the committee, said the committee will take a deeper look at the data presented on Wednesday and may have recommendations, and possible draft legislation, to address the issue in the 2027 legislative session.
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