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North Dakota

North Dakota Legacy Fund keeps growing

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North Dakota Legacy Fund keeps growing


(Bismarck, ND)  —  The fund created to be a source of long-term funding for the state continues to grow.  

According to the Retirement and Investment Office as of March the North Dakota Legacy Fund is worth over ten-and-a-half-billion-dollars.  

The Legacy Fund was created in 2010 to provide money for the state should the energy economy falter.  

The fund received about 487-million-dollars from investments between 2021 and 2023 and received about 564-million-dollars in oil taxes between July 2023 and March 2024. 

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North Dakota

State officials monitoring oil-production spills in northwest North Dakota

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State officials monitoring oil-production spills in northwest North Dakota


(Bismarck, ND)  —  State regulators continue to monitor a pair of oil spills reported last week in northwest North Dakota.  

Sources with the North Dakota Oil and Gas Division say little under 1,250 barrels of oil were released due to overflow near Johnson’s Corner in McKenzie County on Tuesday.  

Contents of the spill reportedly were recovered.  

Sometime later, 300 barrels of water tainted during oil and gas-extraction efforts also were released.  

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Authorities say that spill was cleaned up sometime later.  

State inspectors continue to monitor both sites.



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New interstate would cut through North Dakota

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New interstate would cut through North Dakota


(Bismarck, ND)  —  Plans for a new interstate will bring the highway through the middle of North Dakota.  

There’s no timetable for the construction of the proposed I-27 which would run from Texas to Canada.  

Funds were allotted for the project by Congress in 2022.  

Congressman Kelly Armstrong says giving farmers and energy producers more options to get their products to market will save on transportation costs.  

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The story of North Dakota's youngest 'vagrants' in 1923

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The story of North Dakota's youngest 'vagrants' in 1923


Stutsman County officials faced an unusual challenge with some young vagrants wandering the area in 1923.

The problem started on a Sunday when residents of the Windsor area brought two boys to Jamestown. The boys, ages 11 and 8, were found in the area and claimed they had been traveling alone for a “fortnight,” according to newspaper reports.

A fortnight is two weeks, in case you are not familiar with the time reference.

The children said they had been sleeping in hay and straw stacks in the fields and eating food begged at farmhouses along their route or snitched from vegetable garden plots.

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Officials brought them to juvenile court, where Judge Coffey asked them how they had come to be traveling on their own.

According to the boys, they were traveling with their parents and five siblings by wagon across North Dakota headed toward Dickinson. Somewhere along the way, they had grown tired and stopped for a little nap. When they awoke, the wagon and their family were nowhere to be seen.

I suppose a family of seven children is difficult to keep track of, but it is no excuse to lose two of them along the way.

The children claimed they had tried to track the wagon but were never able to gain sight of their family.

According to newspaper articles, the children were placed under the Stutsman County sheriff’s authority while officials made attempts to locate their parents.

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The newspaper coverage referred to the children as “North Dakota’s youngest vagrants” but also included some skepticism about their story. The article used the term “they said” often and presented no other information about the story.

It appears there were no follow-up articles about the children in any of the regional newspapers.

They may have been runaways, or they might have gotten lost by inattentive parents on a wagon trip across North Dakota

No matter how they came to be traveling along across North Dakota, they managed to spend a fortnight living off the land and surviving.

Author Keith Norman can be reached at

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www.KeithNormanBooks.com





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