North Dakota
North Dakota officials plead with Theodore Roosevelt National Park to keep wild horses

BISMARCK — Gov. Doug Burgum, the state’s tourism director and legislative leaders are pleading with Theodore Roosevelt Nationwide Park to work with the state to discover a method to hold the park’s in style wild horse herd.
The request, made throughout a press convention on Monday, Jan. 30, got here on the eve of the expiration of the general public remark interval in search of enter to the park’s administration plan for the horses.
The park introduced its most well-liked choice is to step by step get rid of the herd of 186 horses, which the governor and others famous roamed the park since earlier than it was created in 1947.
Burgum mentioned fewer than 200 horses are free roaming within the park’s 46,158-acre south unit, an space equal to 72 sq. miles.
“We’re speaking about 200 horses on this huge south unit,” the governor mentioned. He requested park officers to work with the state to strike a administration plan balancing the scale of the horse herd that protects the park’s surroundings.
“For many years and many years, these horses have existed peacefully within the park,” serving as an “indelible image of the untamed badlands,” Burgum mentioned.
Eliminating the horses would strike a blow not solely to park visitation but in addition to the economic system of Medora, the gateway group to the park’s south unit, and the encompassing space, he mentioned.
Burgum famous that the Bureau of Land Administration manages greater than 82,000 wild horses on western federal lands. “We all know that’s an issue,” he mentioned.
“We imagine there are alternatives aside from eliminating this small herd,” Burgum added. “We stand able to collaborate.”
Burgum famous the state has vary scientists and different consultants who’re prepared to assist the park analysis an answer, saying the park is “grossly underfunded and understaffed” relative to its mission.
The governor additionally famous that Roosevelt himself wrote about generally seeing wild horses within the Little Missouri Badlands throughout his ranching days within the open vary period of the Eighties close to Medora.
“They’ve been a part of the panorama of western North Dakota since he famously arrived right here,” Burgum mentioned.
Park officers have mentioned their mission is to honor Roosevelt’s conservation legacy, not his ranching legacy. “However we will’t and we shouldn’t separate these two,” Burgum mentioned, including Roosevelt mentioned conservation and improvement go collectively.
“Ranching is improvement and ranching is conservation,” the governor mentioned. Favoring one over the opposite “is a disservice to his (Roosevelt’s) legacy.”
Though not current on the press convention, Burgum thanked Sens. John Hoeven and Kevin Cramer, each Republicans from North Dakota, for his or her willingness to work with the Nationwide Park Service on an answer for preserving the horses and longhorns within the park.
Sara Otte Coleman, North Dakota’s tourism director, mentioned the horses are a serious vacationer attraction.
“This is among the only a few nationwide parks that does have wild horses,” she mentioned. “That units it aside,” and the horses steadily seem on lists of “must-see” points of interest. The horses are photogenic, Otte Coleman mentioned.
On the rostrum close by, a tv display screen flashed rotating pictures of the park horses.
Final yr, there have been greater than 770,000 journeys to the park, greater than half of them from non-residents, Otte Coleman mentioned. Billings County, which incorporates Medora, generated $16 million from tourism spending, she mentioned.
Rep. Mike Lefor, R-Dickinson, the Home majority chief, famous many western North Dakota legislators had been among the many sponsors of a
decision urging the park to maintain the horses
and longhorn cattle.
“We stay in that space,” he mentioned. “We all know the significance of what’s occurring right here.”
Sen. Brad Bekkedahl, R-Williston, mentioned the horses and longhorns have huge help. “That is as grassroots as you will get in North Dakota,” he mentioned.
Rep. Josh Boschee, D-Fargo, the Home minority chief, mentioned he acquired “a whole lot of emails” from folks in help of the horses, every with a narrative about seeing the herd within the park and what the horses imply to them.
Boschee requested the park for an extension of the general public remark interval however was denied.
Burgum, who despatched a
letter to Angie Richman
, the superintendent of the park, asking to collaborate on a plan to maintain the horses, urged folks to submit official feedback to the park by the deadline.
Richman, who was out of the workplace Monday, was not instantly obtainable for remark.
Till 11:59 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 31, feedback and supporting documentation may be submitted on-line by way of the park’s Planning, Atmosphere, and Public Remark web site at
https://parkplanning.nps.gov/LP
or by writing to: Superintendent, Theodore Roosevelt Nationwide Park, P.O. Field 7, Medora, N.D., 58645

North Dakota
Enrollment up nearly 4% at North Dakota public colleges, universities

BISMARCK, N.D. (Jeff Beach/North Dakota Monitor) – Fall enrollment at North Dakota University System campuses is up nearly 4%, the highest enrollment recorded since 2014.
The 11 public colleges and universities have 47,522 students, according to figures released Wednesday. The system’s record enrollment was in 2011 at 48,883.
Williston State College saw the highest percentage growth in headcount with 11%, while North Dakota State College of Science reported a 9% enrollment jump, Bismarck State College reported an 8% increase and Mayville State University reported 7% growth.
The University of North Dakota, which leads the state in enrollment, saw a 5% increase and is at an all-time high with 15,844 students.
UND President Andy Armacost said the university has seen strong growth in new students the past two years.
“We’re grateful to be able to impact a large number of students with the great programs at UND,” Armacost said.
Bismarck State College’s enrollment of 4,549 students also was a record.
“Seven straight semesters of growth show that our polytechnic mission is not only resonating but making a real difference for students and the industries we serve,” Interim President Dan Leingang said in a statement.
North Dakota State University has recorded the exact same fall headcount for the past three years at 11,952 students. NDSU showed a 3% increase in first-year students, alongside a significant rise in new international undergraduate students, according to a news release from the university.
NDSU has 95% of students enrolled in in-person programs, the highest number across the entire North Dakota University System, the release said.
NSDU President David Cook, who is in his third year on the job, appeared remotely before a North Dakota legislative committee Wednesday.
“We have stabilized enrollment at NDSU, and I think we’re creating the right foundation for where we want to be,” Cook said.
Minot State University President Steve Shirley, in a Tuesday presentation to the State Board of Higher Education, said that while headcount at the school is flat, there is a 3% increase in full-time equivalent students that he said reflects a “nice little bump” in freshman enrollment — about a 15% increase.
“We’re excited about that,” he said.
Dickinson State University was the only school to show an enrollment decline, down 3%.
Dakota College at Bottineau had 3% enrollment growth. Lake Region State College and Valley City State University each reported 1% increases.
North Dakota
Board approves Brent Sanford as new ‘commissioner’ of North Dakota University System
MINOT — The board overseeing the North Dakota University System has awarded the interim chancellor the permanent role and changed the name of that role in the process.
The State Board of Higher Education unanimously approved Brent Sanford as commissioner of the system at its meeting Tuesday, Sept. 23, in Minot.
Sanford, a former Republican lieutenant governor, was
named the interim university system leader in April,
replacing Chancellor Mark Hagerott,
who stepped down around the same time.
In August, Board Chair Kevin Black told a legislative committee meeting in Dickinson that
he favored skipping a nationwide search in favor of giving Sanford the job.
Before the vote Tuesday, Black called it a “once-in-a-generational opportunity” to appoint Sanford, whom he said can make a true difference for higher education.
“For those reasons, I think doing the right thing and putting the right person in the seat trumps the process. In this case, I think it is absolutely 100% worth it,” Black said.
Other board members praised Sanford, indicating he was an obvious choice.
“I can always recognize the guy that’s got that ‘it factor,’ and in my opinion, Brent’s got that ‘it factor,’ and I’m excited about his opportunities to come and lead this university system,” said Member Tim Mihalick.
Said Member Danita Bye, “We could have done a national search and Brent would be our top candidate.”
Black said despite changing the title to commissioner, a motion that also received unanimous approval, the role of the position does not change.
“What I think the board is really saying through this motion is that we believe it’s important to align with what the Constitution says and what Century Code says,” he said.
To reflect the change, Board Vice Chair Donald “D.J.” Campbell laid out further amendments to other leadership titles.
The chancellor will become commissioner, the vice chancellor for academic and student affairs will become deputy commissioner/chief academic and student affairs officer, and the vice chancellor for administrative affairs will become deputy commissioner and chief financial officer, he said.
Before the vote on Sanford took place, he gave a presentation to the board and answered questions from board members.
Member Patrick Sogard asked about
a perception among some in the public
of Sanford’s lack of experience in academia.
Hagerott, who had led the university system since 2015, had a doctorate degree, and other recent chancellors have had master’s or other advanced degrees.
Sanford said his experience interacting with higher education as lieutenant governor was valuable.
He added that he was truly enjoying the role as interim chancellor.
“You can probably tell I do and I find it a better fit than I thought it would be, because it’s turning out that this job is very much a government leadership, government administrator, political administrator, type job that I’m used to,” Sanford said.
Also slated to be discussed Tuesday was
consideration of a policy change stating presidential vacancies at colleges and universities may be filled without doing a search.
North Dakota
One Up for the North Dakota Teacher’s of the Year is From the Grand Forks District

Emily Dawes. (Photo provided by the North Dakota Department of Public Instruction)
(KNOX) – A literacy specialist for grades kindergarten through fifth at Lake Agassiz Elementary School in the Grand Forks District, Emily Dawes is one of four finalists for North Dakota Teacher of the Year.
“I somehow was nominated. I hope it was a reflection of me as a teacher. So than I was chosen from a committee, so a committee chose me.” Dawes told KNOX News in an interview.
Dawes was a teacher at J. Nelson Kelly Elementary School when she was named as a contender for teacher of the year.
“I was at Kelly Elementary and I was happily teaching first grade and I absolutely loved every moment of it. But this opportunity to be a literary specialist came my way,” said Dawes.
The winner will be named in ceremony on September 26th in Bismarck.
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