North Dakota
Port: North Dakota Democrats now control just 4 seats in the state Senate, and just 11 in the House
Minot, N.D. — Yearly I believe to myself that the North Dakota Democratic-NPL could not presumably do any worse within the state’s legislative races. I persuade myself that they’ve discovered all-time low. They could not presumably go any decrease.
After which they do. The North Dakota Republican Get together now controls 90% of the seats within the state Legislature.
Based mostly on the unofficial outcomes from Tuesday’s vote, the Democrats misplaced three seats within the state Senate. Incumbents Richard Marcellais (District 9), Tracy Potter (District 35), and JoNell Bakke (District 43) all misplaced their re-election bids.
The partisan energy stability in that legislative chamber earlier than the election was 40 Republicans and seven Democrats.
It is now 43 Republicans, and simply 4 Democrats, and it may have been worse. In District 10, newly created by final 12 months’s redistricting, Republican Curtis Olafson misplaced by simply 38 votes.
Even so, the Democratic-NPL’s Senate caucus may maintain their conferences in a diner sales space going ahead, and that is outstanding.
Notably shocking is Senator Marcellais shedding. Potter was appointed to exchange former Senator Erin Oban, a Democrat who left to just accept an appointment from President Joe Biden, and wasn’t favored in opposition to Republican newcomer Sean Cleary. Bakke, in the meantime, was one more casualty for Democrats in Grand Forks, a metropolis that is been trending crimson for some time now.
However Marcellais?
He was thought of secure.
He is one of many first Native Individuals to serve within the Legislature, and his district covers the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation, one of many few reliably blue areas Democrats can rely on in our state.
Or, may, anyway.
Marcellais misplaced to Republican Kent Weston by convincing margin, 46 p.c to 53 p.c.
Go determine.
Issues did not get significantly better within the state Home.
Going into Election Day, Republicans managed 80 seats, and the Democrats 14. However Tuesday, the Democrats misplaced a web three seats, leaving the stability at 83-11.
Incumbent Representatives Marvin Nelson (District 9b), Ruth Buffalo (District 27), and Mary Adams (District 43) misplaced. Republicans additionally picked up a seat in District 41 that was held by Rep. Pamela Anderson, who did not run for re-election.
These features had been offset by Republican Rep. Terry Jones shedding in District 4a.
I do not need to pile on, however it’s exhausting to precise simply how a lot of a low level that is for Democrats. There are 141 complete seats within the state Legislature, and Democrats management simply 15 of them, or about 10%.
North Dakota’s Legislature is 90% Republican, and that is outstanding, even for a deep-red state.
There hasn’t been that stage of single-party management in North Dakota’s legislative chambers
because the early Nineteen Fifties
, earlier than the Nonpartisan League broke with Republicans and joined the Democratic occasion, changing into the fashionable Democratic-NPL.
North Dakota
Biden approves major disaster declaration for North Dakota
FARGO — Less than a month before leaving office, President Joe Biden signed off on FEMA’s declaration of the October wildfires in western North Dakota as a major disaster, allowing federal assistance to flow into the state to supplement recovery efforts.
About 40 wildfires coupled with straight-line winds Oct. 5-6 claimed two lives and destroyed nearly 120,000 acres of land, several homes and multiple outbuildings, causing damage of more than $8 million, officials said. About $3.7 million in damage was caused to rural electrical cooperatives in McKenzie and Williams counties.
The FEMA funding is available to state, tribal and eligible local governments and certain private nonprofit organizations on a cost-sharing basis for emergency work and the repair or replacement of facilities damaged by the wildfires and high winds in McKenzie and Williams counties.
Federal funding is also available on a cost-sharing basis for hazard mitigation measures statewide.
Robert Little III has been named as the federal coordinating officer for federal recovery operations in the affected area. Additional designations may be made at a later date if requested by the state and warranted by the results of further assessments, according to a statement by FEMA.
For more information, visit
ndresponse.gov/wildfire-recovery
.
Our newsroom occasionally reports stories under a byline of “staff.” Often, the “staff” byline is used when rewriting basic news briefs that originate from official sources, such as a city press release about a road closure, and which require little or no reporting. At times, this byline is used when a news story includes numerous authors or when the story is formed by aggregating previously reported news from various sources. If outside sources are used, it is noted within the story.
North Dakota
North Dakota Horse Park gets finances on track as 2025 season takes shape
FARGO — Slowly, the North Dakota Horse Park in Fargo is growing its live horse racing meet and for the first time in nearly a decade, the organization that runs the track is not scrambling to make the tax payment that once loomed over it.
The Fargo track is operated by Horse Race North Dakota, a nonprofit organization that contributed when the track was built in 2003.
At a meeting of Horse Race North Dakota on Friday, Dec. 20. Cindy Slaughter, accountant and co-owner of TaxLady, which contracts with Horse Race North Dakota, said the track’s overall income is up about $93,000 from this time last year.
A fourth weekend of racing cost the track about $148,000 this year. However, that cost can be offset in the future by factors such as attendance and the amount bet on the races.
“There’s a couple of things we could do differently this year to reduce that amount,” North Dakota Horse Park General Manager Hugh Alan Drexler said.
While Drexler and HRND will look to decrease costs, they will not try to do that at the expense of the horsemen, as they hope to keep purses for each race flat or increase them in 2025.
“I don’t want to cut the purses at all, that would be the last thing we would cut,” HRND President Jay Aslop said.
“That is what our goal is, to promote racing and to increase race dates,” Drexler said. “The day the finances don’t look the same, that is when we need to make a change.”
Live racing receives additional funds from the North Dakota Racing Commission. The commission will meet in February to determine the amount of funds that will be granted to the Fargo track as well as Chippewa Downs, the second horse racing track in North Dakota near Belcourt.
Overcoming financial struggles
Heavy special assessments loomed over the North Dakota Horse Park for several years after it opened.
In 2003, the city of Fargo spent $1.5 million to extend sewer, water and other infrastructure to the track. The city planned to recoup the costs with special assessments, a kind of property tax assessed to benefiting properties, but the city agreed to suspend the assessments for five years in hopes that the race track would stimulate the development of commercial and residential properties. This would spread the assessments over more property owners and create a smaller bill for the track, which in 2015 was about $1.9 million.
The track is now in repayment of its taxes, making annual payments to the city of Fargo, and accountants are confident a fourth weekend of racing in 2025 will not adversely affect the track.
“I don’t have any concerns about running a fourth weekend this year,” Slaughter said.
Horse racing will be held at the Fargo track in 2025 over four weekends, likely July 12 through Aug. 3, track officials said.
“(It will be) some combination of either Friday, Saturday or Saturday, Sunday depending on what other events are going on in the area,” said Drexler.
In 2024, attendance at the Fargo track was up overall with about 8,358 in attendance over the eight race days, up from about 8,127, in 2023.
The Fargo track held horse races on Saturday and Sunday afternoons for four consecutive weekends, starting Saturday, July 13. The weekend of July 27-28, races were held in the evening so as to not compete with the Fargo AirSho. The horse park competed for attendance each weekend as the Fargo Street Fair, Red River Valley Fair and the Renaissance Fair overlapped the schedule. The horse park’s closing weekend coincided with WeFest.
The track hosted only three weekends of racing in 2022 and 2023, as it was constricted to operating expenses and the amount of money granted for a live season by the North Dakota Racing Commission. The Fargo track hosted a four-week meet in 2021 but held only two weekends in 2020.
North Dakota
Sports Spotlight: Ben DeForest
BISMARCK, N.D. (KFYR) – Bismarck High Wrestlers win a lot of titles.
“We’re striving for a state championship, that’s where the bar is set,” said Bismarck High Wrestling head coach Mark Lardy.
Three of said titles belong to the top-ranked 133-pound wrestler in North Dakota, Ben DeForest.
Now, Ben’s going for number four.
“It would mean everything to me,” said Ben DeForest. “There have been some great wrestlers from BHS that have been four-timers it would just mean a lot for me to add my name to that list.”
”He led a lot by example in the past,” said Lardy. “Now he leads not only by example but his voice in the room is heard.“
Even when his BHS days are over, Ben has another chapter to write in his story: He’s committed to Wrestle at UMary.
“We pride ourselves on trying to keep and retain as many local North Dakota kids here at U-Mary and we’re just very thankful that Ben chose to come here and wrestle for us as well,” said U-Mary Wrestling head coach Adam Aho.
The state champ has a bigger goal in mind.
“His goal is way beyond what our room is going to give him. This is just a stepping stone,” said Lardy.
Ben wants a national championship.
“We need every guy to have that type of mentality,” said Aho. “Without it, we will never be relevant on the national scene.”
”Once you get your hand raised you realize, all those morning practices you didn’t want to go to and all those lifts that you were like, uh I don’t know, it’s worth it. It’s worth it,” said DeForest.
Copyright 2024 KFYR. All rights reserved.
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