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Summit carbon pipeline decision coming Friday from North Dakota PSC • North Dakota Monitor

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Summit carbon pipeline decision coming Friday from North Dakota PSC • North Dakota Monitor


The North Dakota Public Service Commission will meet Friday to vote on the Summit Carbon Solutions pipeline project that aims to permanently store carbon emissions underground west of Bismarck. 

The commission will meet at 10 a.m. in the Pioneer Room on the ground floor in the Judicial Wing of the Capitol Building. 

The PSC denied Summit a permit in 2023, but the company made changes to its route in North Dakota and appealed the decision. 

The three-person commission has held multiple public hearings on the $8 billion pipeline network that would gather carbon emissions from ethanol plants in five states, including Tharaldson Ethanol at Casselton, North Dakota. 

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Supporters view the project as vital to helping the ethanol industry compete in low-carbon fuel markets. Ethanol is a key market for corn growers.

Opponents cite safety concerns, damage to farmland and property values and an infringement on property rights. Some landowners also have complained about Summit’s business practices. 

Iowa has granted Summit a permit, and the company says it plans to try again for a permit in South Dakota. Minnesota’s Public Utilities Commission is expected to vote Dec. 12 on a 28-mile segment near the North Dakota state line.

The project also includes Nebraska, which has no state agency in charge of issuing permits for CO2 pipelines.

Summit would benefit from federal tax credits of $85 per ton of CO2 that it plans to put underground in North Dakota, and would sequester 18 million tons of carbon dioxide per year. 

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Iowa-based Summit will need a separate storage permit from the North Dakota Industrial Commission.



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‘Horrifying’ human trafficking story becomes full-length movie filmed in North Dakota

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‘Horrifying’ human trafficking story becomes full-length movie filmed in North Dakota


BISMARCK — Ejaz Khan was in the middle of filming a movie about horses in Linton, North Dakota, when he waltzed into a gas station for coffee.

Standing behind him with no shoes on — in the dead of winter — was a young woman who he later learned was a survivor of child sex trafficking. While also battling addiction, she was still shackled to the industry as a sex worker.

That was over four years ago. The New Yorker was still completing

“Before They Vanish”

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— released in 2022 — when he became friendly with the woman after buying her food.

Upon hearing the shoeless woman’s “horrifying” life story, Khan’s focus whipped from horses to victims and survivors of child sex trafficking.

“After that, I just was devastated. I went back home, spoke to my wife and said, ‘Here we are creating this film on horses and donating proceeds,’ ” he recounted. “But yet, look at this human. Look at what her family members have done to her.’”

The moment was the inspiration for “Trapped,” which follows the story of a young girl who is being sex trafficked by her mother’s boyfriend.

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Official movie poster for “Trapped,” which was filmed in North Dakota.

Contributed / Ejaz Khan Cinema

Filmed

entirely in subzero Linton,

Khan said the plot was inspired by the woman he met at the gas station.

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Sex trafficking is a form of human trafficking.

According to the North Dakota

Human Trafficking Guide,

the term is used to describe the process of recruiting, harboring, transporting and/or soliciting a person to perform forced, coerced sex acts for money. Victims and survivors can be of any age but are often people who were minors at the time of the crime.

Statewide data from North Dakota’s annual

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Human Trafficking Report

documents 102 sex trafficking victims and just two arrests made in 2023.

Nearly one in four of those women trafficked identified as American Indian or Alaska Native, according to the report.

Khan told Forum News Service that the movie doesn’t specifically point to the disproportionate effects sex trafficking has on Native American communities since it follows the story of the woman he met in Linton, who he said didn’t identify as Native American.

However, the director said Native American women still inspire aspects of the movie, having made up a notable portion of the more than 80 survivors with whom he spoke throughout the production process.

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BTS EJAZ OF TRAPPED.jpg

Ejaz Khan films a scene of “Trapped” in Linton, North Dakota.

Contributed / Ejaz Khan Cinema

A screening of the movie will take place Wednesday, Nov. 13, at the Grand 22 Theater in Bismarck. Lt. Gov.-elect Michelle Strinden is set to attend as an audience member along with Attorney General Drew Wrigley, who is currently on the list as a “maybe.”

Audience members are by invitation only, including people who belong to related organizations in addition to community leaders.

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There will also be representatives from the 31:8 Project,

a resource based in Bismarck

for survivors of human and sex trafficking. Khan worked with the organization while filming the movie.

“Trapped” will be officially released on Jan. 31, 2025, during Human Trafficking Prevention Month. It will be available on Amazon, Google Play and iTunes.

Though the movie is not yet rated, Khan said the crew has worked “very hard” to bring down its rating to PG so that all audiences can learn from its subject material.

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“As a director, I’m saying that it’s going to be very uncomfortable. But just imagine what an hour and a half can do. Put yourself in that hour and a half-hour, 40 minutes, of discomfort to help your own children. That’s all I’m asking for,” Khan said.

“Don’t sweep it under the rug,” he said. “We have to face it. Period.”

Peyton Haug

Peyton Haug joined The Forum as the Bismarck correspondent in June 2024. She interned with the Duluth News Tribune as a reporting intern in 2022 while earning bachelor’s degrees in journalism and geography at the University of Minnesota Duluth. Reach Peyton at phaug@forumcomm.com.





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Fargo City Commission to consider revised turn signal law

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Fargo City Commission to consider revised turn signal law


FARGO, N.D. (Valley News Live) – Fargo Municipal Code requires operators of motor vehicles to signal only if their turning or merging impacts other vehicles. North Dakota law requires drivers who turn or merge to signal in all turning and merging situations.

In light of this, the City Commission voted Monday to direct the City Attorney’s Office to draft revisions to Fargo Municipal Code to make City law consistent with North Dakota law on when signals are needed.

City Commissioners will consider and potentially take action on the revisions at a future meeting.

During the 2023 legislative session, North Dakota’s turn signal law was updated. You can read our previous reporting on that here.

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Burgum proposes $96 million housing initiative for North Dakota • North Dakota Monitor

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Burgum proposes  million housing initiative for North Dakota • North Dakota Monitor


Gov. Doug Burgum outlined Tuesday a $96 million housing initiative that aims to provide financing assistance to developers for building new single and multi-family homes and take advantage of existing infrastructure to help limit costs.

“We’re growing and our economy is growing,” Burgum said during a news conference at Bismarck’s Custer Park. “We can’t grow unless we’ve got workforce, and we know we’re having challenges with workforce coming to our state because housing in certain markets, in certain places in the state, has gotten very tight.”

The recommendations will be part of Burgum’s state budget proposal he’ll announce during the first week of December.

The plan calls for nearly $39 million to be put toward “financing innovations” to provide gap funding for developers to construct single and multi-family homes through the North Dakota Housing Incentive Fund, which is managed by the North Dakota Housing Finance Agency.

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Group gathering input on North Dakota housing needs

It would also provide low interest construction loans for projects relating to entry-level homes and aging-in-place home designs within established neighborhoods.

“None of the programs we are talking about today are going to be directed toward greenfield, or new infrastructure,” Burgum said. “We have to invest in places where we’ve got existing infrastructure.”

Burgum emphasized that focusing the projects in areas with existing streets, utilities and fire and police coverage will not increase the property tax burden for the community.

The plan would also incentivize partnerships at the local level through low interest loan programs to improve existing houses with repairs so people can stay in their homes longer and keep those homes in a sellable condition, if the homeowner decides to move.

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Almost $23 million would be used to fund innovation grants to spur additional housing projects in urban and rural areas. 

Burgum said clearing some of the permitting and zoning “red tape” would also help promote the next generation of manufactured housing, which is modular home designs.

“As the manufactured home moves from what we might traditionally think about with mobile homes, which people think is substandard, there’s a whole new industry coming and we’ve got to attract it to North Dakota,” Burgum said. “There’s a way to lower the cost of homebuilding with modular, manufactured housing as a key part of that, that hasn’t really arrived here … and we’ve got to make sure our code allows that to happen.”

The ideas are the result of the North Dakota Housing Initiative Advisory Committee, which has been working to develop a comprehensive housing strategy. The committee held five listening sessions with stakeholders in Bismarck, Fargo, Harvey, Williston and at the Strengthening Government to Government Conference with tribal nations.

Kim Settel, vice president of retail banking and lending for Gate City Bank and a member of the state’s Housing Initiative Advisory Committee, speaks during a news conference about a new housing initiative in the state at Custer Park in Bismarck on Nov. 12, 2024. (Michael Achterling/North Dakota Monitor)

Committee member Kim Settel, vice president of retail banking and lending for Gate City Bank, said clearing regulatory burdens for new construction would go a long way toward incentivizing new home construction.  She also emphasized finding ways to decrease mortgage rates. 

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Burgum highlighted that some homeowners with grown children may want to downsize and sell their home to a new family, but high interest rates are a deterrent.

“If we can get them into a rate that is more amenable to what it was, then you can open that house up for another family,” Settel said. 

She also said no two housing markets are the same and what may work to increase housing in a city like Fargo may not be the same approach needed in Bowman.

The plan also provides $10 million to address ongoing homelessness through emergency shelter operating funds and re-housing assistance.

Burgum said homelessness can occur rapidly for families, based on circumstances. He added about a third of all homelessness involves families with children.

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“It’s not just about individuals, it’s about families,” Burgum said. 

State Rep. Mike Beltz, R-Hillsboro, a member of the Housing Initiative Advisory Committee, said the best thing you can do for a homeless person is to put a roof over their head.

“It provides them stability and exponentially increases the opportunities for positive outcomes on that front,” Beltz said.

State Rep. Mike Beltz, R-Hillsboro, and a member of the state’s Housing Initiative Advisory Committee, speaks during a news conference about a new housing initiative at Custer Park in Bismarck on Nov. 12, 2024. (Michael Achterling/North Dakota Monitor)

Burgum said about $16 million of the new initiative will provide eviction prevention resources and housing assistance for those deemed high-risk for housing instability. To receive housing assistance, the recipient must take part in a financial coaching program, he said.

“We just want to make sure people understand, on the financial side of things, both the responsibilities and the opportunities within home ownership,” Burgum said.

Beltz said the housing initiative proposal will fall across multiple state agencies that will administer the programs.

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To assist the construction workforce, $6 million from the program would be made available through grants to local schools for continuing to promote construction careers.

Lawmakers will consider Burgum’s budget proposal, as well as budget recommendations from Gov.-elect Kelly Armstrong, when the legislative session begins Jan. 7.

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