North Dakota
Western North Dakota feed plant back in business
GLEN ULLIN, N.D. — The Mill in Glen Ullin quickly can be manufacturing feed.
All Day Trucking, a Jamestown, North Dakota, firm bought the feed mill, which Dakotaland Feeds closed a number of months in the past. Dakotaland had manufactured feed at one time, however for the previous few years offered industrial feed.
The Mill plans to make customized pelleted feed mixes for livestock, together with cattle, bison and sheep, and already is mixing unfastened feeds.
Ethan Kaml, a former Dakotaland Feeds worker, is managing The Mill. Kaml, who initially is from Roseau, Minnesota, and was a building common contractor, acquired into the feed enterprise after he married Beth Glasser, whose household raises black Angus cattle on a ranch close to Glen Ullin. Kaml realized about feed manufacturing, trucking and gross sales at his earlier job.
“I actually loved the trade,” he mentioned.
All Day Trucking, which Ben and Darcy Mickelson based in Jamestown in 2013 with a single truck, bought the feed mill in Glen Ullin as a result of it matches nicely with the trucking enterprise’s transportation of agricultural by-products.
All Day Trucking hauls by-products, together with potato waste, as far north because the Canadian border to as far south as southern South Dakota and east to west from St. Cloud, Minnesota, to Billings, Montana, mentioned Ben Mickelson.
Initially, the trucking firm hauled a wide range of merchandise, till Mickelson discovered his area of interest in transporting commodity by-products. He began specializing in the by-products when he discovered prospects would substitute commodity by-products that have been inexpensive than those they’d requested, however comparable in dietary worth.
“It escalated rapidly after that,” Mickelson mentioned. After the ethanol plant in close by Spiritwood, North Dakota, started operation, the Mickelsons purchased a dwell backside trailer to haul moist feed.
The Mill matches in nicely with the All Day Trucking enterprise.
“We have already got the vehicles and byproducts. That’s what will be key to us,” he mentioned.
The Mill has partnered with
Famo Feeds
, an animal feed firm in Freeport, Minnesota, which can formulate its rations.
“That’s the massive a part of being with Famo. They’re an superior outfit,” Mickelson mentioned. Famo additionally will provide The Mill with the minerals for its feed mixtures.
The Mill’s rations will use a wide range of commodity by-products, together with wheat midds, soy hull pellets and dried distillers grain, within the feed, which additionally will incorporate grain and row crops grown by farmers in Morton County.
“Our area of interest can be cow cake pellets and calf pellets in plenty of completely different varieties,” Kaml mentioned. The Mill plans to start manufacturing the pelleted merchandise within the subsequent few weeks. The corporate has the capability to provide 25 to 30 tons of pelleted feed per day, with a purpose to extend that quantity.
The feed merchandise, which will be packed in totes, 50-pound baggage or bulk can be obtainable to ship nationwide.
The majority of The Mill’s prospects can be ranchers inside a 100-mile radius of Glen Ullin. The closest feed mill to the city is 60 miles away, so the enterprise will fill a necessity for space ranchers, Kaml mentioned.
“We’re proper within the center right here,” he mentioned.
North Dakota
North Dakota family leads fight against youth suicide
Editor’s note: If you or someone you know is in crisis, please call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 988 or contact the Crisis Text Line by texting TALK to 741741.
FARGO — Suicide is the leading cause of death for young people in North Dakota aged 10 to 24, a sobering statistic The 463 Foundation is determined to change.
The foundation, created by Todd and Elizabeth Medd after losing their son Liam to suicide in 2021, hosted a suicide prevention night at Discovery Middle School on Tuesday, Jan. 14. The event emphasized the importance of mental health awareness and reducing stigma.
“Our goal is to make sure that one person hears the right message or the message at the right time,” said Todd Medd, co-founder of the foundation. “With that message, they can either use it for themselves or share it with others as well.”
The Medd family spoke to students and parents about warning signs such as self-segregation or sudden behavioral changes and highlighted studies showing teen suicides can often be impulsive, with 25% of cases occurring within five minutes of the first thought.
Todd Medd emphasized the power of open dialogue. “Vulnerability breeds vulnerability,” he said. “When you share your challenges, it opens the door for deeper conversations with your kids.”
The 463 Foundation will continue its efforts to spread hope and awareness, including its fourth annual baseball tournament in June to support Fargo youth baseball and promote its mission.
North Dakota
Reliance of North Dakota producers on migrant workers
MINOT, N.D. (KMOT) – Farmers and ranchers work with their hands, but sometimes the biggest issue is not having enough.
President-elect Donald Trump will soon be taking office and bringing changes to immigration laws.
When needing an extra hand, producers seek assistance from migrant workers.
These workers go through the H-2A program, granting temporary employment for performing agricultural labor.
Ag Commissioner Doug Goehring said in 2023, North Dakota received 4,600 migrant workers, and that number is expected to grow.
“The margins are even slimmer, so now you have to produce more and you have to produce more acres because of what’s happened with family living,” said Goehring.
He said concerns in the agriculture community aren’t necessarily about immigration, but rather with the Department of Labor, with producers facing lengthy wait periods for paperwork to go through.
“I brought these issues to Sonny Perdue, the Secretary of Agriculture at that time, he actually helped streamline the process,” said Goehring.
He said the public sometimes conflates the issues of illegal immigration and of legal migrants following the correct steps to work here.
“Sometimes the public doesn’t quite understand that, so they think H-2A workers are some of the illegals that are coming across the border. They’re not,” said Goehring.
Goehring added he hopes issues with backlogs in the Labor Department will change when the new administration takes over.
Goehring also addressed the concern of migrant workers taking jobs from American citizens.
He said the processes migrants and employers go through allows plenty of opportunities for American citizens to apply and be hired.
Copyright 2025 KFYR. All rights reserved.
North Dakota
North Dakota bill targets Game and Fish Department’s CWD management efforts
BISMARCK – A bill introduced Monday, Jan. 13, in the North Dakota Legislature would prevent the Game and Fish Department from using hunting and fishing license dollars or application fees for research or management related to chronic wasting disease.
Introduced by
Reps. Bill Tveit, R-Hazen,
and
Dori Hauck, R-Hebron,
HB 1236
would require that the department use license and application fees only for programs and administration not related to CWD.
“Hunting and fishing license fees and application fees … may be used only for department programs and administration unrelated to chronic wasting disease,” the bill states.
Sens.
Mark Enget, R-Powers Lake,
and
Paul Thomas, R-Velva,
are carrying the legislation in the Senate.
The bill marks the
second proposed legislation so far this session
to limit the Game and Fish Department in its efforts to manage CWD, a neurological disease that is always fatal to deer, elk and moose. On Jan. 7,
Sen. Keith Boehm, R-Mandan,
introduced
SB 2137,
a bill that would prevent the Game and Fish Department from prohibiting or restricting the use of supplemental feed on private land – a practice more commonly known as baiting – for big game hunting. A similar bill was introduced during the 2023 legislative session and overwhelmingly passed the House before being narrowly defeated in the Senate during the closing days of the session.
SB 2137 has its first committee hearing at 10:20 a.m. Friday, Jan. 17, before the Senate Agriculture and Veterans Affairs Committee. Anyone interested in
submitting testimony on the bill
can do so on the North Dakota legislative branch website at ndlegis.gov and doing a search for SB 2137 in the “Find a bill” window. A hearing for HB 1236 hadn’t been scheduled as of Tuesday morning.
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