On Sunday, you’ll get the chance to hear the voices of talented performers with the Minot Chamber Chorale. The group will perform the state’s premiere of Kim Andre Arnesen’s “Requiem for Solace.” It is the first time the piece will be performed in North Dakota.
GRAND FORKS – Peer Vision for Mental Health in Minot has received a grant from the Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Dakota Caring Foundation Building Healthier Rural Community (BUILD) Grants Program. The BUILD Program aims to transform the health and well-being of rural North Dakotans and address the social determinants of health affecting its
He is one of the oldest living World War II veterans in the nation. MINOT, NORTH DAKOTA — Ray Curtis was born on Feb. 11, 1917, about two months before the United States entered World War I and a year before what became known as the Spanish Flu ravaged ...
House Bill 1408 received recommendations to pass from both the House Government and Veterans Affairs Committee and the House Appropriations Committee.
This week, some North Dakota cities broke records dating back over 100 years, while other locations experienced their coldest temperatures in several decades!
To be clear, the term limits amendment allows it to be amended, but only through a statewide vote. What's prohibited is the Legislature initiating that change. The larger question is whether it's legal to protect current law from future amendments.
BISMARCK ( North Dakota Monitor) – North Dakota is one of just four states where the Legislature does not meet every year, but that could change starting in 2027 if the state Senate follows the lead of the House. The House of Representatives on Friday voted 64-26 to pass House Bill 1408, to meet and pass a budget every year.
Country music superstar Luke Bryan will headline the North Dakota State Fair on Saturday, July 26.
The girls division and Class A and Class B boys divisions all crowned their team dual champions at the Fargodome to cap the state tournament.
A proposal being considered by the North Dakota Legislature would increase what the state gives to the four biggest metropolitan areas for public transit services, which transit directors across the state have called a necessity as costs climb.