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A portion of the Seventh Street one-way will see lane reductions in Bismarck's downtown area as work is done on a water main.
Read through the obituaries published today in The Bismarck Tribune.
An inspection of the State Street bridge over Interstate 94 in Bismarck will result in some temporary lane closures Wednesday.
Dozens of people gathered at the state Capitol in Bismarck over the weekend to join others around the country rallying for abortion rights.
The North Dakota Department of Human Services is hosting a public webinar on the statewide Dementia Care Services Program.
The state Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation has entered into a contract with the jail in Dickinson to provide behavioral health services to people on parole or probation supervision in that area.
A man who went to prison in 2017 for possessing nude photos and having sexually explicit conversations with a teen girl – whom he later married – was sentenced Monday to 2 ½ years in prison for similar felony sex crimes in Morton County.
Former broadcaster Cory Hepola, who’s running for governor with the upstart Forward Party of Minnesota, has named school administrator Tamara Uselman as his running mate. Uselman, who lives in Pelican Rapids, is director of equity and inclusion for Fargo Public Schools in North Dakota. She's also been superintendent of Bismarck Public Schools in North Dakota and Perham-Dent Public Schools in Minnesota. Hepola says he'll unveil his education platform next month. Democrats have criticized him as a spoiler who could hurt incumbent Gov. Tim Walz. But Hepola says he’s also hoping to attract moderate Republicans turned off by GOP candidate Scott Jensen.
The state Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation has entered into a contract with the jail in Dickinson to provide behavioral health services to people on parole or probation supervision in that area.
A man who went to prison in 2017 for possessing nude photos and having sexually explicit conversations with a teen girl – whom he later married – was sentenced Monday to 2 ½ years in prison for similar felony sex crimes in Morton County.
Two Mandan brothers face terrorizing charges related to a Friday incident in which authorities allege they wielded a machete and a hammer while they threatened two people.
Homeland Security Investigations warns that the agency’s phone numbers have been used as part of a telephone spoofing scam.
The North Dakota Department of Human Services is hosting a public webinar on the statewide Dementia Care Services Program.
Former broadcaster Cory Hepola, who’s running for governor with the upstart Forward Party of Minnesota, has named school administrator Tamara Uselman as his running mate. Uselman, who lives in Pelican Rapids, is director of equity and inclusion for Fargo Public Schools in North Dakota. She's also been superintendent of Bismarck Public Schools in North Dakota and Perham-Dent Public Schools in Minnesota. Hepola says he'll unveil his education platform next month. Democrats have criticized him as a spoiler who could hurt incumbent Gov. Tim Walz. But Hepola says he’s also hoping to attract moderate Republicans turned off by GOP candidate Scott Jensen.
North Dakota regulators want to change the definition of a bar to make clear where electronic pull tab machines will be allowed. Regulators have identified a handful of gas stations and convenience stores that have begun selling and serving booze so that they can put the wildly popular Las Vegas-style games that mimic slot machines in their businesses. The idea for the rule change is to clarify and preserve the intent of the Legislature when it defined a bar as a “retail alcoholic beverage establishment where alcoholic beverages are dispensed and consumed.” Gamblers are on track to wager $1.8 billion in the machines this fiscal year. The North Dakota Gaming Commission scheduled a Thursday meeting at the state Capitol to discuss the proposed changes and to take public comments.
A television report shows South Dakota Senate Republicans in a private 2020 meeting planned an already-negotiated outcome to a committee investigating a pair of lawmakers for being intoxicated during legislative proceedings even before the committee had a chance to meet. A transcript of the April 2020 Republican caucus meeting was reported Sunday by KELO-TV. It showed how Republicans held a private caucus meeting to discuss how to quickly and quietly resolve a legislative investigation into the two most powerful senators at the time, Sens. Kris Langer and Brock Greenfield. The pair were accused of showing up intoxicated at a legislative session that had stretched into the early morning hours as lawmakers discussed the state’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic.