Josh Kramer

I recently read an article in which a large national food distributor proclaimed its “big step” toward reducing its carbon footprint.

Al Gustin

I was anxious to see the county-by-county figures from the 2020 North Dakota census.

Brittnee Wilson, who works in communications at Northern Plains Electric Cooperative in Cando, attends a Co-op Web Builder training workshop in October 2019 for regional co-op communicators from North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota, Montana and Wyoming. The training was conducted by Touchstone Energy Cooperatives’ Sean Walker and sponsored by the N.D. Association of Rural Electric Cooperatives. Photos by NDAREC/John Kary

Josh Kramer

As you grow older, time seems to speed up.

Rural Access Distribution (RAD) Cooperative officers, from left, Diana Hahn, vice president, Jim’s SuperValu in Park River; Alex Bata, president, Adams Community Development Corporation; and Jenna Gullickson, secretary/treasurer, Hoople Grocery, sit in the truck purchased by the co-op, which will deliver groceries and products from the redistribution hub, Jim’s SuperValu in Park River, to grocery stores in Hoople and Edinburg and climate-controlled grocery lockers in Adams and Fordville. PHOTO COURTESY LARR
Roxanne Henke

I don’t like to talk on the phone much. Even more, I don’t like to talk on the phone after supper. So, when the phone rang about 8:30 p.m.

preparing school lunch

The effects of a nationwide labor shortage are hitting North Dakota where it really hurts. After Nov.