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Crookston Visitors Bureau gets influx of funds to launch new website, visitors guide, etc.
The money was in the budget as of June 12, when the Crookston Chamber terminated its agreement with the previous CVB; effort to reconcile Chamber/previous CVB books nixed due to lack of documentation
Mike Christopherson
The new Crookston Visitors Bureau has been allocated approximately $22,700 to continue moving forward on various initiatives such as the launch of its own website and production of a new digital and printed visitors’ guide. The City of Crookston has moved the money to the CVB, which was in the previous Crookston Convention & Visitors Bureau account held by its previous fiscal host, the Crookston Area Chamber of Commerce. The funds have sort of been in limbo since June 12, 2020, when the Chamber terminated its agreement with the previous CVB.
jcotton@timesobserver.com
Times Observer photo by Josh Cotton
Ken Klakamp reviews filings with, left, Brain Zeybel, who is set to become sheriff Jan. 1 and Chief Deputy Chuck Fetzeck.
It’s without question that 2020 was defined by the COVID-19 pandemic and the presidential election.
But that wasn’t all that happened this year.
This week we’ll take a look back at the pandemic in the county and the election but also our favorite positive stories, business news and crime news.
That starts today with the state of politics in local government in 2020.
EMS CHALLENGES
Times Observer photo by Brian Ferry
Carrington Research Extension Center plans a seminar for livestock feeders in January. Written By: John Steiner | ×
The Feedlot School will help identify areas for improvement, including feed bunk management, health, business planning and marketing. (NDSU photo)
Cattle producers, feeders, backgrounders, feed industry personnel, animal health-care suppliers and others will have an opportunity to learn more about during the annual North Dakota State University Feedlot School set for Jan. 20-21, 2021, at NDSU’s Carrington Research Extension Center.
“Feeding cattle is a decades-old business with lots of new techniques,” says Karl Hoppe, Extension livestock systems specialist at the center. “Making cattle feeding profitable is usually a result of doing many things right, not just one thing better. The Feedlot School helps identify the areas for improvement, ranging from feed bunk management to health to business planning to marketing.”
Like Columbus, nearby Schuyler is an area community that continues to grow.
Having welcomed a Love s Travel Stop and Dairy Queen in the last year, the neighboring Colfax County community is now getting its own Scooter s Coffee.
The store will be at 102 W. 16th St. in Schuyler, according to franchise owner Shanna Turner, who lives in Omaha. Right now, she is trying to get it finished. The goal, she told The Telegram earlier this month, is to start training. Turner and her co-owner/husband Andrew originally planned to open mid-December, but it got pushed back.
âI had just opened a Scooter s here in Omaha, a second one, in May of this year, so I really wasnât looking to open another one quickly,â Turner said. âThey had approached us at corporate with this opportunity. They were going to put a corporate store in Schuyler.â