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Lawmakers lay out plans to redraw North Dakota s electoral map

Lawmakers lay out plans to redraw North Dakota s electoral map Senate Majority Leader Rich Wardner said a proposed committee will draw up the new legislative districts. It will likely include 16 or 18 lawmakers, with mostly Republicans and two or three Democrats a reflection of the partisan breakdown in the Legislature. Written By: Jeremy Turley | × Senate Majority Leader Rich Wardner, R-Dickinson, speaks at a news conference on Dec. 1, 2020, in the North Dakota Capitol. (Jeremy Turley / Forum News Service) BISMARCK North Dakota will need to be chopped up into legislative districts later this year, but who gets to draw the lines? Two opposing plans drafted by lawmakers look to answer that question in anticipation of a process that only comes around once a decade.

North Dakota lawmakers push to allow alcohol sales starting at 8 am Sundays

North Dakota lawmakers push to allow alcohol sales starting at 8 am Sundays Senate Bill 2220 would permit bars, restaurants, liquor shops and other vendors to sell alcohol starting at 8 a.m. on Sundays, aligning it with every other day of the week. The proposal received a do pass recommendation from the Senate Industry, Business and Labor Committee via a 4-2 vote on Tuesday, Jan. 26. Written By: Jeremy Turley | × A beer selection at a Fargo liquor store. Forum file photo BISMARCK North Dakotans who go hunting for a case of cold ones early on Sunday morning are out of luck. The remnants of the state s once-strict blue laws prohibit the sale of alcohol before 11 a.m., but a bill that would change the rule has just picked up momentum.

ND wrestles with level of bonding to fund infrastructure projects

ND wrestles with level of bonding to fund infrastructure projects According to a study conducted by the Upper Great Plains Transportation Institute, it would cost more than $9 billion over the next 20 years to address all of the infrastructure problems facing North Dakota. Written By: Brayden Zenker / N.D. Newspaper Association Education Foundation | 6:00 am, Jan. 25, 2021 × The North Dakota State Capitol. Forum News Service file photo BISMARCK Fixing those roads and bridges isn’t getting any cheaper, and local officials across North Dakota are looking for help from state government which is facing its own budget crunch. “In 2014, $333 million was the total estimate for road and bridge investment need in just Grand Forks County,” county engineer Nick West said. “There is just no way under our normal budgeting revenue mechanisms that we can replace that in a timely fashion. We’re always playing catch up.”

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