Feb 20, 2021
GRAND FORKS – A collaboration between the University of North Dakota Center for Innovation Foundation and the UND Alumni Association & Foundation offer a new tenancy option to North Dakotan entrepreneurs: The Food Incubator.
The Center for Innovation (CFI) Foundation is offering entrepreneur coaching and access to commercial kitchen space to assist food-based entrepreneurs in advancing their business ideas.
“We are excited to expand our entrepreneur services and offer a kitchen incubator in Grand Forks. This project would not have been possible without the collaboration and team at the UND Alumni Association & Foundation,” said Travis Fretheim, the CFI Incubator manager.
“The University of North Dakota has always fostered an entrepreneurial spirit, so we are excited to be able to help out this new venture through the use of the commercial kitchen in the Gorecki Alumni Center,” said DeAnna Carlson Zink, CEO of the UND Alumni Association & Foundation. “T
SB 2198 would help the state retain recent nursing graduates. Written By: Jenna Webster | 4:00 pm, Feb. 12, 2021
NORTH DAKOTA A bipartisan bill in the North Dakota State Senate is asking for $400,000 to create a Statewide Nursing Staffing Clearinghouse to help fight chronic staffing shortages throughout the state.
Senate Bill 2198 would use the Clearinghouse to provide career services to North Dakota Nursing graduates connecting them with employers throughout the state. The North Dakota Center for Nursing hopes that by connecting recent graduates and local employers the state may be able to retain more nurses post-graduation.
This bill is currently in the Senate Appropriations Committee.
| News | December 17th, 2020
The vibrant life of Ashley Lake Hamilton came to a sudden end on the Sunset Highway between Airway Heights and Fairchild Air Force Base on Thursday, December 10, 2020.
Ashley was born on a beautiful Monday afternoon, June 2, 1980, at St. Ansgar Hospital in Moorhead, Minnesota. She was the second child of Barbara (Lake) and Douglas Hamilton. Ashley was a beautiful, creative and strong-willed child and she carried those traits into adulthood.
Ashley moved to the Pacific Northwest as a teenager and lived in various places in Oregon and Washington before settling in Airway Heights. She loved the forests and rivers and lakes and mountains terrain very different from the vast prairie and farm fields where she started.