Mountrail County Record News
Rock View to become a community center
Rock View Administrator Val Eide and Parshall 2000 President Kenton Onstad announced at a press conference and transition ceremony on June 2 in Parshall that the Good Samaritan Society, Rock View nursing home will be converted into a community center.
Fong: Strong economy will continue
Taxable sales and purchases in Mountrail County and western North Daktoa continue increasing dramatically and tax commissioner Cory Fong says a lot of it has to do with oil activities, but there are other factors as well.
N.D. Highway 22 reopens with bypass
The North Dakota Department of Transportation along with the North Dakota Highway Patrol have opened N.D. Highway 22, approximately two miles south of Mandaree.
North Dakota enhancing oil field oversight
With additional staffing requested by Gov. Jack Dalrymple and authorized by the 2011 Legislature, North Dakota will become one of the nation’s top 10 states in regulatory oversight of its oil and gas industry within six months.
Parshall grads say farewell to high school
Nineteen students spent their last day in Parshall High School Sunday among family and friends in a formal ceremony marking their completion of high school in North Dakota.
Crop deadline extension proposed
Now that we are in the second half of May and just a month away from the summer solstice, there is mounting pressure to get crops seeded as soon as possible.
Cenex, Whiting sign agreement
Cenex Harvest States has contracted with Whiting Oil and Gas Corp., Denver, to be the marketer of the propane and butane produced by Whiting’s new Robinson Lake fractionation plant located near Belden in Mountrail County.
Taxable sales and purchases skyrocket
Taxable sales and purchases took a huge leap skyward in Mountrail County in the fourth quarter of 2010.
Record receives 15 awards at newspaper convention
Once again the Mountrail County Record has catapulted itself to the top of the heap among small newspapers in North Dakota.
Celebrate Arbor Day today
North Dakota has always had a lack of trees and although Arbor Day began during territorial days in 1872, it has only been in recent years that locals have taken Arbor Day seriously.