HIGHLAND ELEMENTARY SCHOOL RECOGNIZED AS A “BEST ELEMENTARY SCHOOL” AT CITY COUNCIL MEETING

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The Crookston City Council met on Monday night inside the City Hall Council Chambers. The meeting began with a Crookston Visitors Bureau (CVB) presentation. The presentation served as the CVB’s annual report to the City Council, and Cory Dallager gave the report. The report highlighted the main accomplishments from 2021, targeted projects, and partnerships developed. The presentation was informational, and no action was needed from the council.

There was also a presentation from the city, in which they recognized seven individuals for their Years of Service to the City of Crookston. The individuals and their years of service for the City of Crookston can be found down below –

5 Years of Service

  • Andrea Prudhomme – Parks & Recreation Department
  • Katie Hann- Police Department

15 Years of Service

  • Shane Heldstab – Fire Department
  • Shane Mendez – Police Department

20 Years of Service

  • Kent Ellingson – Fire Department

25 Years of Service

  • Tim Froeber – Fire Department
  • Dacian Bienek – Police Department

After the presentations, there was a mayoral proclamation on behalf of Highland Elementary School for being recognized as a top Elementary School by U.S. News and World Report. Highland ranked in the top 30% of Elementary Schools in Minnesota. Highland Elementary School Principal Chris Trostad accepted the certificate from Mayor Dale Stainbrook and said it’s an honor to be recognized. “First off, thanks to the city for recognizing our school,” said Trostad. “We have a great staff that goes the extra mile to help all of our students at Highland School. Those kids get the best teachers, and I think we do a great job of giving our students the very best, and I’m proud of that.”

CONSENT AGENDA

The consent agenda included approval of the City Council meeting minutes from November 22 and City of Crookston bills and disbursements in the amount of $140,134.47. The consent agenda also included a resolution authorizing the preparation of the preliminary engineers report for 2022 street improvements. The Council approved all consent agenda items unanimously.

REGULAR AGENDA

The regular agenda began with a resolution to appoint Darin Selzler as the new Crookston Police Department Chief once current Police Chief Paul Biermaier retires. The Council approved the resolution unanimously, and they all spoke highly of Selzler. Selzer says he’s honored to take the place of Biermaier. “I’m very appreciative of this opportunity, and I’ve been blessed to work with Chief Biermaier over the years,” said Selzler. “We’ve been working closely over the years together and even closer with the transition coming up. I’m excited about the chance, and I’m looking forward to serving the City of Crookston.”

Selzler will assume the role of Police Chief on March 1, 2022, after the retirement of Paul Biermaier on February 28. We will have a full story with comments from Police Chief Paul Biermaier highlighting Selzer later this week.

The next resolution authorized a partial payment to the Polk County Highway Department for their work on the Fisher Avenue Project from over the summer. The bill was for a water main extension placed along the roadway and a few other miscellaneous items, not exceeding $175,000. The Council approved the request unanimously.

The following resolution was to approve the City of Crookston to participate in the State of Minnesota Opioid Litigation Settlements. City Attorney Corky Reynolds gave the Council a brief rundown on what the resolution would do if approved. “The resolution was passed to allow Polk County to participate,” said Reynolds. “The manufacturers and attorney generals in various states were able to reach an agreement, giving us this opioid settlement. This money will be parceled out to different communities. Crookston is under 10,000 in population, so we couldn’t participate directly. Still, by passing this resolution, we allow Polk County to participate, and that in return will benefit Crookston as we are a part of Polk County.”

The Council approved the resolution unanimously, and Polk County Public Health will benefit and offer education and resources to help deal with the significant problem.

The meeting ended with a resolution to approve a Small Cities Development Loan for the Eagles Aerie 873 for $11,425. City Administrator Amy Finch explained the resolution further. “They amended their initial application because the work that qualifies for this type of loan can not be started or completed before the application is approved and funded,” said Finch. “Our Finance Director Ryan Lindtwed has worked closely with the Eagles and taken pictures to document the need of the project. They will be working on the front of the building and some of the windows as they require replacement.”

There will be two loans given in the amount of $5,712. One loan can be forgiven if specific guidelines are met, and the other will be paid back to the city as the work is completed. The board approved the resolution unanimously.

The special closed meeting that was scheduled to take place at 5:30 p.m. before the City Council meeting was canceled due to the absence of Council Member Joe Kresl. Because of this, the last two agenda items, to approve City Administrator Amy Finch’s annual salary and a summary of the closed session, were taken off the agenda.

The next City Council meeting will take place on Monday, January 10, inside the City Hall Council Chambers.

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WINTER TRUCK LOAD INCREASES BEGIN DEC. 31 FOR CENTRAL FROST ZONE

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Winter load increases will begin Friday, Dec. 31, at 12:01 a.m. on unrestricted state highways in the central frost zone. Winter load increases are already in effect in the north and north-central frost zones.

Frost zones and restricted routes can be found on the MnDOT load limits map.

Start and end dates and other load limit information are shown at mndot.gov/loadlimits.

Vehicles will be allowed to operate up to 10 percent over the standard legal maximum loads on unrestricted highways during the winter load increase period.  However, trucks must comply with current registration weight laws and not exceed registered gross weight tolerances. 

Please check with local agencies (cities, counties and townships) prior to increasing any weights on their routes. The sign erected on the roadway governs the load limit in effect.  A winter weight increase permit is required to take advantage of the 10 percent weight increase on interstate highways only; a permit is not required for state trunk highways.

MnDOT will report start and end dates on its 24-hour automated message center at 1-800-723-6543 for the U.S. and Canada, and locally at 651-366-5400 for the Minneapolis/St. Paul area.

For questions about legal axle weight during SLR; Gross Vehicle Weight Schedule, call:
Minnesota Department of Public Safety
State Patrol – Commercial Vehicle Enforcement
651-350-2000

For questions about oversize/overweight loads/permitting call:
Minnesota Department of Transportation
Freight and Commercial Vehicle Operations – Oversize/Overweight Permits
651-296-6000
Or email:  ofcvopermits.dot@state.mn.us

All changes are made with a minimum of three calendar-day notice.

For the most current information, go to MnDOT’s automated 24-hour message center at 800-723-6543 for the U.S. and Canada, or 651-366-5400 for the Minneapolis/St. Paul area. This information is also published on the MnDOT seasonal load limits website at mndot.gov/loadlimits.

For updated road condition information, call 511 or visit www.511mn.org.

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CITY OF CROOKSTON TO CONDUCT DOWNTOWN SNOW REMOVAL BEGINNING TUESDAY NIGHT

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Downtown snow removal on all north/south streets will take place beginning at 12:01 a.m. Tuesday night/Wednesday morning and east/west streets beginning at 12:01 a.m. Wednesday night/Thursday morning barring unforeseen heavy snowfall or another emergency.  

Vehicles on these streets will be towed if not moved.

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MINNESOTA REPORTS 4,155 NEW COVID CASES AND 53 DEATHS, POLK COUNTY HAS 11 NEW CASES

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The Minnesota Department of Health released the COVID-19 numbers for today and the state reported 4,155 cases with 53 deaths. 3 deaths were reported in northwest Minnesota. Two in Roseau County, and one in Beltrami County. Polk County reported 10 new cases with one probable, Pennington County had 7,  Roseau County had 3, Marshall County had 3, Mahnomen County had 1, and Norman County had 1 with one probable.

All the information is below –

Updated December 27, 2021
Updated weekdays at 11 a.m., with data current as of 4 a.m. the previous business day.
In observance of the holiday, we did not update the data on this page on Friday, December 24. Updates posted today are for data as of 4 a.m. Thursday, December 23.

Data is for cases that were tested and returned positive. At-home test results are not counted by MDH.

All data is preliminary and may change as cases are investigated. Many data points are collected through an online survey or during case interviews; however, not all cases are interviewed. Case interviews are focused on people under 18 years old, hospitalizations, deaths, and people with vaccine breakthrough or variants. Data presented below is for all cases, regardless of interview status.

Positive PCR test results are considered confirmed cases. Positive antigen test results are considered probable cases. All probable cases get the same public health follow up and recommendations as cases confirmed by PCR tests.

Daily Update:

Because all data is preliminary and some reports require verification before counting as a case, the change in a number of cumulative positive cases and deaths from one day to the next may not exactly equal the newly reported cases or deaths.

In observance of the holiday, we did not update the data on this page on Friday, December 24. Updates posted today are for data as of 4 a.m. Thursday, December 23.

We continuously receive case reports and work to confirm, process, and report them as quickly as possible. Newly reported cases may not include every case reported to us since the last data update.

Total positive cases, including reinfections (cumulative) 1,000,361
Total positive people (cumulative) 987,599
Newly reported cases 4,155
County Newly reported confirmed cases Newly reported probable cases
Aitkin 2 0
Anoka 162 52
Becker 8 3
Beltrami 19 5
Benton 23 0
Big Stone 1 0
Blue Earth 31 3
Brown 4 0
Carlton 13 4
Carver 108 9
Cass 13 4
Chippewa 4 1
Chisago 28 3
Clay 25 12
Clearwater 1 0
Cook 2 0
Cottonwood 2 3
Crow Wing 39 8
Dakota 368 67
Dodge 11 1
Douglas 10 5
Faribault 10 0
Fillmore 13 0
Freeborn 27 2
Goodhue 24 0
Grant 2 0
Hennepin 1,026 211
Houston 29 2
Hubbard 6 0
Isanti 14 4
Itasca 30 2
Jackson 4 0
Kanabec 10 0
Kandiyohi 19 0
Kittson 1 0
Koochiching 6 1
Lac qui Parle 5 1
Lake 2 2
Le Sueur 15 3
Lincoln 3 0
Lyon 16 1
Mahnomen 1 0
Marshall 3 1
Martin 14 2
McLeod 20 0
Meeker 12 0
Mille Lacs 16 2
Morrison 16 1
Mower 11 1
Murray 1 0
Nicollet 17 1
Nobles 4 4
Norman 1 1
Olmsted 93 0
Otter Tail 18 10
Pennington 7 0
Pine 8 4
Pipestone 1 0
Polk 10 1
Pope 1 0
Ramsey 274 74
Redwood 4 0
Renville 6 0
Rice 29 2
Rock 3 0
Roseau 3 0
Scott 176 8
Sherburne 56 22
Sibley 10 0
St. Louis 73 46
Stearns 116 5
Steele 21 1
Stevens 2 3
Swift 3 0
Todd 14 0
Wabasha 10 0
Wadena 9 2
Waseca 8 2
Washington 170 38
Watonwan 3 2
Wilkin 0 4
Winona 17 2
Wright 73 28
Yellow Medicine 1 0
Unknown/missing 5 3
  • Cases removed: 18
    Cases are removed for many reasons including residence in another state, duplication of cases, and false positive reports.
Total deaths (cumulative) 10,359
Newly reported deaths 53
County of residence Age group Number of newly reported deaths
Anoka 55-59 years 1
Anoka 65-69 years 1
Anoka 75-79 years 1
Becker 60-64 years 1
Beltrami 55-59 years 1
Benton 45-49 years 1
Cass 65-69 years 1
Cass 75-79 years 1
Clay 35-39 years 1
Clay 80-84 years 1
Cottonwood 70-74 years 1
Crow Wing 45-49 years 1
Crow Wing 70-74 years 1
Dakota 65-69 years 1
Dakota 70-74 years 1
Dakota 75-79 years 1
Dakota 80-84 years 1
Dakota 85-89 years 1
Dakota 90-94 years 1
Hennepin 65-69 years 2
Hennepin 75-79 years 1
Hennepin 80-84 years 1
Hennepin 85-89 years 1
Hennepin 90-94 years 1
Hennepin 95-99 years 1
Isanti 60-64 years 1
Itasca 55-59 years 1
Itasca 65-69 years 1
Itasca 80-84 years 1
Kandiyohi 80-84 years 1
McLeod 65-69 years 1
McLeod 95-99 years 1
Mille Lacs 60-64 years 1
Morrison 50-54 years 1
Otter Tail 40-44 years 1
Otter Tail 85-89 years 1
Ramsey 65-69 years 1
Roseau 60-64 years 1
Roseau 80-84 years 1
Scott 80-84 years 1
Sherburne 55-59 years 1
Sherburne 70-74 years 1
St. Louis 55-59 years 1
Stearns 70-74 years 1
Stearns 80-84 years 1
Stearns 95-99 years 1
Steele 60-64 years 1
Washington 30-34 years 1
Washington 65-69 years 1
Washington 90-94 years 1
Wright 70-74 years 1
Wright 80-84 years 1
Residence type Number of newly reported deaths
Private Residence 44
Long-term Care Facility/Assisted Living 8
Residential Behavioral Health 1
Month and year of death Number of newly reported deaths
December 2021 53

Testing

Total approximate completed tests (cumulative) 15,925,106
Total approximate number of completed PCR tests (cumulative) 13,766,135
Total approximate number of completed antigen tests (cumulative) 2,158,971

Testing data table

Minnesota Case Overview

Graph of confirmed cases of COVID-19 by specimen collection date, data in table below.

Total positive cases, including reinfections (cumulative) 1,000,361
Total confirmed cases (PCR positive) (cumulative) 886,296
Total probable cases (Antigen positive) (cumulative) 114,065

Positive cases by date specimen collected data table

Total positive people (cumulative) 987,599
Total number of reinfections (cumulative) 12,762

Cases no longer needing isolation

Cases no longer needing isolation (cumulative) 963,896

Deaths

Deaths of confirmed cases in Minnesota, data in table below

Total deaths (cumulative) 10,359
Deaths from confirmed cases (cumulative) 9,727
Deaths from probable cases (cumulative) 632

Deaths data table

Total non-laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 deaths (death certificate) (cumulative) 134
Deaths among cases that resided in long-term care or assisted living facilities (cumulative) 5,133

Hospitalizations

Minnesota COVID-19 hospitalizations, data in table below

Total cases hospitalized (cumulative) 50,127
Total cases hospitalized in ICU (cumulative) 9,837

Hospitalization data table

Case Demographics

Age

Age group data table:
Including age group of deaths

Gender

Gender data table

Race & Ethnicity

Race and ethnicity data table:
Including race and ethnicity of deaths

Residence

Cases by County of Residence

County of residence is confirmed during the case interview. At the time of this posting not all interviews have been completed.

County of residence data table:
Including county of residence of deaths

 

As of 10/28/21, likely exposure and residence type are no longer collected for all cases and therefore no longer reported. Archived data can be found in the COVID-19 Weekly Report.


Weekly Report

This report includes more detailed information on testing, demographics, syndromic surveillance, and more. Updated Thursdays.

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Stella T. Gast – Obit

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Stella T. Gast, age 95, of Fertile, Minnesota, died peacefully surrounded by her family on Wednesday, December 22, 2021 at Fair Meadow Nursing Home, in Fertile.    

Stella Theresa Waale was born on January 10, 1926, the daughter of Thom and Signe (Skretvedt) Waale at their rural home near Nielsville, MN. She was the sixth of eight children with five sisters and two brothers.

She attended elementary school in Nielsville and later graduated from Climax (MN) High School in 1943. Growing up she worked for relatives and neighbors as well as a cashier in the local grocery store. All her life, Stella had a strong faith in her Lord and was baptized and confirmed at St. Petri Lutheran Church in Nielsville. She joined the U.S. Cadet Nurse Corp. in March of 1944 and graduated from Northwestern Hospital in Minneapolis in 1947. During one of her nursing rotations, she worked in a Navajo hospital at Fort Defiance, AZ. Upon graduation, when WWII was ending she worked at Bethesda Hospital in Crookston, MN.

Stella met the love of her life, Warren Gast on a blind date. They were married on April 17, 1948, at St. Petri Lutheran Church, and settled on a dairy farm near Beltrami where Warren grew up. Stella was an active member of Trinity Lutheran Church for many years, where she participated in Bible study, WELCA, Miriam Circle, and quilting. She taught Sunday school, VBS, and release time, and served in several church office positions in addition to being a delegate to conventions, and a member of Gideons Auxilary, Stella and Warren were blessed with seven children and raised them on the farm where they continued to live until moving into Beltrami in 1981. Over the years, she enjoyed many family activities, her travels with Warren, singing, reading, softball games, watching birds, growing flowers, quilting, and studying the bible.

Warren passed away in 1997. Stella continued to live in her home in Beltrami until moving to an apartment in Ada, MN, in 2003. In August of 2016, she moved to Fair Meadow Nursing Home in Fertile, where she has resided since.

Stella is survived by her children, Susan (Greg) Holmvik, Ada, MN, Sandra (Jon) Veile, Hope, ND, Brad (Magali) Gast, Belo Horizonte, Brazil, Bruce (Mary) Gast, East Grand Forks, MN, Randy (Jo) Gast, East Grand Forks, MN, and Mike Gast, Grygla, MN, 22 grandchildren, 36 great-grandchildren, and one great great-grandchild. Also, surviving are her sister Lorraine Knutson of Glenwood, MN, and many nieces and nephews and extended family.

She was preceded in death by her parents, husband, Warren, son, Harold, daughter-in-law, Darlene Gast, her siblings, Doris Tuseth, Gladys Sistad, Alice Sistad, Ina Braaten, Ole Waale, Hans Waale, and a great-grandson, Beckett Warren Gast.

Funeral Service: 11:00 AM Tuesday, December 28, 2021, at Trinity Lutheran Church, Beltrami, MN.

Interment: Fairview Cemetery, rural Beltrami, MN.

Due to COVID 19 concerns, masks are required at the visitation and funeral.

Please view our guestbook and share condolences online for the family.

To send a flower arrangement or to plant trees in memory of Stella T. Gast, please click here to visit our Sympathy Store.

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Marvin Virgil Reierson – Obit

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Marvin Virgil Reierson, 83, of Federal Dam, MN, passed away Sunday morning, December 26, 2021, in Sanford Bemidji Medical Center, Bemidji, MN, with family at his side. His son, Craig, passed away on December 22nd, and memorial services for both will be held together next spring with information to be released at that time. The Stenshoel-Houske Funeral Home is assisting with funeral arrangements.

Online registry and messages of condolence may be made at www.stenshoelhouske.com

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RIVERVIEW HEALTH OFFERING VACCINATION CLINICS THIS WEEK

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RiverView Health in Crookston will hold the following vaccination clinics this week:

  • Wednesday, December 29: Pfizer Vaccination Clinic for people 12 and older and an Influenza Vaccination Clinic, 9 am-4:30 pm.
  • Thursday, December 30: Moderna Vaccination Clinic for people 18 and older and an Influenza Vaccination Clinic, 9 am-3 pm.
  • Thursday, December 30: Pfizer Vaccination Clinic for children ages 5-11 and an Influenza Vaccination Clinic, 3-4:30 pm.

As a reminder, 16 and 17-year-olds are now eligible for a COVID booster. You can get a COVID vaccination and an influenza vaccination at the same appointment. Call 281.9595 to schedule a vaccination.

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GRAND FORKS FIRE DEPARTMENT RESPONDS TO ATTIC FIRE SUNDAY

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On Sunday, December 26, 2021, at approximately 2:26 PM, the Grand Forks Fire Department responded to 1716 1st Ave N for a report of smoke in the attic area. First arriving crews found light smoke coming from the roof vents. Crews entered the residence and gained access to the attic. Moderate smoke was encountered, and smoldering insulation was found. The cause of the fire was electrical in nature. Crews spent about 2 hours performing salvage and overhaul operations in the attic area.

The Grand Forks Fire Department responded with 1 command vehicle, 5 fire engines, and 1 ladder truck. Also assisting on the scene were the Grand Forks Police Department and Altru Ambulance.

The Grand Forks Fire Department would like to remind homeowners not to overload electrical circuits and have working smoke detectors on every level of your home.

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Retail holiday sales jump 8.5% compared to 2020, with big online gains

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According to a report published Sunday by the credit card company Mastercard, retail sales during the holiday season jumped 8.5% compared with 2020  E-commerce sales were up 11% in 2021 for the holiday season running from Nov. 1 to Dec. 24 compared to the previous year, and online sales were up a massive 61% from 2019, before the COVID-19 pandemic led to a historic increase in shopping online.  Online shopping made up 20.9% of all retail sales in 2021, up from just 14.6% in 2019 while the e-commerce boom rages, according to the report.

Steve Sadove, senior adviser for Mastercard, said in a statement that the growth in holiday sales happened early because of “conversations surrounding supply chain and labor supply issues.  Consumers splurged throughout the season, with apparel and department stores experiencing strong growth as shoppers sought to put their best-dressed foot forward.”

The Mastercard report noted that jewelry sales increased 32% percent in 2021 from 2020, and are up 26.2% compared to 2019. Apparel sales are up 47.3% in 2021 compared to 2020, and up 29% compared to 2019.

Editorial credit: Sonpichit Salangsing / Shutterstock.com

Dr. Fauci warns Omicron cases may get ‘much higher’ as more flights are canceled over the Christmas weekend

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On Sunday, Dr. Anthony Fauci warned that cases of the COVID-19 Omicron variant are likely to climb “much higher” as the variant wreaked havoc on holiday traveling, with 2,271 flights cancelled as of Sunday.  Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, told ABC New’s This Week that  “every day it (Omicron cases) goes up. The last weekly average was about 150,000, and it will likely go much higher.”  As of Sunday, 71,044 people nationwide had been hospitalized with COVID-19. New York on Sunday reported 36,454 new COVID-19 cases, down from a record 44,431 on Friday.

Delta canceled 212 flights, JetBlue 195, American Airlines 158 and United 115 as the major airlines cited staff shortages due to COVID-19 outbreaks. A JetBlue spokesman told CNBC that the airline came into the holiday with is highest staffing levels since the beginning of the pandemic but was still forced to cancel flights amid the Omicron surge.

Fauci on Sunday urged Americans not to “get complacent” despite studies showing Omicron appears to be less severe in terms of causing hospitalizations, noting that a high volume of new infections “might override a real diminution in severity. If you have many, many, many more people with a less level of severity, that might kind of neutralize the positive effect of having less severity when you have so many more people. And we’re particularly worried about those who are in that unvaccinated class … those are the most vulnerable ones when you have a virus that is extraordinarily effective in getting to people.”

Editorial credit: Viktor Gladkov / Shutterstock.com