Grain Storage Bags Saving Farmers Time, Money This Harvest

Though they may look like snowdrifts that somehow survived into the summer, the humongous white plastic bags that are appear on the southwest North Dakota landscape during harvest are full of very valuable commodities.

The 300- to 500-foot grain storage devices, which can hold anywhere from 12,000 to 34,000 bushels of wheat, are being used more than ever by area farmers who want cheaper and easier methods of storing their product once it’s off the field.

“There’s no way in the world I could farm that many acres without doing the bagging,” said Craig Fisher, who farms around 17,000 acres near Richardton and sells grain bagging machines through his business, Antelope Farm Supply.

Fisher started using grain bags in 2010 and jokes that a couple years later he was roped into selling them for Loftness, a Hector, Minn.-based company that builds the grain bagging machines.

Fisher said his sales doubled from 2014 to 2015 and have gone up another 25 percent this year.

He said many farmers are now using the bags in fields they’re harvesting, which cut down on truck transport.

“There’s always that lull when farmers quit hauling and they’ve got to keep grinding,” Fisher said. “Those bags really give you that flexibility, if you can manage the labor to do it.”

Keith Witte, who farms throughout central Hettinger County, has been using grain bags instead of adding extra bin space for the past three years. The Regent farmer said he has been impressed with the bags’ durability and the amount of money he has saved.

He has filled eight 12,000-bushel bags so far this summer and plans to fill three to four more.

“It does save me more, short-term,” Witte said. “Bins are long term and would be wonderful to have. But at the price, it’s not as feasible as this.”

Fisher said he sells three different bags, a 12-by-500-foot bag that holds 34,000 bushels of grain, a 10-by-500-footer that holds 22,000 bushels, and a 10-by-300-footer that hold 13,000 bushels. The smallest bag is the most common, he said.

Ben Hetzel, manager of Southwest Grain in Lemmon, S.D., said his elevator has been using the bags the past four years to help manage the volume of grain it takes in during harvest.

Because Lemmon is not on a major rail line and only has around 1 million bushels of storage capacity in bins, it was often faced with turning producers away during harvest after its bins filled up.

Since the elevator started using grain bags, however, Hetzel said it has been able to add about another 1 million bushels in storage capacity through their use of the 500-foot bags.

“Not having a lot of big space to hold grain for a few months, we’ve relied heavily on that to get us through harvest,” he said.

This year, the elevator has put around 700,000 bushels of grain in bags, and has used them as transitional storage beginning with winter wheat in early harvest. Hetzel said once bin storage space is cleared, they transfer the grain out of the bags. Once that happens, more grain will come in. That product is then put in bags and the process starts over.

“In order to do what we’ve done, we’d have really needed about a million bushels of space (in bins),” he said. “Even if you go cheap, that’s a $3 million-plus project. We might have total right now of 10 percent of that invested in this, and over 50 percent of that is something you can recoup your investment out of it.”

Hetzel said while using the bags has been profitable for his cooperative, the tool has been divisive among producers.

“The guys who hate them had a bad experience and won’t go there again,” he said.

Fisher and Hetzel said some farmers were scared off the bags because they aren’t impervious to large hail. Thunderstorms that ripped through the Mott and Regent area this summer brought large jagged hail and poked hundreds of holes in grain bags owned by farmer Alan Honeyman.

Hetzel said that also happened in Lemmon and “created a little nightmare,” though the bags still served their purpose.

Witte said the only issues he has had is the bags can attract wildlife if holes are poked in them.

“You have to do a great job of cleaning up any spills or anything around the bag. Don’t let the wildlife find it as a food source, or you’re out of luck. They’ll eat it,” he said with a laugh. “If a pheasant starts to poke on it, they’ll come back.”

Fisher said the bags are not supposed to be a long-term storage solution like grain bins. He suggests keeping grain in the bags for, at most, two years.

“We’ve had luck with them, but we empty them out in a timely fashion,” he said.

‘Critical’ Witness in DSU Foundation Case to Plead Fifth Amendment

A key witness in the state’s case against the Dickinson State University Foundation is invoking his Fifth Amendment right by refusing to testify. Parrell Grossman, attorney with the North Dakota Attorney General’s Office told Southwest District Judge William Herauf.

Grossman, representing the state Thursday during a request for summary judgement hearing, said the “very critical” witness “has a lot of key information” and could incriminate himself through testimony. However, he did not name him.

The announcement caught Judge Herauf off guard, and he expressed surprise at the news.

“He knows more about anything that went on here than anyone else,” Grossman added. “He’s certainly entitled to do that to the extent that what he might say could result in criminal charges.”

Grossman added there are other witnesses beyond the man invoking the Fifth Amendment who have also given the state “some resistance” in request for testimony.

The announcement came after Herauf denied a motion for summary judgement requested by First International Bank and Trust of Watford City, an intervener in the case, regarding the validity and priority of debts owed to it by the DSU Foundation.

Herauf’s denial pushed all further arguments in the case to a scheduled two-day hearing Oct. 31 and Nov. 1, though Jon Brakke — the attorney for First International Bank and Trust — expressed concern. Grossman agreed that it wouldn’t be enough time for Herauf to sufficiently hear the entire case and that it could require more than a week.

The judge agreed and said the hearings will stretch out as long as they need to.

Herauf said he has found the case against the DSU Foundation to be entirely unique in North Dakota case law, as there are no true precedents.

“I’ve spent some sleepless nights on this and I’ve spent many hours reading the statutes,” Herauf said.

Herauf said while he wants the case to have an amicable conclusion in which both the defendants, plaintiffs and intervening parties can all reach reasonable outcomes, he’s doubtful that’ll happen.

“One side or the other is not going to be happy with how this comes out. That’s a concern I have,” he said.

He also expressed concern for the DSU Foundation donors, many of whose money cannot be accounted for by either the state-appointed receiver or Brady Martz accountants, saying they trusted their money to the foundation without any real ability to protect themselves.

“Then the DSU Foundation did a whole bunch of stuff that didn’t work out … and now we have this problem.”

DSU and Roughrider Commission Working to Keep Fourth Fireworks Display Campus

Despite many Roughrider Days events moving to the new Stark County Fairgrounds south of Dickinson next summer, Fatty Heinz wanted to make sure the Fourth of July fireworks display remained in town.

So did Dickinson State University President Tom Mitzel.

For the past few weeks, DSU and the Roughrider Commission have been working at finding a way to keep the display on the university’s campus.

The fireworks have long been set off at the rodeo grounds. But that’s no longer possible with the rodeo moving to the new fairgrounds and the former arena transitioning to the site of the Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library.

“We wanted to keep it centrally located, in the town,” said Heinz, the Roughrider Commission’s fireworks committee chair. “It’s more easier for people.”

Heinz said the Roughrider Commission is required by law to be about 420 feet away from the nearest building when shooting their fireworks.

He said it’s likely the fireworks committee will set up on the DSU football practice field next Fourth of July, as it’s the most open place on campus and would keep the display relatively close to where people are used to watch it at.

“I’m pumped up about Dr. Mitzel helping us keep the fireworks in town,” Heinz said in a press release. “I cannot express how good this is for the city of Dickinson. We’re very thankful to have had such a great working relationship with DSU and we hope that continues.”

Mitzel added that DSU is “more than excited to continue our partnership” with the Roughrider Commission.

Heinz, who is also the chair of the Roughrider Commission’s carnival committee, said a location for the carnival is still being discussed and could have a location soon. The carnival has also most recently been held near the old rodeo arena.

Heinz said he’s like for the carnival to remain on DSU’s campus as well, since he understands most carnival-goers would rather stay in town then drive to the fairgrounds. However, he said the Roughrider Days concert will move to the new arena and grandstands at the fairgrounds.

Unapologetic Toby Keith Heads to 4 Bears With Brash New Single

NEW TOWN — Toby Keith said despite the recent trend to mix more hip-hop flavor into country music, he’s staying true to the roots that have earned him 20 No. 1 singles during a 25-year career.

One the most decorated country musicians this century said he’s concerned about the direction his genre is heading, especially when it comes to music that’s being played on the radio.

“I just don’t know if the radio stations will still play country music anymore,” he said. “Real country and real rock ‘n’ roll is kinda dead. Everything’s got a little more hip-hop feel to it, and very few records get made that don’t have a little hip-hop in them of any kind.”

The 55-year-old “Courtesy of the Red, White, & Blue” singer will feature his more traditional, unapologetic brand of country music at 8 p.m. Friday when he takes the stage to open the 4 Bears Casino & Lodge’s $47 million renovated concert venue near New Town.

The man behind hits like “Red Solo Cup,” “How Do You Like Me Now?” and “American Soldier” was brought back to 4 Bears because he was the first national act to perform at the venue when it originally opened in 2000, 4 Bears general manager Patrick Packineau said. After that appearance, Keith reeled off 10 straight No. 1 hit singles and three multiplatinum albums over the next four years.

“His career has definitely grown since then and we have also,” Packineau said. “It’s kinda unique that he was available and took a show on of this size, because he’s only doing the big arenas. But we had some history together.”

Packineau said the venue holds 3,500 people — maybe a few more for this concert — and that Keith is bringing the same show he performs in major arenas. He said Wednesday afternoon that a handful of general admission tickets remained.

“The people who are coming are in for a big treat,” Packineau said.

Concert-goers will be treated to Keith’s latest single, “A Few More Cowboys,” which is still trying to gain traction on country radio after it was released a month ago.

He said Wednesday in a phone interview that some stations are staying away from the song because its lyrics have been deemed “too political” by some in the music industry, even though Keith said it doesn’t take political sides and features lyrics he thinks appeal to everyone.

The song opens “If the White House was in Texas, man, we’d get a straighter answer / If they’d let us smoke what we want, we’d have a lot less cancer.” Later, he sings “If we did it with a handshake, we’d save a lot of paper / That’d save a lot of trees we’re shippin’ overseas to make her.”

In the chorus, he asserts there’d be less outlaws in the world if there were a few more cowboys. “This world would be a better place to live in, with a few more cowboys,” he sings.

“Which political side of the fence is that coming from?” Keith asked. “It’s a song about what would happen if there were a few more cowboys in the world. That’s all that song says. And everybody’s gotta take it out of context. They wanna hear what they wanna hear.”

He said people can make their own determinations of what the song is about, though he noted he was unimpressed with the public’s choices in this year’s presidential election.

“I’ve told everybody it’s a dumpster fire,” Keith said with a deep chuckle. “We’ve got 300 million people in the United States and these two candidates are what we’ve got left. It’s just crazy that we can’t do a better job of picking candidates. One of them’s got a history of corruptness. The other one might as well have wrestled in the WWE.”

Keith’s outspokenness has never turned off country music crowds though. In fact, he’s still packing them in.

Friday’s concert is part of his “Interstates and Tailgates Tour and he’s coming off selling out major venues in Pittsburgh and Chicago last week.

“We’ve been selling as big as ever,” he said. “It’s neat that I’ve created myself a party crowd that comes to my deal. I don’t have to have a latest, greatest flavor-of-the-month hit.”

Keith said while he used to do around 155 concerts a year, today 60 is a hefty number. He said he will tour through October this year and then take the winter off.

Still, Keith said proud that he’s still performing in front of big crowds at nearly ever stop.

“As long as we’ve got that, you look forward to going and doing it,” he said. “If I didn’t have that fan base, I could have retired a long time ago. It ain’t about the money no more.”

Column: Time to Take Western ND Drug Crime Seriously

Over the past two months, I’ve been listening to and reporting on stories involving the rise in drug use and crime in western North Dakota — mostly here in Dickinson.

In early July, I reported that the rise in drug activity has coincided with the drop in drug prices in our area. Methamphetamine that was selling for $3,000 during the height of the Bakken oil boom is now going for $800 on the street, one of our area’s lead drug investigators says.

Meth, heroin and cocaine. It’s all out there, too. Every day.

Adding to the mix is the incredibly dangerous and deadly fentanyl, a drug so bad it has caught the attention of U.S. Sen. John Hoeven, R-N.D., and other leaders in Washington who are proposing legislation that would make it illegal for the substance to enter the United States.

Along with that, I reported about how gang members — both street gangs and biker gangs — have made their presence felt in Dickinson and the surrounding areas, and are directly tied to the rise in drug crime. The Country Boy Crips, the Hells Angels, the Sons of Silence. They’re all here in some way, shape or form.

Most of us tend not to see any of this happening. This is the activity that lurks mostly in the shadows. Still, we need to be aware that it is indeed happening.

So much that we’ve even, often regrettably, stopped considering some of it news.

Cases in Southwest District Court involving meth, heroin and cocaine were once a big deal to our newspaper. When I first took over as editor more than three years ago and in years prior to that, when those type of cases came up, we reported on them. Now, they’re mostly relegated to our daily Police Blotter section and only the bigger drug crime cases are followed into court.

There’s simply too many drug crimes taking place in our area to justify complete coverage. Plus, most of the major drug arrests get bumped up to the federal level almost immediately, making them difficult to follow from arrest to conviction. Still others plead out for jail time.

Leaders of the Southwest Narcotics Task Force and the state Bureau of Criminal Investigation say drug crime here is worse than ever, and they’re constantly faced with new challenges on how to fight it.

Earlier this month, the leaders of our area’s task force introduced themselves to the Dickinson City Commission, who listened for 15 minutes to the stories of challenges faced by our law enforcement, and how the task force’s staff can only handle the worst of the worst problems coming through our area.

They’re on track to make fewer drug arrests this year because they’re focusing primarily on the big drug deals.

That means they’re less concerned about petty drug users, and are more concerned about catching dealers — many of whom have gang ties that often reach all the way to Mexico or Canada.

The task force is concerned that even when they are able to add more staff, the problems will keep stacking up. And it’s not just them. Our local police and sheriff’s departments, state attorney’s offices, and as far up as the U.S. District Attorney’s office are all slammed with problems related to drug crimes in some way, shape or form.

Next Tuesday, many of our city and legislative leaders and several behavioral and public health professionals who deal will attend a state-sponsored Opioid Symposiums being held Tuesday in Bismarck.

It’ll be a unique venue for them to network and to learn more about how to combat the rising drug use and crime.

Whether it’s marijuana, cocaine, meth, heroin or fentanyl, the point needs to be driven home that there’s a drug culture in western North Dakota that’s here to stay. It’s growing and it’s bringing a gang culture with it. It’s time we start looking at it seriously and do something about it.