Four years ago, Mike Fisher set out to bring a handful of companies he ran together under one roof.
Today, The Fisher Group employs an estimated 250 people at a more than a dozen area businesses and has turned into a management company that has given area residents businesses they not only want but, in many ways, need.
“We want to be the best at what we do,” Fisher said. “We want to be the best in class.”
A worker for Tommy Thompson Contracting measures a 2-by-4 piece of wood Tuesday while building a home not far from the new CHI St. Joseph’s Health campus in Dickinson.
Note: This column is written as the introduction to The Dickinson Press’ annual Progress edition, which begins Sunday, Feb. 1 and continues each Sunday through March 22.
You see them every day. In supermarkets, at your job or school, as you sit down to eat, or when you drive past a construction site.
Almost everywhere you look in southwest North Dakota, people are achieving the so-called “American Dream.”
Western North Dakota, for the past five years or so, has been a place where just about anyone could get back on their feet. There are people here who were broke only a few years ago but now have thriving businesses or jobs that pay very well. Others were simply able to get out of debt after falling on hard times elsewhere.
Now, however, as we enter a time of simultaneous progress and uncertainty, there seems to be few willing to say the good times are over, even if the boom is.