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CEO Salaries Were on the Rise. Then Came COVID-19
September 9, 2020 Volume 16, Number 34 CEO salaries were on the rise. Then came COVID-19. The agriculture industry was able to wrap up its annual early-year blitz of meetings and conventions before the onset of the coronavirus led to months-long event cancellations, but with next year’s crop of meetings in jeopardy, organizations are taking a nervous look at their balance sheets — including what they pay their CEOs. “A key driver for a lot of organizations is going to be how are they now going to measure success?” asked Bob Skelton, the chief administrative officer at the American Society of Association Executives. Financial indicators have been an easy metric to follow in recent years; an organization with good cash flow generally means a CEO receives a healthy bonus or raise. In fact, Skelton said a 5% bump in pay had become standard for association executives across many different sectors. Now, with the lost revenue of canceled events, one area where there might be some savings is in payroll, specifically in the compensation of their top executives. The numbers reported in this year’s Agri-Pulse CEO salary report just might represent a peak of sorts, and the financial hit of COVID-19 could deal a blow to organizations that will require years of recovery. “The whole landscape right now is murky, and there’s going to be changes,” Skelton said. “We’re not going to know all the details about those changes for another year, but things are definitely going to look different.” www.Agri-Pulse.com 1 But prior to COVID-19, CEO salaries were on a predictable upward trajectory. -
Northern Sights Newsletter
Northern Sights Newsletter North Dakota Vol. 30 Issue 4 August 2018 Optometric Association President’s Message ~ Dr. Darin Johnson 921 South 9th Street, Ste. 120 Bismarck, ND 58504 Phone: 701-258-6766 Wow, summer is Secondly, we are working on the health Fax: 701-258-9005 flying by. I hope eve- care trust. This could be a great option for E-mail: [email protected] ryone has had the our members to have a potential cost saving Website: www.ndeyecare.com opportunity to get out alternative for reliable health insurance. and enjoy the beauti- Nancy has been working hard to make sure 2018 NDOA OFFICERS ful North Dakota we can offer this benefit, and keep it afforda- Dr. Darin Johnson weather. I feel as if ble for our members and their employees. time is slipping by, President Lastly, I am working on a more consistent and I have not accom- 1525 31st Ave. SW, Ste. E and repeatable sponsorship form. There is plished much for the Minot, ND 58701 some stress about our questionable future of NDOA this summer, 701-857-6050 sponsorship, and support from members in but we have many irons in the fire. We [email protected] our industry. It is our obligation as optome- would like to say thank you to our members trists to make sure we recognize our spon- Dr. Nate Shilman who were able to make the NDOA spon- sors, and thank them for their continued sup- President Elect sored golf outing in Bismarck. It was a suc- port of the NDOA. Please speak to all your 2273 3rd Ave West cess as far as the number of attendees, and Dickinson, ND 58601 vendors, and always mention how much we we always have great sponsorship for this 701-225-7886 appreciate their continued support and en- event. -
Legislative Council Joint Meeting with the Correctional Facility Review Committee
NORTH DAKOTA LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL Minutes of the LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL JOINT MEETING WITH THE CORRECTIONAL FACILITY REVIEW COMMITTEE Teleconference Meeting Thursday, September 6, 2007 Prairie Room, State Capitol Bismarck, North Dakota Representative Al Carlson, Chairman, called the the Legislative Council staff received proposals from meeting to order at 8:30 a.m. seven companies: Members present: Representatives Al Carlson, 1. Syscon Justice Systems, Inc., Folsom, Rick Berg, Merle Boucher, Jeff Delzer, Shirley Meyer, California. Phillip Mueller, Chet Pollert, Bob Skarphol; Senators 2. The Durrant Group, Inc., Denver, Colorado. Dick Dever, Tim Flakoll, Ray Holmberg, David 3. Foss Architecture and Interiors, Ltd., Fargo, O'Connell, Larry J. Robinson, Bob Stenehjem, Rich North Dakota. Wardner 4. KMD Justice, San Francisco, California. Members absent: Representative Lee Kaldor; 5. Criminal Justice Institute, Inc., Middletown, Senator Joel C. Heitkamp Connecticut. Others present: Representatives Ralph Metcalf, 6. EAPC, Bismarck, North Dakota. Alon Wieland, Senator Tony Grindberg; Correctional 7. HDR Architecture, Inc., Chicago, Illinois, in Facility Review Committee association with Ritterbush-Ellig-Hulsing, PC, Jay E. Buringrud, Jim W. Smith; Legislative Bismarck, North Dakota. Council, Bismarck Representative Pollert said the Correctional Facility See attached appendix for additional persons Review Committee, based on presentations from all present. seven companies at its August 21, 2007, meeting, It was moved by Senator Stenehjem, seconded selected the following three companies in priority by Senator Wardner, and carried on a voice vote order: to dispense with the reading of the minutes of the 1. Criminal Justice Institute, Inc. - Criminal June 6, 2007, meeting and to approve the minutes Justice Institute, Inc., is a private not-for- as distributed. -
Party Ballot
GENERAL ELECTION BALLOT NOVEMBER 6, 2018 A STATE OF NORTH DAKOTAB CASS COUNTY C To vote for the candidate of your choice, you must darken the oval ( R ) next to the name of State Senator State Representative that candidate. District 45 District 27 Vote for no more than ONE name Vote for no more than TWO names To vote for a person whose name is not printed on the ballot, you must darken the oval ( R ) next to the blank line provided and write that Ronald Sorvaag Jon Kitzman person's name on the blank line. Republican Party Democratic-NPL Party PARTY BALLOT Danielle Pinnick Thomas Beadle Democratic-NPL Party Republican Party United States Senator Randy G Boehning Vote for no more than ONE name Republican Party Heidi Heitkamp State Representative Ruth Buffalo Democratic-NPL Party District 11 Democratic-NPL Party Kevin Cramer Vote for no more than TWO names Republican Party Gretchen Dobervich Democratic-NPL Party Representative in Congress Kathy Jorgenson State Representative Vote for no more than ONE name Republican Party District 41 Mac Schneider Ron Guggisberg Vote for no more than TWO names Democratic-NPL Party Democratic-NPL Party Kelly Armstrong Bridget Ertelt Michelle Strinden Republican Party Republican Party Republican Party Charles Tuttle Pamela Anderson independent nomination Democratic-NPL Party Al Carlson Republican Party State Senator State Representative Brandon Medenwald District 11 District 13 Democratic-NPL Party Vote for no more than ONE name Vote for no more than TWO names Tim Mathern Austen Schauer Democratic-NPL Party -
Legislative Redistricting Committee
NORTH DAKOTA LEGISLATIVE MANAGEMENT Minutes of the LEGISLATIVE REDISTRICTING COMMITTEE Tuesday and Wednesday, October 11-12, 2011 Roughrider Room, State Capitol Bismarck, North Dakota Senator Ray Holmberg, Chairman, called the a corridor between District 8 and District 47, and meeting to order at 9:00 a.m. finally ends up at the interstate bridge over the Members present: Senators Ray Holmberg, Missouri River. He said the plan supported by the Randel Christmann, Dwight Cook, Tony Grindberg, District 47 legislators derives its District 47 Jerry Klein, Stanley W. Lyson, Ryan M. Taylor, John contribution to the new district from the neighboring Warner; Representatives Larry Bellew, Bill Devlin, precinct across Highway 83 next to the main body of Richard Holman, Nancy Johnson, Jim Kasper, Jerry the new district. Senator Kilzer provided written Kelsh, David Monson, Mike Nathe testimony (Appendix B). Others present: See Appendix A Chairman Holmberg called on Representative It was moved by Representative Kasper, Klemin for comments regarding the Bismarck area seconded by Representative Devlin, and carried proposals. Representative Klemin said revised on a voice vote that the minutes of the template A is complex and complicated, whereas the September 27, 2011, meeting be approved as plan presented by the District 47 legislators is much distributed. simpler. He said the plan takes all of the 4,500 people At the request of Chairman Holmberg, District 47 must lose from one area. He said some Representative Nathe discussed changes made to the refinement to the plan would be necessary in the Burleigh County area in revised template A (PDF map southeastern part of District 47 in the Winnipeg Drive or Google Earth image). -
MCF CONTRIBUTIONS JULY 1 - DECEMBER 31, 2016 Name State Candidate Amount U.S
MCF CONTRIBUTIONS JULY 1 - DECEMBER 31, 2016 Name State Candidate Amount U.S. House Robert Aderholt for Congress AL Rep. Robert Aderholt $2,000 ALABAMA TOTAL U.S. House Crawford for Congress AR Rep. Rick Crawford $1,500 Womack for Cogress Committee AR Rep. Stephen Womack $500 ARKANSAS TOTAL U.S. House Kyrsten Sinema for Congress AZ Rep. Kyrtsen Sinema $500 ARIZONA TOTAL U.S. House Denham for Congress CA Rep. Jeff Denham $1,500 Garamendi for Congress CA Rep. John Garamendi $500 Kevin McCarthy for Congress CA Rep. Kevin McCarthy $1,000 Valadao for Congress CA Rep. David Valadao $1,500 U.S. House Leadership Majority Committee PAC--Mc PAC CA Rep. Kevin McCarthy $5,000 State Assembly Adam Gray for Assembly 2016 CA Assm. Adam Gray $1,500 Catharine Baker for Assembly 2016 CA Assm. Catharine Baker $2,500 Cecilia Aguiar-Curry for Assembly 2016 CA Assm. Cecilia Aguiar-Curry $2,000 Chad Mayes for Assembly 2016 CA Assm. Chad Mayes $2,000 James Gallagher for Assembly 2016 CA Assm. James Gallagher $1,500 Patterson for Assembly 2016 CA Assm. James Patterson $2,000 Jay Obernolte for Assembly 2016 CA Assm. Jay Obernolte $1,500 Jim Cooper for Assembly 2016 CA Assm. Jim Cooper $1,500 Jimmy Gomez for Assembly 2016 CA Assm. Jimmy Gomez $1,500 Dr. Joaquin Arambola for Assembly 2016 CA Assm. Joaquin Arambula $1,500 Ken Cooley for Assembly 2016 CA Assm. Ken Cooley $1,500 Miguel Santiago for Assembly 2016 CA Assm. Miguel Santiago $1,500 Rudy Salas for Assembly 2016 CA Assm. -
Envision 2030 Paths Forward North Dakota University System
Envision 2030 Paths Forward North Dakota University System ENVISION 2030 2 Table of Contents Executive Summary ............................................................................................... 3 Introduction ............................................................................................................. 9 Context and Drivers of Change............................................................................... 13 State Board of Higher Education Vision ................................................................ 15 List of Priorities ..................................................................................................... 26 Appendix A: Additional Recommendations from Advisory Groups ..................... 29 Appendix B: Additional Technology, Research & Workforce Recommendations 32 Appendix C: Student Feedback .............................................................................. 34 Appendix D: Faculty/Staff Feedback...................................................................... 37 Appendix E: Legislative Feedback ......................................................................... 41 Appendix F: Acknowledgements ............................................................................ 44 Timeline .................................................................................................................. 46 References .............................................................................................................. 47 ENVISION 2030 3 Executive Summary -
Biennial Report 2011 - 2013
North Dakota Department of Agriculture Biennial Report 2011 - 2013 Promoting a healthy economy, environment and social climate for North Dakota agriculture and the rural community. Doug Goehring, Commissioner Contents A Message from the Commissioner ii Mission Statement iii Organizational Chart iv Administration 1 The 2011-13 Biennium: A Timeline 4 Administrative Services 21 Marketing & Information 23 Animal Health 26 Livestock Services 29 Pesticide & Fertilizer 32 Plant Industries 34 State Fair 37 Funding & Expenditures 38 A Message from the Commissioner My Fellow North Dakotans, All North Dakota can take pride in the achievements and contributions of the state’s 31,000 family farm- ers and ranchers, who have maintained their reputation as some of the best producers in the world. Their efforts have made our state the national leader in more than a dozen important commodities, including spring wheat, durum, barley, sunflowers, canola, dry edible peas and beans, oats, flax, honey and more. North Dakota is now among the top 10 corn and soybean producing states. They have done this despite less than optimal growing conditions. Too much moisture in some parts of the state and severe drought in others significantly reduced yields for many producers and prevented the planting of hundreds of thousands of acres. Plant diseases, insects and other plant pests caused further losses. Yet our farmers and ranchers continued to provide safe and abundant food, fiber and fuel for our state, our nation and the world. The staff of the North Dakota Department of Agriculture is proud to have helped our producers meet these challenges. The Pesticide and Fertilizer Division obtained federal registrations and exemptions to get producers the pesticides needed to protect crops and livestock. -
Quarterly Cannabis Report
News April 22, 2021 Quarterly Cannabis Report The 117th Congress is shaping up to be the year for cannabis reform. As of April 2021, 47 states, four U.S. territories and the District of Columbia have legalized medical cannabis, recreational cannabis or both. Many of these efforts can be contributed to Steve Fox, a true pioneer of the legalization movement. Fox, managing partner of VS Strategies, and godfather of the industry, paved the path for nationwide legalization efforts and was instrumental in cannabis reform throughout the country for decades. He was one of the first to politically advocate on behalf of medical and recreational cannabis legalization, advance decriminalization measures and promote reform and social justice. As an educator and leader, Fox will be remembered for his wisdom, knowledge and kindness, and his voice, perspective and presence will be dearly missed. VS Strategies welcome the celebration of Fox’s life through the sharing of thoughts and memories, and asks for respect and privacy for his family, friends and co-workers who are still reeling from this loss. VS Strategies also started a GoFundMe page to support Fox’s wife and daughters as they navigate their way through this extremely difficult time— https://www.gofundme.com/f/support-the-family-of-steve-fox. FEDERAL CANNABIS PROPOSALS The SAFE Banking Act: On March 18, Rep. Ed Perlmutter (D-CO) reintroduced the Secure and Fair Enforcement (SAFE) Banking Act. H.R.1996 that creates a safe harbor for financial institutions to provide traditional banking services to cannabis and cannabis-related businesses in states that have legalized the drug and allows cannabis and cannabis- related businesses to access traditional banking services like lines of credit, loans and wealth management. -
Citizen Initiatives Teacher Training Gas Taxes
DEFENDING AGAINST SECURITY BREACHES PAGE 5 March 2015 Citizen Initiatives Teacher Training Gas Taxes AmericA’s innovAtors believe in nuclear energy’s future. DR. LESLIE DEWAN technology innovAtor Forbes 30 under 30 I’m developing innovative technology that takes used nuclear fuel and generates electricity to power our future and protect the environment. America’s innovators are discovering advanced nuclear energy supplies nearly one-fifth nuclear energy technologies to smartly and of our electricity. in a recent poll, 85% of safely meet our growing electricity needs Americans believe nuclear energy should play while preventing greenhouse gases. the same or greater future role. bill gates and Jose reyes are also advancing nuclear energy options that are scalable and incorporate new safety approaches. these designs will power future generations and solve global challenges, such as water desalination. Get the facts at nei.org/future #futureofenergy CLIENT: NEI (Nuclear Energy Institute) PUB: State Legislatures Magazine RUN DATE: February SIZE: 7.5” x 9.875” Full Page VER.: Future/Leslie - Full Page Ad 4CP: Executive Director MARCH 2015 VOL. 41 NO. 3 | CONTENTS William T. Pound Director of Communications Karen Hansen Editor Julie Lays STATE LEGISLATURES Contributing Editors Jane Carroll Andrade Mary Winter NCSL’s national magazine of policy and politics Web Editors Edward P. Smith Mark Wolf Copy Editor Leann Stelzer Advertising Sales FEATURES DEPARTMENTS Manager LeAnn Hoff (303) 364-7700 Contributors 14 A LACK OF INITIATIVE 4 SHORT TAKES ON -
2013 Senate Education Sb 2032
2013 SENATE EDUCATION SB 2032 2013 SENATE STANDING COMMITIEE MINUTES Senate Education Committee Missouri River Room, State Capitol SB 2032 1-14-13 17129 D Conference Committee Committee Clerk Signature Explanation or reason for introduction Relating to a performance and accountability report by the state board of higher education. Minutes: stimony Attached Chairman Flakoll: Opened the hearing on SB 2032 John Haller, Interim VCAA for NDUS: I wish to testify in support of SB 2032. (See attachment #1 for written testimony) Chairman Flakoll: Any questions? These could be captured now with the exception of D. John Haller, Interim VCAA for NDUS: We are looking for something more user friendly. Chairman Flakoll: When would this normally be available? John Haller, Interim VCAA for NDUS: Our intent is to have this available around this time. We are setting up a work group. Senator Heckaman: Does this move itself into the financial part the institution receives according to their accountability? John Haller, Interim VCAA for NDUS: We are working on a plan to develop this and we will have it available as we approach the next year. Chairman Flakoll: One of the gripes I have about higher education data is that it is often times lists a student as a failure if the student transfers to a different environment. How will you list the data if the student goes to DSU in year one and transfers to Minot State for year two? Is that going to be deleterious to the data from DSU even though they are in the same system? John Haller, Interim VCAA for NDUS: We do not currently accommodate for what you said. -
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1'_I.IIIII~'I_.".I"""'&.IIIIDI •• ~~,~ The Sargent County Teller ~~ __ ~ November9,2018·Page5 Council: Chri s brought up asking about ~", -: a food truck that could be parked in town. PUBLIC NOTICES They would have to have all the licenses and permits for be a food truck as a business. ELECTION RESULTS... CONTINUED FROM FRONT PAGE A public notice is information informing They would Heed to find a location to park citizens of government activities that may it also. cent). aifecr the citizens' everyday lives. Public Congress. Armstrong received 60.2 that 'only a citizen' of the United percent) in Sargent County, and Sargent County, 1,255 votes were Auditor Report: Jessica Reported. notices have heen printed in local news- percent of the statewide vote. with The role of Tax Commission- States is a qualified elector, instead Sargent County Emergency Management 811 Sargent County votes in fa- cast in favor (64.52 percent), and papers, the trusted sources for community 192,733 votes in his favor. Dem- by er went to Republican Incumbent of the current provision that states vor (40.98 percent). Percentage 690 (35.48 percent) votes were information, for more than 200 years. (MHMP) was approved Linda/Chris all ayes. Motion passed. The council also ocratic candidate Mac Schneider Ryan Rauschenberger. Sargent 'every citizen' of the United States wise, results were almost exactly cast in against the measure. State- North Dakota newspapers also post public created a Gwinner resolution for Sargent received 113,89 L votes statewide, County voters went in a differ- is a qualified elector," was passed.