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Learn to Respond to Opioid Overdoses in Free March 6 Workshops at BSU

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Bemidji State University’s Student Center for Health and Counseling is sponsoring a March 6 training session covering aspects of the nation’s current opioid addiction epidemic.

The presentation, entitled “The Opioid Crisis: Learn More About the Many Pathways to Recovery,” will be held twice — at noon in the Crying Wolf Room of BSU’s lower Hobson Memorial Union and at 7 p.m. in Hagg-Sauer Hall room 100.

The session will be led by Bemidji resident Travis Carlson, a nationally-registered emergency medical technician who has experience working in cities large and small and on Indian reservations. He currently works as an EMS Training Center Coordinator for the Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe’s Emergency Medical Services Division. He is a licensed Minnesota Peace Officer who holds numerous emergency medicine certifications and a degree in criminal justice/public safety.

The training will include ways to recognize signs and symptoms of an overdose, ways to respond to a person who has overdosed, how to administer Narcan — an FDA-approved drug used for the emergency treatment of a known or suspected opioid overdose — and information and resources on addiction and recovery.

The presentation is one of nearly two dozen scheduled this year as part of an extensive campaign by Leech Lake EMS to spread awareness of opioid addiction and treatment and to share life-saving techniques for responding to overdoses. The Bemidji Pioneer reported that in a period of one week prior to Christmas 2017, Narcan was used to save the lives of four persons who had overdosed on the Leech Lake Reservation.

Free doses of Narcan will be available for persons who attend the training sessions. Research shows that most accidental opioid overdoses occur in a home setting, the drug was developed to allow first responders, family, friends and caregivers to respond immediately to an overdose. Narcan is not a substitute for emergency medical care.

The training is sponsored by Leech Lake EMS, Indian Health Services, the Rural AIDS Action Network and Face It Together.

Calendar

March 6 – noon & 7 p.m. – “The Opioid Crisis: Learn More About the Many Pathways to Recovery,” a free clinic showing strategies for responding to persons who overdose on opioids, with resources for addressing addiction and recovery, presented by Travis Carlson, Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe Emergency Medical Services Division. Location: Crying Wolf Room, lower Hobson Memorial Union (noon session) and Hagg-Sauer Hall 100 (7 p.m. session), BSU campus. Admission: free. Information: Jay Passa, (218) 755-2080, jpassa@bemidjistate.edu

Contact
Links

Bemidji State University, located amid the lakes and forests of northern Minnesota, occupies a wooded campus along the shore of Lake Bemidji. Enrolling more than 5,100 students, Bemidji State offers more than 80 undergraduate majors and eight graduate degrees encompassing arts, sciences and select professional programs. BSU is a member of the Minnesota State system of colleges and universities and has a faculty and staff of more than 550. The university’s Shared Fundamental Values include environmental stewardship, civic engagement and international and multicultural understanding.

 

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Gallery: All-Campus Campaign Social on Feb. 15

Bemidji State Student Kristin Knudson wins EXHIBITOR Student Achievement Award

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Bemidji State University senior Kristin Knudson has received the 2018 EXHIBITOR Media Group Student Achievement Award.

“I am honored to be awarded this achievement,” Knudson said. “It’s a group of elite students that I am happy to be a part of.”

EXHIBITOR said in its announcement that the Annadale, Minn., native’s engagement in her future industry, academic performance and leadership in the classroom made her an ideal candidate for the award.

Recipients are selected by faculty in BSU’s School of Technology, Art & Design.

As this year’s recipient, Knudson receives an All-Access Passport to the EXHIBITORLIVE 2018 trade-show and corporate event marketing conference, held Feb. 25 – Mar. 1 in Las Vegas, including a $500 scholarship to help offset travel expenses; a one-year subscription to EXHIBITOR magazine; and her name added to a plaque of previous winners displayed in Bridgeman Hall.

Knudson will graduate in May with a bachelor’s degree in art and design with emphases in exhibit design and graphic design.

She already has accepted an exhibit design job with Hill and Partners, located in Weymouth, Mass. Hill and Partners work with clients to design corporate interiors and trade-show and event installations. Knudson’s position begins in June.

Bemidji State University, located amid the lakes and forests of northern Minnesota, occupies a wooded campus along the shore of Lake Bemidji. Enrolling more than 5,100 students, Bemidji State offers more than 80 undergraduate majors and eight graduate degrees encompassing arts, sciences and select professional programs. BSU is a member of the Minnesota State system of colleges and universities and has a faculty and staff of more than 550. The university’s Shared Fundamental Values include environmental stewardship, civic engagement and international and multicultural understanding.

Gallery: The Pirates of Penzance Opera

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Bemidji State University’s Department of Music will bring Gilbert and Sullivan’s classic opera, “The Pirates of Penzance,” to Bemidji audiences with a modern twist beginning March 2.

The two-act comedic opera show follows a young pirate apprentice named Fredrick who is about to get his freedom after 21 long years belonging to the pirates. Inevitably, he runs into some troubles along the way.

The opera’s space theme came from Dr. Cory Renbarger, Bemidji State’s associate music professor who also directs the university’s opera theater productions.

BSU’s Andy Hafs and Student Katti Renik to be featured on “Praire Sportsman” TV series

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The work of two Bemidji State researchers will be featured on a “Prairie Sportsman” episode airing March 31 on Lakeland Public Television.

In August, BSU News featured Katti Renik’s work to analyze 30 streams and 10 beaver habitats in Minnesota’s North Shore region during the summer of 2017.

Dr. Andy Hafs, assistant professor of biology, and Katti Renik, a biology graduate student from Bridgeport, Neb., are conducting a two-year study in northeast Minnesota on the relationship between beavers and brook trout. Hafs worked as the primary investigator while Renik has led the study’s field research.

“The research is designed to determine how beavers influence the brook trout population since sometimes they conflict with each other,” Hafs said.

With more than 1,500 miles of designated trout streams in the region being studied, Renik is sampling and measuring conditions in about 80 streams and beaver ponds through next summer. The analysis will help natural resource managers determine which, if any, beaver dams need to be moved.

The cool temperatures are ideal for native brook trout that cannot tolerate temperatures warmer than 75 degrees Fahrenheit. Beaver dams can potentially impact trout streams by warming water temps and increasing sediment and erosion. But the dams also create critical habitat for waterfowl, moose, frogs and other wetland wildlife.

The episode of Prairie Sportsman featuring the BSU research follows the travels of host Bret Amundson to Sax-Zim Bog in northeast Minnesota, called the Arctic Riviera, where the Great Grey Owl and hundreds of other birds winter. In the early 1900s, there were failed attempts to drain the bog, located between Duluth and Hibbing. What remained were roads, hay fields and meadows filled with voles that owls and other raptors came to feast on. The bog now draws thousands of photographers and birders annually from across the United States and other countries.

“Prairie Sportsman” will air at 2:30 p.m. March 31 on Lakeland Public Television.

About Prairie Sportsman
“Prairie Sportsman” is produced by Pioneer Public Television with funding from the Minnesota Environment and Natural Resources Trust Fund. The series first aired on Pioneer on Feb. 25 and also is available to view online at prairiesportsman.org. It will also air on KSMQ-TV, Austin, and Twin Cities Public Television.

Prairie Sportsman celebrates Minnesota’s love of the outdoors and the hunting, fishing and recreation opportunities provided by the state’s vast resources of lakes, rivers, trails and grasslands. The program aims to encourage more people to become environmental stewards as they enjoy the natural world.

Prairie Sportsman is produced by Cindy Dorn and filmed and edited by Dylan Curfman, Tim Bakken and host Bret Amundson. The 2018 season is made possible by funding from the Minnesota Environment and Natural Resources Trust Fund, SafeBasements of Minnesota, Live Wide Open and Western Minnesota Prairie Waters Tourism.

About Pioneer Public Television
Established in 1966, Pioneer Public TV is an award-winning, viewer-supported television station dedicated to sharing local stories of the region with the world. For more information visit pioneer.org.

Bemidji State University, located amid the lakes and forests of northern Minnesota, occupies a wooded campus along the shore of Lake Bemidji. Enrolling more than 5,100 students, Bemidji State offers more than 80 undergraduate majors and eight graduate degrees encompassing arts, sciences and select professional programs. BSU is a member of the Minnesota State system of colleges and universities and has a faculty and staff of more than 550. The university’s Shared Fundamental Values include environmental stewardship, civic engagement and international and multicultural understanding.

Gallery: Facing Addiction and Recovery at March 6 Presentation on Opioids

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Bemidji State University’s Student Center for Health and Counseling sponsored a pair of March 6 training session covering aspects of the nation’s current opioid addiction epidemic.

The presentations, “The Opioid Crisis: Learn More About the Many Pathways to Recovery,” were led by Bemidji resident Travis Carlson, a nationally-registered emergency medical technician who has experience working in cities large and small and on Indian reservations. He currently works as an EMS Training Center Coordinator for the Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe’s Emergency Medical Services Division. He is a licensed Minnesota Peace Officer who holds numerous emergency medicine certifications and a degree in criminal justice/public safety.

Margot Kelsey, executive director of the Bemidji affiliate of Sioux Falls, S.D.-based Face It Together, also presented. She discussed addiction, wellness, and peer-recovery coaching. Face It Together works to helps communities solve addiction crises and works to reduce barriers between people in need and the resources that exist to support them.

Series of Activities Celebrate March as Women’s History Month

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In recognition of March as Women’s History Month, Bemidji State University is hosting a series of events featuring presentations, panel conversations and activism activities to celebrate women’s contributions to history, culture and society.

Downloadable Event Posters
Women's History Month 2018 Wikipedia Gender Gap Edit-a-Thon
We Will Not Be Quiet So You Can Remain Comfortable

All events are free and open to the public. Sponsors include BSU’s Center for Diversity, Equity & Inclusion, the gender & women studies program, BSU’s Center for Professional Development, the leadership studies program, A.C. Clark Library, American Indian Resource Center, Minnesota Council of Nonprofits and the Patty Johnson Seed Grant Fund.

Gender and women studies, the Center for Diversity, Equity & Inclusion and the A.C. Clark Library are sponsoring a Women’s History Month Celebration book display throughout the month of March.

Tuesday, March 20

5–7 p.m. — Students and community members will celebrate Women’s History Month by editing Wikipedia articles on topics surrounding women and women’s history at an event called “Wikipedia: Gender Gap.” Participants will add reputable sources to the online encyclopedia created by and for everyone. Participants should provide their own laptops. Located in A.C. Clark Library 327.

Thursday, March 22

4-6 p.m. — Dr. Rucha Ambikar, assistant professor of sociology, will give a presentation on gender and other biases in student evaluations. Located in Bridgeman Hall 100.

Saturday, March 24

8:30 a.m. – 3 p.m. —Leadership and capacity training for low-income people, people of color and women in the Bemidji area. The hands-on workshop will provide training on leadership style, public speaking skills, grant writing and fundraising techniques, and awareness of nonprofit board openings. Located in the American Indian Resource Center Gathering Room.

Wednesday, March 28

4–5 p.m. — A panel conversation featuring women from across the Bemidji State campus entitled “We Will Not Be Quiet So You Can Remain Comfortable.” The conversation will span pop culture, gender and sexuality, social justice and feminism. BSU students who attend the panel can enter a drawing for a free book. Located in the A.C. Clark Library.

Thursday, March 29

6–7 p.m. — Noted motivational and corporate speaker Tish Norman will present “Becoming Outstanding Women.” Her presentation encourages female collegians to redefine themselves with respect, humility and refinement and a positive self-image. Located in the Beaux Arts Ballroom of the upper Hobson Memorial Union.

Learn more about Tish Norman at http://metropolismanagement.com/portfolio/tish-norman/.

Contact
  • Dr. Carla Norris-Raynbird, associate professor of sociology and director of women’s studies gender studies and liberal education; (218) 755-2828, cnorrisraynbird@bemidjistate.edu
  • Dr. Brian Xiong, coordinator, Center for Diversity, Equity & Inclusion; (218) 755-3773, bxiong@bemidjistate.edu

Bemidji State University, located amid the lakes and forests of northern Minnesota, occupies a wooded campus along the shore of Lake Bemidji. Enrolling more than 5,100 students, Bemidji State offers more than 80 undergraduate majors and eight graduate degrees encompassing arts, sciences and select professional programs. BSU is a member of the Minnesota State system of colleges and universities and has a faculty and staff of more than 550. The university’s Shared Fundamental Values include environmental stewardship, civic engagement and international and multicultural understanding.


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Faculty & Staff News — March 2018

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New Hires & Transfers

  • Loren Larson has joined the Physical Plant as a stationary engineer.

Faculty & Staff News

  • Dr. Valica Boudry, associate professor of integrated media, has received a top paper award in the Communication Ethics, Activism and Social Justice Interest Group. She will be presenting her research paper, “The Inside Out: The Need for Different Journalism Ethics in Ethnojournalism,” at the Central States Communication Association conference April 5 in Milwaukee.
  • An interview with Bill Blackwell Jr., executive director of the American Indian Resource Center, was featured in the Feb. 10 issue of the Cook County Herald, and on Feb. 22 WTIP North Shore Community Radio previewed his March 8 presentation at the Social Justice Conference in Grand Marais, Minn. Listen on Soundcloud:

Bemidji State University Magazine — “Indispensable Stewards”

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Students in a 2014 Wetlands Ecology course log their research at BSU’s Hobson Memorial Forest. Students work in the garden at the Bemidji Community Food Shelf in September 2014 as part of a sociology course on social movements. Dr. Anna Carlson, assistant director of sustainability (second from left), and Erika Bailey-Johnson, director of sustainability, receive a 2017 Green Ribbon Schools Award from the U.S. Department of Education on July 19 in Washington. Aquatic biology students use nets to sample the population of species in Lake Bemidji along the BSU shore in October 2015. Students collect trash along the Lake Bemidji shoreline as part of Earth Day activities in April 2012. A student waves from BSU’s solar-powered Fossil Fuel-Free Fish House following its dedication on Jan. 28, 2017. Bemidji State has participated in the Nice Ride bike-sharing program since 2014. A student uses a kayak rented from BSU’s Outdoor Program Center to paddle Lake Bemidji in 2012. Recyclables salvaged during a 2013 student audit of trash and food waste in Hobson Union.

Forever inspired by its idyllic lakeshore setting in Minnesota’s north woods, Bemidji State University has taken a lead in environmental stewardship, education and advocacy for almost 50 years.

This story originally appeared in the Fall/Winter 2017 edition of Bemidji State University magazine. Read the entire issue online.

In 1972, amid global consciousness-raising about the fragility of Spaceship Earth, Bemidji State established one of the nation’s first bachelor’s degree programs in environmental studies.

As scientific consensus coalesced behind human-caused climate change, BSU in 1998 adopted an Environmental Policy Statement that committed it to promoting “environmental awareness, local action and global thinking.”

Nearly 20 years later, with a wellness-centered approach that stretches the term’s popular definition, the university continues to embrace sustainability as one of its fundamental values.

In a major new initiative, Bemidji State seeks to build a photovoltaic solar system on the grounds of the American Indian Center, funded by donors and grants and capable of providing about 25 percent of the building’s electricity.

“We are the indispensable stewards — not only of a university but of a precious planet,” President Faith Hensrud said in her inauguration speech on Oct. 14, 2016. “Earth’s uncertain future rests on mankind’s ability to overcome waste, destruction, intolerance and greed, and instead embrace understanding, innovation, respect, compassion and justice. This, and nothing less, is our calling.”

Expression – and recognition – of Bemidji State’s environmental commitment have taken many forms. One of the most meaningful accolades came in July, when the U.S. Department of Education presented BSU with a Green Ribbon Schools Award, bestowed on only nine colleges and universities in 2017.

In Washington to receive was Erika Bailey-Johnson, who for a decade has been the university’s most visible champion of sustainability, both on campus and in the Bemidji region. She earned her master’s degree in environmental studies from BSU in 2006 and became the first director of BSU’s Sustainability Office in 2008.

Bailey-Johnson’s position was created with funds from a student-approved Green Fee, which began at $5 a semester. Now $7.50, the fee continues to support many of the university’s environmental initiatives.

Joining Bailey-Johnson in Washington to accept the Green Ribbon was Dr. Anna Carlson, assistant sustainability director, who completed her master’s in environmental studies at BSU in 2008 and became an employee in 2014.

Beginning with this academic year, Bailey-Johnson has been spending much of her time on a grant-funded program to integrate indigenous studies with environmental studies, combining traditional American Indian cultural beliefs with sustainability. Carlson is heavily involved in the AIRC solar project and other strategies to reduce energy consumption and lower emissions of carbon dioxide and other so-called greenhouse gases.

Bailey-Johnson said she had two main duties when she became sustainability director: coordinate the Green Fee and its associated projects and promote the goals of the American College and University President’s Climate Commitment.

Then-BSU President Dr. Jon Quistgaard signed the commitment in 2008, pledging that the university would become carbon neutral by 2050. That means achieving a balance between its emissions associated with energy use and waste products and its use of renewable energy, planting of oxygen-producing trees, recycling and other steps.

Since 2006, Bemidji State has purchased 61,600 kilowatt-hours of wind energy through Otter Tail Power’s Tailwinds program, earning a Green Power Partner designation from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

BSU has continued to do more: By 2015, the university had surpassed its interim carbon-reduction goal of 2 percent, actually reducing emissions by 3 percent from a 2010 baseline.

The university has cut its energy use by nearly 44 percent since 2009 through such steps as reducing overall square footage and installation of a more efficient natural gas boiler, as well as LED lighting and a solar-transpired air collector on the roof of the lower Hobson Union that lowers energy needs by preheating air coming into the building.

Modernization of campus buildings has opened another door. For example, the total renovation of Memorial Hall, as the new home for business and accounting programs, earned BSU its first Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) certification. The transformed building which reopened in August 2015 uses 21 percent less energy and 41 percent less water than before.

If state bonding funds are secured, BSU has plans to tear down Hagg-Sauer Hall, a 47-year-old classroom building, and replace only one-third of its former space, a reduction of approximately 55,000 square foot.

As important as such initiatives are in achieving long-term goals, Bailey-Johnson especially values her role as an educator. One of her current responsibilities is to coordinate BSU’s People of the Environment course, required for all students.

“I call myself a facilitator of student ideas,” she said. “(The Green Fee) is the students’ money, so it’s really important to me that it’s spent on what they want to see happen, projects that the students want to see supported.”

One such student idea was Weigh the Waste, introduced in 2015. In cooperation with Aramark food services, students who work in the BSU Sustainability Office each semester collect and weigh food and disposable container waste in the student union.

The goal, said Jordan Lutz, a student from Fargo working on his master’s in environmental studies, is to promote awareness of food waste and guide recyclable materials out of the waste stream.

Another student effort, which emerged from the weigh-ins, is delivery of excess food to the Community Table, a soup kitchen in Bemidji. Through nine recoveries since last spring, more than 1,400 pounds of food that would not have been served at BSU has been provided to the Community Table.

“It’s one of those experiences that really lifts you up because (the soup kitchen) is very, very appreciative,” Lutz said.

The goal of avoiding food waste and helping feed the needy is an example of how BSU applies a broader definition of sustainability that encompasses not only the Earth and its resources but also people and social systems.

For Bailey-Johnson, and now for the university as a whole, a major source of inspiration has been Anishinaabe, or Ojibwe, teachings about the duty to honor and protect both Mother Earth and its inhabitants.

“(There is an) indigenous perspective of Mother Earth as one of the most important things we need to be responsible for,” she said. “… We ultimately should always look at the Earth as the foundation of everything that we do.”

The Sustainability Office hosts monthly traditional skills workshops, teaching students on various topics such as canning peaches, hand-sewing, straight-razor shaving and making Kombucha tea.

“Here, we do all kinds of things to try to reduce our footprint, to reduce waste, to reduce energy waste,” Bailey-Johnson said.

For Hensrud, accepting leadership of Bemidji State included gaining an understanding of its sustainability commitment – past, present and future.

In fall 2016, when she had  been BSU’s president for only a few months, Hensrud was encouraged to reaffirm the ACUPCC climate pledge that Quistgaard had made before her.

Insisting on due diligence, Hensrud discussed the step with her leadership and, specifically, with Karen Snorek, BSU’s vice president of finance and administration.

“I wanted to know, ‘Is this a doable thing, to really look at reducing our carbon footprint by that much in this period of time?’” Hensrud said. “One of the points Karen made is that we don’t even know the technologies that will be coming out in that time period. With today’s technologies, could we do it? Perhaps, but between now and then there are likely to be so many opportunities for innovation that we don’t even have a sense for yet, so likely this is going to be very doable.”

Additionally, she viewed Bemidji State’s progress to date and the campus community’s strong support for sustainability goals as encouraging signs.

“We had some pretty significant efforts taking place here,” Hensrud said. “The institution as a whole is behind it.”

Also crucial, she said, are the dual efforts of Bailey-Johnson and Carlson in their distinct roles, each tackling sustainability initiatives from different angles.

“With Erika’s work, in helping to integrate some of the sustainability efforts into the curriculum, and with Anna’s focus on the facilities aspect, I think we’ve got a really solid one-two punch,” Hensrud said.


Written by Bethany Wesley

Bemidji Choirs Kick Off 2018 Spring Tour March 16 in Moorhead

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Bemidji State University’s Bemidji Choir and Chamber Singers will begin their annual spring concert tour March 16 in Mankato, culminating with a March 20 home concert in Bemidji.

Download tour program

Under the direction of Dr. Dwight Jilek, assistant professor of music, the tour will include daytime performances and workshops at local high schools followed by public concerts in the evenings. The tour dates are:

  • March 16, 7:30 p.m.: St. Joseph’s Catholic Church, 218 10th St. South, Moorhead, Minn.
  • March 17, 7:30 p.m.: St. Mary’s Cathedral, 25 8th Ave. South, St. Cloud, Minn.
  • March 18, 7 p.m.: St. Olaf Catholic Church, 215 S. 8th St., Minneapolis, Minn.
  • March 19, 7:30 p.m.: St. Agnes Church, 210 Division St., Walker, Minn.
  • March 20, 7:30 p.m.: First Lutheran Church, 900 Bemidji Ave N., Bemidji, Minn.

Jilek said the choir is developing a rotation to visit multiple areas in the northern Minnesota region, and this year’s tour stops were selected from areas in which BSU has traditionally recruited music students — and where music alumni currently call home. The Walker concert is hosted by renowned costume designer Fred Rogers, who has worked with the Department of Music on both its Madrigal Dinners and Opera Theater productions.

All concerts are free of charge and open to the public. Free-will offerings will be taken at all three locations to support the choir’s planned spring 2018 international tour to the Baltics.

This year, the BSU choirs have performed in support of mental health awareness and to advocate for suicide prevention and at a Martin Luther King Jr. remembrance event on campus and as a group are preparing for their spring tour of the Baltics. The 19-song set list for this year’s tour reflects all of these activities, along with classical and sacred choral music standards.

“Part of the beauty of going on tour is that it not only provides essential professional growth for our students, but also the opportunity to put together everything you’ve worked on and present it in a program,” Jilek said. “Suicide prevention and mental health have been at the forefront of our discussions and performances all year, we have our upcoming Baltics tour, and the MLK event featured two of the more famous composers to come out of Bemidji State. It’s an opportunity to take an audience through multiple time periods and ideas and feelings and emotions, and those are some of the more rewarding and fun parts of a tour like this.”

During the tour, the BSU choirs also will make several stops at regional high schools for performances and workshops. BSU will visit Fargo North, Fargo Shanley and Fargo South high schools in North Dakota on March 15-16, and Staples-Motley High School on March 19.

Dr. Dwight Jilek

Dr. Dwight Jilek joined the Bemidji State faculty in 2016 as just the fourth director since BSU choral music programs began in 1937. He came to Bemidji from the University of North Texas, where he received the school’s 2016 Outstanding Graduate Conductor award, conducted UNT’s Concert Choir and was conducting associate with the Dallas Symphony Chorus. Jilek arrived at North Texas in 2013 after completing his master’s degree at Michigan State, and prior to that he spent six years as vocal music director at Northfield (Minn.) High School. There, he oversaw five curricular and four extracurricular choirs. Under his direction, the Northfield Concert Choir was accepted by audition to perform in the inaugural Minnesota American Choral Directors Association (ACDA) Choral Arts Finale in 2006, at the Dorian Choral Invitational and the Minnesota State ACDA Convention in 2007, and at the Minnesota Music Educators Association convention in 2008. Northfield also was a featured choir at the 2009 St. Olaf Choral Festival.

In addition to his doctorate from North Texas, Jilek has a bachelor’s degree in vocal music education from Concordia College in Moorhead, Minn., and a master’s degree in choral conducting from Michigan State University.

THE BEMIDJI CHOIR

The Bemidji Choir was founded in 1937 by Carl O. Thompson and has gained an international reputation for excellence. The choir has toured extensively throughout the United States and Europe, including performances at Carnegie Hall and in Austria, the Czech Republic, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Scotland, Switzerland and England. For nearly five decades, the choir has produced Bemidji State’s annual Madrigal Dinners.

THE CHAMBER SINGERS

The Chamber Singers is an ensemble of 17 singers chosen by audition from The Bemidji Choir. They specialize in early music from the ancient, Renaissance, Baroque, and Early Classical eras. During the fall semester, The Chamber Singers serve as the Royal Court for BSU’s annual Madrigal Dinners.

In 1996, The Chamber Singers performed in Carnegie Hall as the centerpiece of the inaugural National Madrigal Festival, and in 2002 they performed at the North Central Division Convention of the American Choral Directors Association in Des Moines, Iowa. The group returned to Carnegie Hall in April 2015 for the annual Gotham SINGS! Choral Showcase.

Contact
Links
  • The Bemidji Choir on Tour | 2018 Spring Tour Program (PDF)

Bemidji State University, located amid the lakes and forests of northern Minnesota, occupies a wooded campus along the shore of Lake Bemidji. Enrolling more than 5,100 students, Bemidji State offers more than 80 undergraduate majors and eight graduate degrees encompassing arts, sciences and select professional programs. BSU is a member of the Minnesota State system of colleges and universities and has a faculty and staff of more than 550. The university’s Shared Fundamental Values include environmental stewardship, civic engagement and international and multicultural understanding.


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Fensons share family passion at USA Curling Nationals

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FARGO—Curling runs deep in the Fenson family. Never has that been more evident than this week.
Pete Fenson, 2006 Olympic bronze medalist and one of the most decorated Americans the sport has seen, is competing alongside his oldest son, Alex Fenson, at the 2018 USA Curling National Championships in Fargo. Meanwhile, the Bemidji, Minn., family also is occupied with younger son, Graem Fenson, in action for the U.S. at the 2018 World Junior Curling Championships in Scotland.

Not that this is anything new for the Fensons.

Pete’s father, Bob Fenson, competed on the Bemidji team that won Nationals in 1979 and represented the U.S. at that year’s World Championships. Pete Fenson has won eight national titles himself, including one with his brother, Eric Fenson, whose son, Riley, recently skipped a team that included Graem Fenson to a U18 national championship at the Bemidji Curling Club.

“My dad’s curled forever,” said Alex Fenson, a 23-year-old Bemidji State University student. “My grandpa curled, and it’s just been in the family forever. They never really pressured Graem and I to play, but we thought, ‘Why not? Everybody else does, so we’ll give it a go.'”

Alex Fenson serves as the lead for the team his father skips. The rink also includes Bemidji native Mark Fenner and Chisholm, Minn., resident Shawn Rojeski.

The father-son duo first competed together at Nationals last year, forming a team prior to the 2016-17 season with their eyes on the 2018 Olympics.

“He just asked me if I wanted to play,” Alex Fenson said, “and he’s like, ‘Do you want to make a run at the Olympics?’ And at that point we had a chance to do that. So I was like, ‘Yeah, I’d love to.'”

Though they were ultimately unable to qualify for the Olympic trials, the two have enjoyed competing together during the past two seasons.

“It’s been fun,” Pete Fenson said. “It has its challenges, obviously. It’s a different dynamic having father and son on the team. It’s a work in progress. I really enjoy my time with him. It’s lots of fun that I get to do this with him, and you know, I hope he feels the same way about it.”

“Last year was the first year I started playing with him and it’s fun,” added Alex Fenson. “It’s different. There’s definitely a little bit of a different dynamic with the father-son aspect out there. But it’s good. I mean we get along pretty well. We get over it.”

Pete Fenson, 50, can see some of himself in Alex.

“He grew up in my house. I mean we talk about curling a lot,” the elder Fenson said. “What he does out there, I can see all the things we’ve talked about over the years of curling.”

Growing up in the same household with someone who has such a prominent role in curling—Pete Fenson works as an analyst for NBC Sports covering the Olympics and Curling Night in America—has given Alex Fenson an accessible figure to emulate.

“He’s been a role model for me forever,” Alex Fenson said. “I’ve grown up wanting to be like him. Curling-wise, I’ve been watching him play forever at a competitive level and be very successful. I’ve grown up wanting to do the same thing.”

Alex Fenson will complete his studies at BSU this semester and will leave with a degree in exercise science and an eye on potentially attending optometry school in the future, though that depends on how long he decides to continue curling.

In the meantime, he is relishing the chance to curl with his father this week, while also cheering on Graem Fenson from across the Atlantic.

“It’s almost like business really,” Alex Fenson said of how he and his brother support each other during tournaments. “… We’ll check up on each other and see how it’s going and send them a ‘There you go, bud. Keep it up.’ Stuff like that. Like it’s not huge communication, but when we get back home, that’s when we talk all about the event and all about the week.”

Back in Fargo, Team Fenson tried to keep its playoff hopes alive Wednesday, March 7, falling 5-4 in the afternoon session to move to 4-4 on the week with one more game to go in round-robin play. Results of the final draw Wednesday night were not available at press time.

“When we’re in the heat of battle here, we’re just trying to play great and win games,” Pete Fenson said. “Right now we’re trying to get ourselves into the playoffs still. But when I’ve had time to sit back and reflect (on) this week, it’s really been a fun time.”

Prairie Business: Northwest Minn. college offers overdose training

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BEMIDJI, Minn.—Leech Lake’s Emergency Medical Services and the addiction treatment program called Face It TOGETHER continued their efforts to prevent opioid overdoses Tuesday, March 6, with two trainings aimed at Bemidji State University students.

The hourlong events, held at the university, covered general information on addiction and services, as well as the overdose reversal drug naloxone, also known as Narcan. Students were encouraged to rethink the way they saw addiction, then taught how to use Narcan to reverse an overdose.

“(Addiction has) been classified as a disease since 1956, and 31 percent of our population still believes this is a moral choice,” said Margot Kelsey, Face It TOGETHER’s executive director. “It is not.”

Kelsey has run Face It TOGETHER’s Bemidji branch for more than a year. The nonprofit helps addicts recover by connecting them with peer coaches who are also in recovery, directing them to other resources and hosting SMART Recovery meetings.

“This is a long-term, chronic, manageable disease,” Kelsey said. “People can get well and stay well, it’s just that we don’t have any resources, or very few. The scary thing is, is that Minnesota is better than most states in the country, but we still have a huge addiction problem.”

Leech Lake EMS personnel also weighed in on the rash of opioid overdoses impacting the Bemidji area, nearby reservations and the nation. The first responders responded to an uptick in Leech Lake overdoses by holding dozens of classes throughout the state, including one January session at BSU.

“It’s not a problem, it’s an epidemic. It’s out of control,” said Leech Lake EMS Training Center Coordinator Travis Carlson. “We’re losing a lot of people from overdoses.”

But Carlson and other first responders hope that providing community members with Narcan and teaching them how to use it will reduce overdose deaths.

During the training, Carlson told the audience how to identify an opioid overdose. Generally, victims have pale skin with blue lips and fingertips, slow shallow breathing and make loud, uneven grunting noises.

The class also learned what steps to take if they find someone who has overdosed.

Kelsey and Carlson both said that some critics say that opioid-reversal drugs can enable users, but the pair takes issue with that characterization. Though naloxone is not dangerous it can cause an opioid user to go through withdrawal, something many addicts hope to avoid.

“This has become kind of an urban legend, as it were,” Kelsey said. “This is not enabling, this is saving lives. If people aren’t alive, they can’t get into recovery.”

March 19 Honors Council Lecture Explores Sexual Violence and Rape Culture

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A Bemidji State University psychology professor will explore factors leading to sexual violence as part of the university’s Honors Council Lecture Series.

Dr. Kathryn Klement, assistant professor of psychology, presents “From Virginity to Violence: How Negative Attitudes About Women’s Sexuality Uphold Rape Culture,” March 19 at 6 p.m. in Hagg-Sauer Hall 107.

“In trying to explain causal factors of sexual violence, previous research has demonstrated that rape-supportive beliefs can be a risk factor for committing sexual assault,” Klement said. “Other explanations include rape myth acceptance, rape scripts and institutionalized acceptance.”

“In different ways... cultures both punish women who deviate from gender and sexual role expectations, and in some cases the punishment takes the form of sexual violence." —Dr. Kathryn KlementKlement will offer a broader explanation: the culture of expecting and accepting sexual violence against women, known as a “rape culture,” is the result of negative attitudes about women’s sexuality. Her presentation will emphasize two groups of attitudes that provide a foundation for purity culture — a culture that values abstinence until marriage and conservative proscription of women’s sexuality — and for rape culture.

“In different ways, these two cultures both punish women who deviate from gender and sexual role expectations, and in some cases, the punishment takes the form of sexual violence,” Klement said.

Her presentation will include evidence from several studies showing how societal attitudes support both purity and rape culture, and how those cultures relate to each other.

The Honors Council Lecture Series provides a forum for BSU faculty to share their expertise and the results of their research with the Bemidji community. Lectures are open to everyone free of charge.

About Kathryn Klement

Dr. Kathryn Klement is an assistant professor of psychology at Bemidji State. Her primary research focuses on women’s sexuality, particularly the relationship between negative attitudes about women’s sexuality and their behavioral consequences. She has a bachelor’s degree in psychology and political science and a master’s degree in psychology, both from Concordia University Chicago, and a doctorate in social psychology from Northern Illinois University.

BSU Honors Council

The Honors Council Lecture Series is hosted by the Bemidji State University Honors Council, the advisory group to BSU’s honors program composed of 12 faculty members representing each of the university’s colleges. Student representatives are also elected to the council by their cohorts for one-year terms.

UPCOMING HONORS COUNCIL LECTURES

March 19 — 6 p.m. — Bemidji State University Honors Council Lecture Series presents Kathryn Klement, assistant professor of psychology, “From Virginity to Violence: How Negative Attitudes About Women’s Sexuality Uphold Rape Culture.” Hagg-Sauer 107, BSU campus. Admission: free. Information: (218) 755-3984.

April 3 — 6 p.m. — Bemidji State University Honors Council Lecture Series presents Camille Brandt, assistant professor of professional education, “Art on Saturdays: An Inclusive Project for Children Impacted by Autism Spectrum Disorders.” Hagg-Sauer Hall 102, BSU campus. Admission: free. Information: (218) 755-3984.

April 16 — 6 p.m. — Bemidji State University Honors Council Lecture Series presents Jenna O’Dell, assistant professor of mathematics and computer science, “Examining the Mathematical Dispositions of Elementary Students with an Unsolved Mathematics Problem.” Hagg-Sauer 107, BSU campus. Admission: free. Information: (218) 755-3984.

Contacts

Bemidji State University, located amid the lakes and forests of northern Minnesota, occupies a wooded campus along the shore of Lake Bemidji. Enrolling more than 5,100 students, Bemidji State offers more than 80 undergraduate majors and eight graduate degrees encompassing arts, sciences and select professional programs. BSU is a member of the Minnesota State system of colleges and universities and has a faculty and staff of more than 550. The university’s Shared Fundamental Values include environmental stewardship, civic engagement and international and multicultural understanding.


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Neilson Foundation Program Offers BSU Students 25 Paid Summer Internship Opportunities

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Seventeen Bemidji-area employers will host more than two dozen Bemidji State University students for paid internships during the summer of 2018 as part of the university’s continuing partnership with the George W. Neilson Foundation.

Support from the foundation provides up to 50 percent of an intern’s salary, up to $2,500, with the participating business contributing the remaining 50 percent.

Students interested in applying for Neilson Foundation paid summer internships should contact Career Services in Decker Hall.

The internship partnership launched in the summer of 2012 to promote academic development and to encourage employers to provide local, paid internship opportunities for BSU students. Originally planned to launch with 10 internships, high employer demand led to 13 positions being created at 12 businesses. Since its inception, the program has funded more than 110 internships, and student interns have earned more than $482,000 from 88 participating employers.

About the Neilson Foundation

The George W. Neilson Foundation supports community development projects by making grants to programs and projects that improve the lives of the area’s children, adults and senior citizens. The foundation concentrates its giving program in the city of Bemidji and the surrounding area. Following the wishes of contributor Katharine Neilson Cram, the foundation supports northern Minnesota and the Bemidji area, where she spent the summers of her youth and lived throughout her later life.

Employers and Internship Titles

American Garage Door Supply Inc. — Product/Process Development Intern
Bemidji Candlewood — Marketing & Sales Intern
Bessler Brother Electric, LLC — Apprentice Electrician
Construction Engineers Inc. — Assistant Project Manager Intern
Construction Engineers Inc. — Field Engineering Intern
Construction Engineers Inc. — Carpenter Intern
Design Angler — Creative Marketing Intern
Design Angler — Web Development Intern
DomiNative Development Inc. — Marketing Intern
Glacier Icehouse — Apprentice Technician
Headwaters Regional Development Center — Regional Planner Intern
Innovative Office Solutions — New Business Development Intern
Knife River Materials — Office Management Intern
Miller McDonald Inc. — Summer Staff Accountant
Northland Fishing Tackle — Online Marketing/Sales
Peterson Sheet Metal — Accounting Intern Peterson Sheet Metal — Prefab Drafting Intern
PotlatchDeltic Corporation — Curriculum Technical Writer Intern
Sanford Health — Clinical Informatics Intern
Sanford Health — Foundation/Donor Relations Intern
Sanford Health — IT Securities Intern
Sanford Health — Volunteer Services Intern
Sanford Health — Information Technology Intern
Stittsworth Meats — National & Regional Sales and Marketing Planner
VenuWorks of Bemidji LLC/Sanford Center — Marketing/Sales Intern

Contact
  • Molly Aitken-Julin, program director of internships and summer employment, Career Services; (218) 755-2038, maitken@bemidjistate.edu

Links

Bemidji State University, located amid the lakes and forests of northern Minnesota, occupies a wooded campus along the shore of Lake Bemidji. Enrolling more than 5,100 students, Bemidji State offers more than 80 undergraduate majors and eight graduate degrees encompassing arts, sciences and select professional programs. BSU is a member of the Minnesota State system of colleges and universities and has a faculty and staff of more than 550. The university’s Shared Fundamental Values include environmental stewardship, civic engagement and international and multicultural understanding.


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EuroSpring 2018 Underway at University of Oxford

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EuroSpring 2018 is underway! Seventeen Bemidji State University students, along with trip leaders Dr. Tom Beech, professor of policial science, and Cherish Hagen-Swanson, director of the International Program Center, arrived in England earlier this week and have begun their five-week stay at the University of Oxford’s Wadham College.

At the group’s first day at Wadham College, Professor Alan Chapman — who has coordinated the EuroSpring program for 42 years — took the students on a walking tour of campus.

Bucky the Beaver is tagging along on this year’s EuroSpring trip. Follow Bemidji State on Instagram to check in on his adventures.

Students participating in this year’s EuroSpring trip come from 16 different major programs at BSU. They are:

  • Danica Anderson, sophomore, social work, Granite Falls, Minn.
  • Steven Carter, senior, history, Park Rapids, Minn.
  • Kenneth Christie, senior, criminal justice, Deer River, Minn.
  • Aaron Gladhill, sophomore, social studies education, Coon Rapids, Minn.
  • Jacob Israel, senior, political science and mass communication, Springfield, Va.
  • Hannah Mallet, junior, nursing, Pine City, Minn.
  • Maryn Molden, senior, marketing communication, Benson, Minn.
  • Brittney Molberg, sophomore, creative & professional writing, Sandstone, Minn.
  • Kimberly Morrow, sophomore, wildlife biology, Harmony, Minn.
  • Magen Pelland, sophomore, nursing and exercise science, Baudette, Minn.
  • Mattison Pelland, senior, business administration, Baudette, Minn.
  • Dana Petty, junior, music education, Milaca, Minn.
  • James Ryan, senior, sport management, Avon, Minn.
  • Michael Scholl-Lonsky, sophomore, social studies education, Minneapolis, Minn.
  • Madalyn Simpson, sophomore, history and business administration, Brainerd, Minn.
  • Charity Veaux, junior, business administration, Bemidji, Minn.
  • Kaitlyn Westphal, junior, psychology, Park Rapids, Minn.

BSU Fishing Duo Qualifies for 2018 Bassmaster National Championship

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Bemidji State's Luke Gillund (left) and Jack Kons have qualified for the 2018 Bassmaster College Series Championship.
Bemidji State’s Luke Gillund (left) and Jack Kons have qualified for the 2018 Bassmaster College Series Championship.

Two members of the Bemidji State University Fishing Team have qualified for the 2018 Bassmaster College Series National Championship.

Jack Kons, a junior business administration major from Savage, Minn., and Luke Gillund, a junior marketing communication major from Ham Lake, Minn., qualified with a 15th-place finish at the Carhartt College Central Tour, Jan. 25-27 at Louisiana’s Toledo Bend Reservoir.

Bassmaster will announce dates and a location for the 2018 national championship at a later date.

Kons and Gillund ended the first day of the three-day Central Tour tournament in 34th place. A strong second-day performance helped them jump up to 15th place overall, and the duo held that position when fog canceled the tournament’s third day.

Competitors kept up to five bass per day, with an option to return smaller fish to the lake as larger fish were caught during the day. During their two-day tournament run, the duo’s catch totaled 29 lbs, 6 oz.

“We were pretty bummed out that Day Three was canceled because we thought we could move into the Top 10,” Kons said.

Kons said that he and Gillund enjoyed the challenge of competing at the regional qualifier and are looking forward to the championship.

“Every day on the water is a new day,” Kons said. “It’s peaceful and most of the time it’s beautiful out there. It’s fun putting the pieces of the puzzle together and having it all come together with a trip to the Bassmasters Championship.”

Thor and Mitch Swanson weigh in on Day 1 of the Bassmaster College Series National Championship, Aug. 10.
Thor and Mitch Swanson weigh in on Day 1 of the Bassmaster College Series National Championship, Aug. 10, 2017.

Kons and Gillund have guaranteed that a Bemidji State University team will compete for the Bassmaster College Series Championship for a second consecutive year. Gillund will be making his second appearance in the tournament after qualifying with Robbie Troje, a junior business administration major from Hastings, Minn., for the 2017 championship — held on Lake Bemidji, adjacent to the BSU campus. Brothers Mitch and Thor Swanson, both seniors from Blaine, Minn., finished ninth overall at the 2017 championships.

College anglers will have three more opportunities at upcoming College Tour events, in addition to state qualifiers, to earn a berth in the 2018 Bassmaster College Series Championship.

Bemidji State University — the only college or university in Minnesota which offers a four-year degree program in aquatic biology — is located in northern Minnesota’s lake region, with more than 400 of the state’s 15,000 lakes located within 25 miles of campus. In 2015, Scout.com named Bemidji State the No. 1 college in the country for fishing.

Carhartt Bassmaster College Series

The Carhartt Bassmaster College Series presented by Bass Pro Shops gives college anglers a platform for competing with their peers in a national setting. Anglers can compete in one of five regionals and in a Wild Card tournament for the opportunity to advance to the national championship. From there, one college angler earns a berth in bass fishing’s premier tournament, the Bassmaster Classic.

Links

Bemidji State University, located amid the lakes and forests of northern Minnesota, occupies a wooded campus along the shore of Lake Bemidji. Enrolling more than 5,100 students, Bemidji State offers more than 80 undergraduate majors and eight graduate degrees encompassing arts, sciences and select professional programs. BSU is a member of the Minnesota State system of colleges and universities and has a faculty and staff of more than 550. The university’s Shared Fundamental Values include environmental stewardship, civic engagement and international and multicultural understanding.


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Bemidji State Programs Receive Online Rankings for Quality, Affordability

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Bemidji State University and several of its degree programs have recently received a variety of awards for quality and affordability from several websites specializing in college rankings.

About BSU’s Online Programs

Bemidji State offers seven major programs and seven minors completely online, including online degree-completion programs designed for students who already have the equivalent of their first two years of college completed or who are transferring at least 24 college credits. BSU uses D2L Brightspace as an interactive software program that allows the use of a personal computer to receive and submit assignments, work in groups, explore advanced learning options and interact with instructors and other distance students.

Bemidji State’s online programs give students the same opportunities to participate in class discussions, post assignments and receive feedback from professors that they would have on campus. BSU’s Center for Extended Learning is dedicated to assisting off-campus students, beginning with the the application process and connecting them with the programs and services they may need to succeed.

Contact
Links

Bemidji State University, located amid the lakes and forests of northern Minnesota, occupies a wooded campus along the shore of Lake Bemidji. Enrolling more than 5,100 students, Bemidji State offers more than 80 undergraduate majors and eight graduate degrees encompassing arts, sciences and select professional programs. BSU is a member of the Minnesota State system of colleges and universities and has a faculty and staff of more than 550. The university’s Shared Fundamental Values include environmental stewardship, civic engagement and international and multicultural understanding.

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Bucky Abroad: Looking Back at the First Week of EuroSpring 2018

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Bucky Abroad

Bemidji State University’s Bucky the Beaver has wrapped up the first week of his EuroSpring adventure. Bucky, along with trip leader Dr. Tom Beech and 17 BSU students, flew across the pond to attend the University of Oxford for a five-week study abroad program.

Bemidji Pioneer: Bemidjians to promote a number of matters at annual trip to state Capitol

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BEMIDJI—A bus will leave Bemidji Wednesday morning before sunrise, with numerous passengers dressed in plaid. The destination is St. Paul, where the 13th annual Bemidji Day at the Capitol will take place.

The hours-long lobbying effort will get underway at 10:30 a.m., where individuals from Bemidji will meet with District 2 and District 5 Sens. Paul Utke, R-Park Rapids and Justin Eichorn, R-Grand Rapids. Those who’ve traveled down to the metro will then be able to go to legislators throughout the capitol and inform leaders about Bemidji needs.

“Our agenda includes lobbying support for BSU’s Hagg-Sauer Academic Learning Center replacement project, and we’re requesting support for the Northern Minnesota Veterans Home to be located in Bemidji,” said Deb Pfaff, Bemidji Area Chamber of Commerce President. “With the latter, there’s a great need that’s been identified.”

The push for a veterans home in Bemidji has been a goal for local advocates and officials for more than a decade. The effort is based on the northwest Minnesota region having nearly 30,000 veterans, with 77.2 percent of them over the age of 55. Additionally, the nearest veterans home is in Fergus Falls, a 128-mile drive from Bemidji.

Project proponents are requesting the state pledge funding for the veterans home, which would allow an opportunity for federal dollars.

The home will be the subject of a State Government Finance Committee meeting Wednesday at 1 p.m. Beltrami County Veterans Services Officer Scotty Allison is scheduled to speak at the meeting.

Another item Bemidji representatives will discuss Wednesday is the Paul Bunyan Expressway, an idea to expand State Highway 371 between Jenkins and Cass Lake to four lanes.

“This is a great opportunity for the community to come together, with involvement from Bemidji High School and BSU,” Pfaff said. “It’s a chance to meet with the legislators and provide some face-to-face feedback. It’s also a chance to talk about some of the great things that are happening here.”

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