News

North Dakota land value rises Both cropland and pastureland values went up in the state of North Dakota for 2023. Photo taken in Ellendale, North Dakota in June 2021.
Under the North Dakota Century Code, land platted after March 30, 1981, must meet four of seven conditions to no longer be classified as agricultural land.
North Dakota’s attorney general found the sale of a couple thousand acres of prime farmland to a group tied to Bill Gates complies with a Depression-era law meant to protect family farms because ...
When the regular deer season in North Dakota opened on Nov. 5, many hunters for the first time had electronic access to about 4 million acres of land on which its owners gave permission to hunt.
BISMARCK — Members of a North Dakota government board voted Thursday, Feb. 17 to appoint a Bismarck attorney and investment manager as the state's new land commissioner.
Native Americans on an oil-rich North Dakota reservation have been cheated out of more than $1 billion by schemes to buy drilling rights for lowball prices, a flurry of recent lawsuits assert. And ...
The sale of 2,100 acres in North Dakota to Red River Trust, an entity tied to Bill Gates, secured legal approval despite backlash from residents in the area.
North Dakota landowners have until July 1 to post their land electronically for the 2022-23 hunting season. Participation doubles in North Dakota's electronic land posting ...
Republicans want to use a rule-killing law to undo a Biden-era land use plan, and an agency paperwork issue is giving them ...
North Dakota today has less than 1 million acres of land enrolled in CRP, and 85% of the acreage enrolled during the peak in 2007 could be gone by 2026 if contracts continue to expire at their ...
One shard remains of the so-called "trespass bill" that sought to ease issues over hunting access on private land. Though the bill failed on North Dakota lawmakers' last day in session, a twin of ...
BISMARCK – Members of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee heard testimony on two bills related to foreign governments purchasing land in the state during a hearing on March 17.