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North Dakota State Authority

North Dakota State Authority is home to 784,841 residents with median household income $76,657.

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North Dakota

North Dakota State: What It Is and Why It Matters

North Dakota is the 39th state admitted to the Union, entering on November 2, 1889 — the same day as South Dakota, in a deliberate act of Congressional simultaneity that left both states arguing, mildly, about which one came first. This page covers how the state is structured, what its government systems do, how its 53 counties fit into the whole, and where public understanding tends to go sideways. Across 90 published pages — from county-level government profiles to agency breakdowns and city guides — this site maps the operational reality of North Dakota's public institutions.


Why This Matters Operationally

North Dakota operates under a bicameral legislature that meets biennially — every two years, in odd-numbered years — which means the state's entire legislative agenda, budget, and statutory changes get compressed into a single session. The North Dakota Legislative Assembly convenes for no more than 80 days per session, a constitutional ceiling that creates real urgency around how rules get made and money gets allocated. Miss the session window, and a proposed change waits two years.

That structure has downstream consequences. State agencies operate on two-year appropriations cycles, not annual ones. Counties, which are the primary delivery mechanism for most public services — from property records to road maintenance — plan around that rhythm. A resident disputing a property assessment in Bottineau County or filing a business registration in Benson County is interacting with systems whose funding authority traces back to a 80-day legislative window that may have closed 18 months prior.

The North Dakota Governor's Office holds broad executive authority during inter-session periods, including emergency rulemaking powers that have practical effects on agriculture, energy, and public health — three sectors that define much of the state's economic base. Agriculture alone accounted for roughly $6.5 billion in annual cash receipts as of the most recent USDA census figures (USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service, 2022 Census of Agriculture).


What the System Includes

North Dakota's governmental architecture has three main layers, and they don't always communicate as cleanly as an org chart suggests.

State government sits at the top: the Legislative Assembly, the Governor, the Supreme Court, and a constellation of elected statewide offices — Attorney General, Secretary of State, State Treasurer, and others — each operating with independent constitutional authority. The North Dakota Constitution establishes these roles explicitly, which means the Governor cannot simply absorb or redirect the functions of, say, the North Dakota Attorney General by executive preference.

County government forms the operational middle layer. North Dakota's 53 counties are not merely administrative subdivisions — they are constitutionally recognized units of local government with elected commissioners, auditors, and sheriffs. The North Dakota Counties: Complete Government Structure Guide maps this structure across all 53 counties, including how each county commission operates and what services fall under county versus state jurisdiction.

Municipal government handles incorporated cities and towns. Fargo, with roughly 130,000 residents as of the 2020 U.S. Census (U.S. Census Bureau, 2020 Decennial Census), is the largest city. Bismarck, the capital, runs a city-commission form of government. These cities operate under home-rule charters or statutory authority granted by the state — not as sovereign entities, but as creatures of state law.

The North Dakota Government Authority provides deeper reference material on how these governmental layers interact, covering agency structures, regulatory bodies, and the mechanics of state administration that don't always surface in standard civic guides.


Core Moving Parts

Understanding North Dakota's government means tracking five structural features that shape almost everything else:


Where the Public Gets Confused

The most common misconception is treating North Dakota's counties as branches of state agencies. They are not. Billings County — the least populous county in the state, with under 1,000 residents and no incorporated municipalities — runs its own elected commission with authority independent of the state executive branch. When a state agency and a county commission disagree on implementation of a program, the resolution process is administrative and sometimes legal, not simply hierarchical.

A second confusion involves the Secretary of State's role. The North Dakota Secretary of State handles business registrations, elections administration, and notary commissions — functions that look administrative but carry real legal weight. A business operating in North Dakota without proper Secretary of State registration is operating outside statutory authority, regardless of whether it holds licenses from other agencies.

Third, and worth stating plainly: federal law frequently supersedes state law in North Dakota as elsewhere, but the scope of that preemption is fact-specific. Environmental regulation on private land, water rights, and agricultural subsidies all involve overlapping federal and state authority. This site covers state-level structures and does not address federal preemption analysis or tribal law — those fall outside the scope of what these pages can responsibly cover.

The North Dakota State: Frequently Asked Questions page addresses the most common points of confusion about jurisdiction, county authority, and where to direct specific inquiries. For anyone trying to locate a specific county's government structure or services, the detail pages — including Benson County in the north-central region — break down each county's commission, major employers, and administrative contacts.

This site belongs to the broader United States Authority network, which provides the same reference-grade structure across all 50 states, making it possible to compare how North Dakota's biennial legislature or county-delivery model differs from neighboring Minnesota or Montana without losing the state-specific detail that actually matters.

North Dakota Counties — Interactive Map

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North Dakota county map

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Federal Disaster Declarations (48)

Severe Storms, Straight-Line Winds, And Tornadoes
August 2025 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · DR-4895-ND
Severe Storm, Tornadoes, And Straight-Line Winds
June 2025 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · DR-4888-ND
Wildfires And Straight-Line Winds
October 2024 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · incident type: fire · DR-4852-ND
Elk Horn Fire
October 2024 · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · incident type: fire · FM-5541-ND
Bear Den Fire
October 2024 · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · incident type: fire · FM-5540-ND
Severe Winter Storm And Straight-Line Winds
December 2023 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · incident type: winter storm · DR-4760-ND
Flooding
April 2023 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4717-ND
Severe Winter Storm, Snowstorm, And Straight-Line Winds
November 2022 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4686-ND
Severe Winter Storm And Flooding
April 2022 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4660-ND
Severe Storm, Straight-Line Winds, And Flooding
June 2021 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4613-ND
Severe Storms And Flooding
June 2020 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4565-ND
Flooding
April 2020 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4553-ND
COVID-19 Pandemic Federal Disaster
January 2020 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance only (institutional reimbursement) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4509-ND
COVID-19 Emergency
January 2020 · Emergency declaration · Public Assistance only (institutional reimbursement) · EM-3477-ND
COVID-19 Emergency
January 2020 · Emergency declaration · Public Assistance only (institutional reimbursement) · EM-3512-ND
Flooding
October 2019 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4475-ND
Flooding
March 2019 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4444-ND
Flooding
March 2017 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4323-ND
Severe Storms And Flooding
June 2014 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4190-ND
Severe Winter Storm
October 2013 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4154-ND
Severe Storms And Flooding
May 2013 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4128-ND
Severe Storms And Flooding
May 2013 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4123-ND
Flooding
April 2013 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4118-ND
Flooding
April 2013 · Emergency declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · EM-3364-ND
Severe Winter Storm
April 2011 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-1986-ND
Flooding
February 2011 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-1981-ND
Flooding
April 2011 · Emergency declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · EM-3318-ND
Flooding
February 2010 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-1907-ND
Severe Winter Storm
April 2010 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-1901-ND
Flooding
February 2010 · Emergency declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · EM-3309-ND
+ 18 more

Source: FEMA OpenFEMA v2 DisasterDeclarationsSummaries

Codes & laws coverage

State statutes & administrative code

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categories with corpus rows (100% of applicable) · known: Agency Guidance, Attorney General Opinions, Constitution & Foundation, Court Decisions, Federal Notices & Orders (+5 more) · full breakdown →

Laws & Codes

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  • N.D. Const. art. IX, § 2 Distributions from the common schools trust fund, together with the net · source
  • N.D. Const. art. IX, § 1 All proceeds of the public lands that have been, or may be granted by the · source
  • N.D. Const. art. VIII, § 8 This constitutional provision shall be self-executing and shall become effective · source
  • N.D. Const. art. VIII, § 6 a. The state board of higher education shall hold its first meeting at the office of the · source
  • N.D. Const. art. VIII, § 5 All colleges, universities, and other educational institutions, for the support of · source
  • N.D. Const. art. VIII, § 4 Each appointive member of the state board of higher education, except the student · source
  • N.D. Const. art. VIII, § 3 The members of the state board of higher education may only be removed by · source
  • N.D. Const. art. VIII, § 2 a. The state board of higher education consists of eight members. The governor · source
  • N.D. Const. art. VIII, § 1 A high degree of intelligence, patriotism, integrity and morality on the part of · source
  • N.D. Const. art. VII, § 11 The power of the governing board of a city to franchise the construction and · source

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