Wannaska Survives the Trends of Rural Decline

Rural America faces plenty of economic challenges, from the sharp decline in the number of family farms and, in turn, the small-town economies that supported them, to the disproportionate reliance on manufacturing jobs, to a severe shortage in child-care providers.

Of course, these are broad-stroke issues within a greater problem facing the country at large, but despite the gloomy outlook touted by commissioned studies, universities, and rural betterment institutes across our 50 states, there are still small community success stories happening everywhere you look.

Wannaska is one such story.

25 miles south of the Canadian border on Highway 89, the small community bearing the Ojibwe word for the Roseau River lies on the South Fork of the winding tributary. A bedroom community for the likes of Polaris (13 miles away), Marvin Windows (35 miles away) and even Digi-key in Thief River Falls (58 miles away), Wannaska is unincorporated and doesn’t list a population on its road sign. But it’s actually those kinds of traits that are a draw to some of the residents.

“We like it because it isn’t a town,” Ward Knight said. Knight runs his construction company Anglewood Builders from his residence in Wannaska. “It has the feel of a community but without all the hubbub and governmental noise of an actual town.”

Holly Braaten also lives and works in Wannaska running a day care center. Holly joked that her husband, who is a Polaris employee, imported her from Edina, MN, and she admitted it was a culture shock at first. “I do miss the shopping and restaurants that the bigger city has to offer,” she said. “but now I wouldn’t want to live anywhere else. I love the small-town community. Everyone looks out for each other, and it’s so peaceful and quiet.”

The ten children of Holly’s Tiny Hands Day Care can often be spotted out and about in the community going to the post office, taking walks or picnicking at the park. “I love running my business in a small town,” Braaten said. “Everyone in the community loves the kids, and businesses in town open the doors for us when we’re out strolling around. They are so welcoming.”

Writer and national community activist, Arthur Morgan, who was active during FDR’s tenure as president, believed that small-town America was an incubator for the positive characteristics of society. “The roots of civilization are elemental traits—good will, neighborliness, fair play, courage, tolerance, open-minded inquiry, patience,” Morgan said. Throughout his life he taught that these traits are most successfully instilled down through the generations in small communities, and to witness the decline of small-town culture is to watch the decline of the entire nation’s culture.

To life-long Wannaska resident Elaine Billberg, this instillation of values is a core facet of small-town life. “People always say it’s a great place to raise kids,” she said. “That’s one thing about country life, kids learn to work.” The community also comes together when people are in need. “I’m sure you probably see this in every small community,” she said. “But here, if someone has a hardship, if there is a death or illness, people go over with food and help out how they can. Farmers will help each other get crops in. It’s really how close-knit the community is that makes it prosper.”

Small yet prosperous communities such as Wannaska are, in some ways, like a freshwater stream emptying into a large body of saltwater. Families in rural areas work hard at raising their youth to be good and productive members of the community, kindhearted and compassionate, and when the young adults leave, as many of them do, the communities are then giving these values to the world. Where freshwater meets saltwater, an estuary is created, one of the most bountiful aquatic ecosystems there is.

An interesting real-world example is one of Wannaska’s most famous exports, Garrett Hedlund, who is known for his roles in films such as TroyFour BrothersTron: Legacy and Unbroken. Hedlund is said to be a thoughtful actor, an optimistic personality and forever the farm-kid from northern Minnesota.

“I was born with chores,” Hedlund was recently quoted as saying in a video series called “My North” created by MPLS St. Paul Magazine and presented by Explore Minnesota. Garrett spoke about going to school in the Wannaska area. “Our school was about 75 yards long; it had a little outdoor ice rink with a warming house that a local in the town would groom with a little irrigation tank that he had made, his own personal Zamboni. We were so far out that we were the first ones on the bus and the last ones off.”

The long bus rides for school kids or the shuttling responsibilities for parents were the only disadvantages Elaine Billberg could think of to living in a small community like Wannaska. Others might point to minimal opportunities for young adults and the need to travel for medical care or even fresh produce.

For Margo Lee, who lived in Uptown Minneapolis for a time but then came back to be a part of the family business, the differences were jolting. “It was still a shock even though I grew up here,” Lee said. “But I do like that my commute, instead of an hour drive, takes me 2 minutes now.”

According to demographic expert Bert Sterling of bestplaces.net, Wannaska (zip 56761) has seen a population decline of 24% in the last 17 years. Still, it has what its in-town residents need. A handful of businesses keep the community patterns alive and running like clockwork. Riverfront Station opens at 6AM for commuters and coffee drinkers. Café 89 right across the street welcomes the regular coffee crew. “Mostly the guys,” Billberg chuckled, “they get everything pretty much solved.”

Locals are very loyal to Café 89, which has been around for more than six decades and is said to have unusually good food for a neighborhood joint. Holly Braaten said that walking over for Saturday morning breakfast is a standing tradition for her and her family.

Wannaska has one church, Riverside Lutheran, with a very active Sunday school and youth group program. The Wannaska Lion’s Club just celebrated 100 years and is another high-functioning aspect of the community. The brand-new Community Center was built almost entirely with volunteer labor and through funds raised in and by the community. Bull Dog Storage and Bergstrom’s Inc., an electrical contracting company, are also based in Wannaska, as well as a host of other home-based businesses we are likely unaware of.

Lee’s Trustworthy Hardware is also a staple of the community. The oldest business in Roseau County, Lee’s has been family owned and operated since 1906. Fourth generation Margo helps run the store with her parents Kraig and Bonnie. “We have a little bit of everything,” Margo said. Open from 8:30-5:30 during the week, until 4PM on Saturday and closed on Sunday, the small-town business maintains small-town hours, but it takes care of its neighbors. “Since everyone in the community knows how to get a hold of us, we open the store after hours if it’s an emergency,” Margo said. “The post office is also located in the store. And we stay open later during deer season and around the holidays.”

Lee’s is way more than a hardware store, as regular shoppers can attest. The store boasts over 40 feet of just toys. Plus, their sundries, treats, giftware and house décor sections make it a true destination. And during the holidays, Wannaska becomes just that.

December 9th is Santa Clause Day at the Community Center. From 11-2, you can meet Santa, play games, have a free lunch and the Reller Family Farm will be offering sleigh rides. Simultaneously, Lee’s will host a holiday open house staying open till 7PM, offering door prizes, free coffee and cookies, as well as plenty of sales.

For barely being on the proverbial map, Wannaska certainly knows who it is as a community. It, and others like it, are the freshwater nutrients in an increasingly muddy delta. Even actor Hedlund has talked about swimming upstream again in the future. “Everything that pushed me away is what pulls me back now,” he said in an interview with the DailyMail.com. “It’s the kind of life I’d like to give my kids when I have them.”

(Published in the Nov 21st issue of the Warroad Pioneer)
From: Angle Full of Grace | https://anglefullofgrace.com/2017/11/26/wannaska-survives-the-trends-of-rural-decline/

Roseau’s Aaron Ness Feeling at Home with Washington Capitals

DENVER—Aaron Ness walked into the visitor’s locker room at the Pepsi Center and sat down in the stall in the corner.

He put his head in his hands and tried to catch his breath.

But in the Colorado altitude, it doesn’t happen so easily.

Ness had just finished a grueling workout after morning skate with the Washington Capitals—a routine for players who aren’t going to suit up later that night.

It helps players get in a good workout and remain in game shape for when they next get the call.

For Ness, those calls have been coming frequently this season.

The 27-year-old former Roseau High School star, who helped the Rams to the 2007 Minnesota Class AA state title, is in the midst of his best professional season yet.

Ness has remained with the Capitals all season to this point and is on pace to set a personal best for most NHL games in one season.

The left-handed shooting defenseman has been in the lineup for eight games this season, on pace to play roughly 30.

“It’s been pretty good so far,” Ness said. “It’s been a lot of fun. It’s exciting to be here and it’s going pretty well. I’m trying to use my assets. My skating has always been big for me. When I get in the lineup, I’m trying to be consistent and help the team win.”

Ness has an assist this season and is hoping to stay up with the Washington Capitals for the entire year.

“For me, I think I have to continue to be reliable, continue to make a good first pass out of the zone, defend hard and jump up in the play as much as possible and create offensively,” Ness said.

Ness has now been with Washington’s organization for three seasons.

He spent his first four professional seasons with the New York Islanders organization, splitting time between the Isles and their top American Hockey League affiliate. Ness was selected to the AHL All-Star Game in 2014-15.

The following season, he signed with the Capitals. Now in his third year with Washington’s organization, Ness is starting to feel more comfortable.

“It’s a good group of guys and a great coaching staff,” Ness said. “It’s my third year here, so I’m kind of getting to know the guys better. It’s a really great group and they are fun to be around. Your first year, you’re maybe a little tentative and you don’t get to know the guys that well. Everyone has really opened up.”

On the ice, it has made a difference, too.

“You start to learn the system,” Ness said. “You don’t have to think about it anymore. You just react.”

Ness spends his summers in the Twin Cities, where he played college hockey at the University of Minnesota. But he still returns to Roseau, where his parents reside.

“It’s my favorite place on Earth,” Ness said.

While Ness is suiting up alongside some of the world’s best players in Alexander Ovechkin and Nicklas Backstrom, he still fondly recalls the days of playing alongside his closest friends at Roseau High School and winning a state title.

“It’s a special bond,” Ness said. “That was awesome. It was one of my favorite hockey memories and it always will be. It’s a great group we had. I think we’ll be going back and forth with each other for a long, long time.”

 

Photo Credit: Calgary Flames center Mark Jankowski (77) chases after Washington Capitals defenseman Aaron Ness (55) during a game in October at Scotiabank Saddledome. Photo/Candice Ward, USA TODAY Sports

15 Years After Flood, Super Bowl Grant Helps Roseau Rebuild

Dylan Wohlenhaus , KARE 5:19 PM. CDT October 31, 2017

ROSEAU, Minn. – A decade and a half after a devastating flood in Roseau, a Super Bowl Legacy Fund grant is helping the community do more than just rebuild.

Fifteen years ago, the Roseau River spilled far outside of its banks after heavy rains, flooding the city of Roseau and affecting almost every home and business in its path.

The city has rebuilt what was damaged, and part of its plan for the future is the new South Riverview Park along the river.

“It’s definitely part of our bigger picture,” says Mayor Jeff Pelowski. “It’s related to our schools. It’s related to health care. It’s related to our downtown.

For the small town of roughly 2,700 people, it’s taken several years to bounce back, let alone help raise funds for this specific project.

But now $100,000 in grant money is flowing into Roseau, thanks to the Polaris Foundation and the Minnesota Super Bowl Host Committee Legacy Fund’s 52 Weeks of Giving campaign.

“We’re excited to make this contribution, to kick off and really build on what’s been done here,” said Scott Wine, CEO of Polaris and member of the Minnesota Super Bowl Host Committee’s advisory board.

The funding will push the project into its second phase adding a skate park, an ice rink and more.