Harwood rejects Fargo’s annexation proposal for Applied Digital land

Harwood Mayor Blake Hankey’s interview on The Jay Thomas Show

HARWOOD, ND – The City of Harwood has rejected Fargo’s proposal regarding annexation of land where Applied Digital is being built.

Mayor Blake Hankey, appearing on WDAY Radio’s The Jay Thomas Show, said the City of Fargo sent ‘an unsolicited five-page document’ for the City of Harwood to sign. Hankey said it was sent without input from the City of Harwood and drafted by the Fargo City Attorney.

“They’re willing to withdraw their annexation with we follow certain said conditions,” Hankey said.

That includes a 20-year agreement that would bind both councils in the future, restrict the current landowner from having any say in which city they want to be a part of and that Harwood could never annex any of Fargo’s extraterritorial zone under any circumstance.

Harwood officials said their position would be that they would not unilaterally annex land, but should be able to discuss in the future if the landowner petitions the city.

Hankey said he informed the City of Fargo he could not provide a response to the proposal until the night of Monday, November 24, when the Harwood City Council met.

“I’m not the King of Harwood,” he said. “I can’t make that call. I don’t even have a vote really. I’m the tiebreaker vote. It’s our council that votes on that.”

Hankey said Fargo Mayor Dr. Tim Mahoney told him that the Harwood City Attorney advised the proposal “was okay.”

“That is not true,” Hankey said. “She’ll advise us on pros and cons of accepting a deal and not accepting a deal, the legal ramifications. She would never say that.”

Mahoney told Flag Family News the conversation resulted in Fargo sharing ‘a draft agreement’ with Harwood.

“The draft we shared was simply a starting point for the conversation,” he said. “We’re always willing to revisit terms together, and I welcome continued discussions with Harwood.”

Mahoney said he’s hopeful Harwood and Fargo can find a clear path forward on the annexation issues.

“Our goal is to resolve this matter and move ahead collaboratively with Harwood, working toward a fair outcome that strengthens both cities and the region as a whole,” Mahoney said

Mahoney added taxpayers have an expectation.

“Our cities have a responsibility to evaluate the public safety and infrastructure impacts of any project near city limits; that’s what taxpayers expect of us,” Mahoney said. “The data center highlights exactly why regional partnership matters, and Fargo remains committed to open dialogue with our metro neighbors.”

At its City Commission meeting on Monday, November 24, commissioners delayed any decision until the City of Harwood makes theirs.

With Harwood’s decision, they’ll now request Fargo drop the annexation altogether – without conditions.

“Withdraw your annexation, and we’ll sit down and have a good faith negotiation,” Hankey said.

Should the two sides come to an impasse, the next step would be mediation. Governor Kelly Armstrong would appoint a mediator.

Hankey said he feels his city is in a good position to be successful.

“We feel like every single factor favors us and we’re going to win,” Hankey said.

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