Linda Marie Isaacson

Linda Marie Isaacson, 60, of Crookston passed away at her home Sunday afternoon, March 27, 2022, with members of her family at her side. The Mass of Christian Burial for Linda will be held at 1:30 p.m., Monday, April 4, 2022, at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in Crookston. Visitation will be for one hour prior to the service. The funeral will be livestreamed by logging on to www. crookstoncathedral.com and clicking on the Funerals prompt to view the Mass. The Stenshoel-Houske Funeral Home is assisting with funeral arrangements.

Eris Angela Super (Bruggeman)

Eris Angela Super (Bruggeman), age 94, of Mentor, MN, passed away on Wednesday, March 23, 2022, surrounded by family at The Glenn Minnetonka, in Minnetonka, MN, where she had lived since September of 2021.

City Council passes expenditure plan for ARPA funds

After a marathon conversation and presentations by several department heads, Crookston City Council passed a resolution authorizing expenditure of American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds totaling $848,467.30. The resolution describes a portion of the obligated funds as "Revenue Recapture Funds" which are restricted to project use as well as identifying projects for IT, Parks & Recreation, Crookston Police Department and waste water that included items like infrastructure/network and data backup/ recovery, mechanical/ HVAC modifications and upgrades at the Crookston Sports Center (CSC), garage and security upgrades at the CPD, plus lift station control systems which have been previously discussed.

Spring Clean-Up Week in Crookston April 25-29

The City of Crookston announces “Spring Clean-Up Week” Monday, April 25 through Friday, April 29, 2022. Pick-up will be made on your regular garbage day ONLY and pickup will not be extended after April 29.

Crookston family speaks up for second time at School Board meeting

A Crookston High School student's mother, Mildred Roosevelt, took the mic for the second time in two months at the School Board's open forum saying her family continues to have the same issues with racism and bullying, and that nothing has changed. On January 31, Roosevelt plead with the board to allow her children to do online learning through the end of the school year but Superintendent Jeremy Olson, who was absent from the January 31 meeting, told the Times on March 28 that he told Roosevelt that would not be an option at this time.