Beltrami County declares state of emergency after June 21 derecho; recovery to require weeks of response

Beltrami County Board of Commissioners · March 29, 2026

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Summary

After a destructive severe thunderstorm on June 21 estimated with top winds near 120 mph, the Beltrami County Board declared a 30‑day state of emergency on June 23 and later extended it. The declaration authorized Emergency Management to pursue state and federal aid and coordinate debris clearance; initial estimates indicate the county will seek reimbursement.

Beltrami County officials declared a State of Emergency on June 23 after a severe thunderstorm (described in board materials as similar to a derecho with winds estimated near 120 mph) produced widespread tree fall, infrastructure damage and extensive debris that overwhelmed local resources.

The board met in a special session and adopted a resolution authorizing Emergency Management Director Christopher Muller to coordinate response and recovery, request a State Declaration and pursue available reimbursement programs. The resolution said hundreds of thousands of trees were downed, public and private facilities were damaged, and the response would likely take weeks or months. The county activated mutual‑aid agreements and worked with cities and townships to stabilize the incident.

Emergency Management and Public Works staff later presented a Solid Waste Debris Management Plan that included temporary operations changes, additional temporary hires, equipment leases and an MOU with IUOE Local 49. Commissioners approved the debris plan and temporary measures; costs were described as candidates for state reimbursement (the county estimated up to 75% reimbursement for eligible debris‑removal costs and said it would submit claims under state and federal programs).

Chair Craig Gaasvig and Director Muller publicly thanked county staff, neighboring agencies and volunteers for response efforts during the special meeting and noted the county would continue to coordinate closely with the Minnesota Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management as damage assessments and reimbursement applications proceed.