Yellowstone County
Welcome to Yellowstone County
Published: 2022By Trestin Feagler
Community Project Connection
Published: 2022By Roni Baker
After informational gathering sessions, the core group developed and distributed a community questionnaire to prioritize potential projects in Worden and Ballantine. The group now known as Community Project Connection selected leadership and began to work on main street revitalization, community connection through special events, local business development, and honoring the agricultural heritage of the area.
Events included: • Spring Block party on the main street with the school band. • “Where’s Dinner?” which featured monthly food trucks and activities on the main street through the summer. • The Beef, Beets, and Barley Harvest Fest brought together community members for an event on the main street including a child educational area, vendors, food, beer, and a street dance.
Plans in addition to continuing the ones from the past year are a community garden, paving Main Street, Christmas Stroll, a mural on Main Street, and a swimming pool.
The Ballantine/Worden community members' new motto is, “We are the they! We need to make it happen.”
New Family and Consumer Sciences Agent
Published: 2022By Sara Fluer
Since June, Fluer has been meeting community stakeholders, interacting with clientele, and assessing county needs. Most of her clientele interactions have centered around food and nutrition (70%), such as food safety and preservation, followed by family and human development topics (15%) related to aging, caregiving, and mental health. Fluer is actively involved in the efforts of multiple coalitions that address local issues regarding suicide, behavioral health, and community/public health. As she lays the groundwork for a robust Family and Consumer Sciences program, she has also taken this time to invest in her professional development, gathering additional training and certifications in demonstrated areas of need within the county.
Looking ahead to 2023, Fluer will be rolling out programs on food safety, suicide prevention, and physical activity. Also find her teaching cooking classes for the local Diabetes Prevention Program, continuing her coalition work alongside community stakeholders, offering food preservation content, and more.
EFNEP: Yellowstone County
Published: 2022By Melody Harris
Positive behavioral changes for in-person and online adult classes resulted in:
• 98% improved diets by eating more fruits, red, orange, and dark green vegetables, drinking fewer sugary drinks, and cooking more dinners at home. • 81% improved food safety practices: washing hands before preparing food, washing all items and surfaces after cutting raw meat or seafood, not thawing frozen food at room temperature, and using a meat thermometer. • 71% increased physical activity behaviors by exercising for at least 30 minutes, doing workouts to build and strengthen muscles, or making small changes to be more active. • 49% learned to budget food purchases to avoid not eating less than they wanted so there was more food for their family, or not having enough money to get food for the family.
Through youth programs in schools and summer programs, positive behavioral changes in youth include 83% of kids improving their ability to choose foods according to Federal Dietary Recommendations, 53% using safe food handling practices more often, and 48% being more physically active.
New Horticulture Agent
Published: 2022By Heidi Schueler
Schueler works with the Master Gardener Association and the Billings Library to bring horticultural information and classes to the county. Partnering with the Billings Library, she hopes to encourage participation from individuals not involved with the Master Gardener Program. The group will attend presentations from The Yellowstone Arboretum and MSU Extension Horticulture Specialists in the coming months.
One of the county benefits of the Extension Horticulture position is consultation. More than 90 calls were answered within two and a half months to discuss horticultural issues affecting county residents. Yellowstone County’s leading consultation needs for 2022 were plant disease identification (30%), entomology and insect identification (19%), overall gardening questions (13%), and plant identification (10%).
In 2023, Schueler plans to work alongside fruit producers in Yellowstone County to impact eastern Montana’s fruit production and prevalence. With the help of F Bar 3 Vineyard in Laurel, Yellowstone County MSU Extension gained insight from current producers on future goals for the industry. Schueler is also working on an updated Master Gardener program with other agents and specialists.
Yellowstone County MSU Extension’s New Agriculture Agent
Published: 2022By Trestin Feagler
In October 2022, the Northern International Livestock Exposition (NILE) was held in Billings. Yellowstone County MSU Extension agents partnered with the NILE, Yellowstone Conservation District, Montana Cattlewomen, Yellowstone County Weed District, MSU Extension specialists, and Sunshine Apiary to educate 1,670 fourth-grade students over two-and-a-half days through a program called Ag in the Classroom. The program focuses on hands-on learning about crops, livestock, range science, and weed science. Through this opportunity, students and teachers gain a better understanding of the importance of agriculture in Montana.
In addition to continuing programs such as Ag in the Classroom, pesticide applicator licensing, and forage testing, Feagler plans to get into the community to understand better how to address the needs of Yellowstone County agriculture, which will shape her upcoming programs.