“When I ran for mayor … it wasn’t for the big money,” Olson told the council and a crowd assembled at City Hall when she announced her resignation on Sept. The eight-member City Council, not so much. The voters of Glendive were willing to trust her, electing Olson over her predecessor by a huge margin. Powered by an earnest sense of municipal do-goodery, she wanted to revive local manufacturing, generate jobs, expand trail access and support a struggling and understaffed police department. She said she didn’t run for mayor as a revolutionary, just as an alternative to a two-decade incumbent. This story also appeared in Glendive Ranger ReviewĪll the ingredients were there: a multi-generational power structure with a long-established way of conducting business under next to no scrutiny a collective amnesia about local civic history a population (4,871, as counted in 2021) anxious about the economic future of their town, which, like many tiny towns across the prairie, had stagnated - even with its newly legal marijuana dispensaries and proximity to intersecting highways, the Yellowstone River, Montana’s largest state park, and the once-money-minting Bakken Formation.
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