Anna Peterson empowered by recovery and resilience in NW Minn.

July 2024

For Anna Peterson, community is everything.Professional headshot of Anna Peterson, Northwest CERT Regional Coordinator. She is smiling, wearing a yellow sweater and a floral black and white blouse. The background is a brick wall. 

She’s the proud wife of a farmer and member of the northwest Minnesota farming community. Peterson’s husband, Mark, raises wheat and soybeans on 500 acres of family land in Crookston. Beyond her local roots, Peterson has cultivated a considerable connection within the University of Minnesota, both as an alumna and a U of M Extension staff member. For over a decade, she served as support staff for the Regional Sustainable Development Partnerships (RSDP). More recently she took on the role of Northwest Minnesota Regional Coordinator for the Clean Energy Resource Teams (CERTs.) 

As a mother of four, an active volunteer in her church, and a member of numerous other groups, Peterson can’t help but be proud of her rich, wide-reaching community. Yet, it was in the aftermath of a traumatic accident where Peterson says she truly understood the depths of that community.

A lost moment

When reflecting on that January evening in 2019, Peterson says her memory is spotty.

“I just remember being face down in the snow,” she explains. “Someone was talking to me and telling me that they had called an ambulance.”

Only a few hours earlier, Peterson and her husband had made plans to join their local snowmobiling club for an evening on the trails.

“The kids went to grandma's and we told them we'd be back in a couple of hours,” she recalls. “Then we got out onto a main highway. It was a groomed trail. One that we had ridden literally hundreds of times.”

What started as an ordinary ride took a turn for the worse when Peterson encountered an unexpected change in the familiar route. 

“It was a straight-away, so I had been going fast. And I just didn't see it. It caught us all off guard.”

I just remember being face down in the snow. Someone was talking to me and telling me that they had called an ambulance.

- Anna Peterson

At a high rate of speed, Peterson hit a drainage ditch. It was a spot in the trail that was usually filled with snow. This time, it wasn’t. The exact details of the incident are unclear, but it’s believed that the impact launched Peterson into the air. Upon landing, she was partially crushed. Later her sled would be found an estimated 120 yards away from the crash site. 

“The next thing I knew I was on the ground. I had one arm pinned underneath me, and the other arm was straight up beside me. Someone was talking to me and telling me that I was going to be okay.”

Peterson soon found out that she was not ok. After being airlifted to a Fargo hospital, doctors determined she had broken multiple ribs, a wrist, and an arm. Most devastatingly, she sustained five broken vertebrae, one of which had shattered into her spinal cord.

Peterson says her memories from that night consist of excruciating pain. It was her 42nd birthday.

Healing in community

Five years later, Peterson’s eyes still well up when recalling her snowmobile accident. But she insists it’s gratitude that’s filling her heart and spilling out.

Following the crash, Peterson spent two months in the hospital. With her husband holding down the home front in Crookston, she focused on recovery and intensive physical therapy. As she fought to find her way forward, her community stood beside her. 

“I literally had to learn how to walk again,” she shares. “It was truly awful. But we weren’t alone. The community just came out in droves! We were overwhelmed by the support.”

The Petersons' farming community in northwest Minnesota heard about Anna’s accident and rallied to help. Friends and strangers alike donated money toward her recovery and gas cards to help Mark with driving back and forth from Fargo. 

Meanwhile at work, Peterson’s U of M Extension family also came to her aid. Countless staff members from across the state donated hundreds of vacation hours to support her recovery time. 

“As a busy mom, I didn’t have a lot of time off saved up. But I had enough hours donated that when I finally returned to work that spring, I was able to work part time for over a year.”

 Anna recovering in the hospital. She smiles, wearing a white “turtle shell” body brace. Behind her a medical professional smiles.

Peterson spent months in the hospital, recovering from her injuries. 

Peterson taking part in physical therapy. She stands in a lunge position while Trevor Roppel, DPT of Choice Therapy stands behind her, helping support her. Exercise equipment stands in the background.

Intensive physical therapy helped Peterson regain her mobility. 

In addition to a statewide support network cheering her on, Peterson says it was an Extension colleague and close friend who made it possible for her to keep going.

“My husband was trying to farm, we had a crop to get in the field. My mom had been living with us for a time but she eventually had to move home,” she recalls. “So Mark would get me to work in the mornings, then my friend Megan Hruby in Extension's Family, Health, and Wellbeing Department, would bring me home in the afternoon. She would help me into bed and get me all tucked in. Then I'd be good until Mark got home. That's a best friend.”

Today Anna still deals with complications from the accident. She’s permanently lost most feeling in her lower extremities and often uses mobility aids. Yet, she remains determined to move forward. She's energized by pride in her community, her religious faith, and faith in herself.

“It’s been a long road. I’ve learned to live a very different life than a ‘normal’ life. But overcoming these obstacles has made me a more resilient person.”

It’s been a long road. I’ve learned to live a very different life than a “normal” life. But overcoming these obstacles has made me a more resilient person.

- Anna Peterson

A labor of love

In 2023, after a decade Peterson (right) stands in a grassy farm field with her husband and youngest child. The group smiles. In the background, the sky is an orange hue and the sun hangs low on their last night of harvest. serving in her old role, Peterson joined CERTs, an RSDP core partner. In her new position as Northwest CERT Regional Coordinator, she leads CERTs’ work to help connect the region with clean energy opportunities. This means attending local events, coordinating with local energy utilities, working with local businesses, and spreading clean energy information in her community, sometimes even in her own home.

“It’s been exciting to teach Mark about the possibilities on the farm! We’ve been talking about geothermal, solar, and the rebates that might be accessible to him,” she says. “He even helps me think about how I can get in front of other local farmers!”

More broadly, Peterson is spearheading CERTs' work in a new initiative called Empower CrookstonThe up-and-coming program’s mission is to improve the quality of life for people in Crookston by tapping into state and federal funds. The multi-organization effort focuses on tactics like improving existing residents' homes through energy efficiency projects, revitalizing the historic downtown district, and supporting the local economy. 

As a founding member of Empower Crookston, Peterson has focused her summer on running CERTs' Business Blitzes! She spent time reaching out to local businesses to talk about their energy concerns, discuss how clean energy could serve them, plus provide information on how to apply for grants to bring the vision to life.

I want to help people get to whatever level of clean energy they need in their lives!

- Anna Peterson
Anna Peterson (right) sitting in a wheelchair behind a table; alongside fellow CERTs regional coordinator, Heidi Auel. A sign at the table welcomes visitors to the “Metro CERT 2024 Annual Event.” Both women are smiling, welcoming guests to the event.

Peterson (right) welcomes community to a CERTs event, alongside Central CERT Regional Coordinator, Heidi Auel.

Anna Peterson (right) beside an RSDP colleague as they tour a wind farm. Both women are wearing hardhats, sunglasses, and smiling. Behind them a green field stretches far and wide, and wind turbines can be seen.

Touring a wind farm in Worthington, Minnesota. Peterson (right) with RSDP colleague Danielle Piraino.

Anna Peterson presents to a group of colleagues in New York Mills. The group is meeting in an art gallery. Anna reads from a binder and her colleagues look on, taking notes and listening intently.

At a recent RSDP event in New York Mills, Peterson (left) leads a conversation with colleagues on CERTs work in northwest Minnesota.

“I have had a warm reception from people eager to learn more on how they can improve their energy efficiency and even add solar!” says Peterson. “It’s exciting because I know it's something that a lot of people up here don’t know about. I want to help people get to whatever level of clean energy they need in their lives!”

At the end of the day, Peterson says all of these efforts add up to one thing, a chance to serve the community that has given her so much.

“Since the accident, my outlook has completely changed. You learn very fast what’s important to you. That's why my work with CERTs and Empower Crookston is so exciting! It’s my opportunity to give back,” she says. "I love this community. You just can’t replace it."

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