County to consider permit extension appeal from Madison Food Park

Updated Dec. 19 to correct taxable value and taxes owed amounts

The Cascade County Zoning Board of Adjustment will consider an appeal on Dec. 18 from Madison Food Park on the planning director’s denial of their permit extensions.

Earlier this fall, Michael Harris, county planning director denied an extension request for three special use permits issued to Madison Food Park.

An attorney for Madison Food Park wrote a letter to Harris a month later in November, asking that he refer the request to the ZBOA for consideration.

The permits for Big Sky Cheese, Silver Falls Distillery and Friesen Nutrition’s vitamin trace minerals blending facility were all extended twice previously and as of Dec. 16, all are now expired.

Ed Friesen, managing member of Madison Food Park, wrote to county planning staff on Oct. 16 requesting that their request for a third extension, for 36 months, be placed on the next ZBOA agenda.

Proposed Madison Food Park land for sale; lawsuits ongoing

“As you are likely aware, the time has passed by quickly again prior to us being able to meet all the conditions of the above SUP’s and they will expire soon. We continue to work with the regulatory agencies, contractors and financiers to begin construction as soon as every component is approved to meet the conditions,” Friesen wrote.

Harris responded in an Oct. 20 email to Friesen that the permits were initially issued in 2019 and the last extension granted by the ZBOA in 2023 was through late 2025.

“However, pursuant to Cascade County Zoning Regulations at 10.4 an SUP is valid for one year if construction or the use has not started. The zoning administrator is authorized to issue a one-time six-month extension. The permit expires if the use ceases for six months for any reason,” Harris wrote. “Without additional information showing construction had begun under the issued permits prior to December 2024 or the use has not ceased for six months for any reason my determination would have to be your permits have expired and you must apply for new special use permits. If you wish to apply for new special use permits we can schedule a pre-application meeting at your earliest convenience.”

County grants 2-year extension for Madison Food Park projects [2023]

In a Nov. 17 letter to Harris, Alan McCormick, attorney for Madison Food Park, wrote that the county zoning regulations include a provision that any further extensions of special use permits must be granted by the ZBOA prior to their expiration.

McCormick wrote that they assume Harris meant construction needed to begin prior to this month, rather than December 2024, as written by Harris.

“This determination is directly contrary to Section 10.4 of the Zoning Regulations and, if not corrected immediately, will result in significant liability for Cascade County. There is no reason for treating this situation differently than Cascade County has previously handled requests from Madison Food Park. Section 10.4 specifically grants Madison Food Park the right to request an extension of the permit approvals from the Zoning Board of Adjustment. Your Oct. 20, 2025, determination erroneously eliminates this right,” McCormick wrote. “In order to correct this error, we ask you to immediately place the extension requests on the next Zoning Board of Adjustment meeting agenda and provide proper notice of the agenda item. If for some reason this is not possible prior to the expiration of the permits, please note that our client intends to hold Cascade County responsible for the damages which result from the loss of the permits.”

Madison Food Park subsequently filed a formal appeal of Harris’ decision.

The ZBOA did not meet in November 2025.

Lawsuit filed against Madison Food Park over unpaid loans [2023]

None of the letters from Madison Food Park detail their plans or project status.

The Electric emailed Friesen asking, “since the land was listed for sale, and I got the impression the Big Stone Colony had made an offer on the land, and it was tied up in court to settle liens, I’m curious what your plans are for continuing the project?” and corrected ourselves that the colony that had made an offer was Hill Top Colony, not Big Stone.

Friesen responded, “We have no comment at this time on any of your inquiries. You have your information wrong as is most often the case with media.”

The land remains listed for sale at $8.9 million.

The land is also part of a foreclosure action in district court brought by the Great Falls Development Alliance since Madison Food Park defaulted on their loans.

County ZBOA considering permit application from Friesen for supplement blending facility at Madison Food Park [2022]

In February 2023, GFDA filed a civil lawsuit in district court over more than $2 million in unpaid loans and placed liens on the Madison Food Park properties east of Great Falls.

During a Sept. 5 court hearing before Judge John Kutzman, it was stated that the amount owed to GFDA was $3.1 million, including attorney’s fees.

As of Dec. 15, Brett Doney, GFDA president, said they had not yet been paid and were waiting on a court decision.

Doney said there had been three offers on the land that he was aware of, including one from Hill Top Colony, that had since expired, and two more from a developer that Friesen had been working with.

Hill Top Colony has been farming the land for some time, Doney said, and had been interested in purchasing the property that they’d been making lease payments on.

County responds to city request for study of Madison Food Park proposal [2020]

As part of the court case, Hill Top is now paying an annual $100,000 lease rate in monthly installments of $8,333.33 until a sheriff’s sale of the land is completed. According to an order from Kutzman, the monthly rent is being sent to GFDA and applied as payment toward the amount due by Madison Food Park on their overdue loan payments. That agreement went into effect Sept. 15.

Doney said that GFDA remains in first position to collect liens from the property sale and that the agency has enough available funding to continue providing other business loans in the meantime.

According to publicly available tax records, Madison Food Park is listed as delinquent on 17 parcels owned under that name in Cascade County, since the first half were due Nov. 30.

The company’s taxable total is $16,603, with $8,369.53 owed in taxes for 2025 and the company last paid taxes in January 2025, according to the county tax records.

Big Sky Cheese defaulted on their loan with the Great Falls Development Authority in 2023.

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GFDA’s Doney told The Electric in December 2022 that the company hadn’t paid interest over the entire fiscal year on their bridge loan.

City Commission to consider resolutions asking state, county to study potential impacts of proposed Madison Food Park [2020]

Ed Boland Construction also sued Madison Food Park in 2022 for breach of contract over unpaid invoices, totalling $42,448. A default judgement was entered against MFP in August.

In a Sept. 5 brief filed in district court, Steve Potts, attorney for Madison Food Park, wrote that the parties had decided on foreclosure and the other partners in MFP couldn’t convert their ownership in the company to a credit bid for the land.

“It is clear that MFP is insolvent,” Potts wrote.

During the Sept. 5 hearing, which The Electric observed via Zoom for about six hours, Friesen testified that Madison Food Park was created as a limited liability company in Montana to purchase land in Great Falls at a $5.6 million purchase price.

He said that a Friesen company owned 75 percent of the company and two other companies owned the remaining 25 percent, including Silver Sage Colony in Canada.

Friesen testified that MFP borrowed money from GFDA and that they’d anticipated having an operational facility by 2021 to make payments to share owners.

He said in court that GFDA was not paid, largely due to the COVID-19 pandemic tying up capital and interest.

Friesen said that people lost interest in investing as there was a lot of anxiety in the marketplace and it was very difficult for a few years.

“MFP does not have any money. It is insolvent,” he said during the Sept. 5 hearing, with no prospects for funding.

An attorney for MFP said during the hearing that a $9.9 million offer had been made the previous week and was pending acceptance by the LLC members.

Friesen said in court he didn’t object to the sale.

The Cascade County Zoning Board of Adjustment approved extensions for three Madison Food Park projects in November 2023.

County grants 2-year extension for Madison Food Park projects [2023]

The county approved permit extensions for

  • Big Sky Cheese to December 2025
  • Silver Falls Distillery to November 2025
  • Friesen Nutrition’s vitamin trace minerals blending facility to December 2025