Gold production increases at mine in South Dakota’s Black Hills • South Dakota Searchlight

Production at South Dakota’s only active, large-scale gold mine climbed to its highest level in eight years, according to a new 2024 annual report.
The Wharf Mine, owned by Chicago-based Coeur Mining, is near the city of Lead and the Terry Peak Ski Area in the northern Black Hills. The mine produced 98,042 ounces of gold last year — nearly 5,000 ounces more than the prior year.
The mine also produced 232,013 ounces of silver, which is a lesser-value “co-product” of the gold mining process. Silve...

ICE makes 8 arrests in South Dakota city where Noem was subjected to a protest three days earlier • South Dakota Searchlight

U.S. immigration officials conducted a “worksite enforcement action” that resulted in eight arrests Tuesday in Madison, three days after their boss, Kristi Noem, was subjected to a protest in the same South Dakota city.
At least one of the two targeted businesses, Manitou Equipment, was awarded financial support from the state while Noem was governor.
The media office for Immigration and Customs Enforcement said in a written statement that the agency’s action was at Manitou and also at Global Po...

International student recounts ‘numb’ feeling after receiving email about her potential deportation • South Dakota Searchlight

RAPID CITY — Priya Saxena was staying up late to read comments about her doctoral dissertation around 1 a.m. on April 7 when she saw the message in her email.
“I was numb at the time,” she testified through tears Tuesday in a Rapid City courtroom, where she continued her fight to remain in the country.
The email from U.S. immigration officials said her visa was revoked. Saxena called some friends and holed up in her bedroom.
“I was scared,” she said, “and I had no idea what to do next.”
Her fear...

Noem’s honorary degree sparks protest; meanwhile, a student she’s trying to deport earns a doctorate • South Dakota Searchlight

An international student in western South Dakota overcame Kristi Noem’s attempt to stop her from graduating Saturday, while hundreds of people protested on the other side of the state where Noem received an honorary degree and delivered a commencement speech.
The international student is Priya Saxena, from India. She received two degrees from South Dakota Mines in Rapid City: a doctorate in chemical and biological engineering and a master’s degree in chemical engineering.
Noem’s U.S. Departm...

AmeriCorps cuts are ‘devastating’ for nonprofit Native American school in South Dakota, lawsuit says • South Dakota Searchlight

The Trump administration’s decision to abruptly cut AmeriCorps funding has had a “devastating impact” on a nonprofit school for Native American children in South Dakota, according to a lawsuit.
Red Cloud Indian School Inc., which operates schools under the Lakota name Mahpiya Luta, is one of more than a dozen plaintiffs that jointly filed a lawsuit this week challenging the funding cut.
“Red Cloud schools, their programs, and the prospects of their students and of Lakota youth who participate in...

South Dakota wins concessions for itself and for universities nationwide in settlement with NCAA • South Dakota Searchlight

South Dakota won special terms for itself and financial concessions for universities across the country while settling a lawsuit against the National Collegiate Athletic Association, according to a Wednesday announcement from state Attorney General Marty Jackley.
The NCAA is the governing body for the highest level of college athletics. Jackley and the South Dakota Board of Regents sued the NCAA last year. The lawsuit alleged that a proposed $2.8 billion nationwide agreement to compensate athlet...

Ballot group sues state over shorter petition circulation window • South Dakota Searchlight

A ballot question committee is suing South Dakota’s top election official over a new law that shortens the window for petition circulation by three months.
Dakotans for Health filed the lawsuit Tuesday in federal court against Secretary of State Monae Johnson.
“This new law is just another effort to silence the voices of South Dakotans and deny them the right to make decisions that impact their lives,” said Dakotans for Health Chairman Rick Weiland in a news release.
South Dakota’s Republican-d...

Legislature sustains veto of geographic signature requirement for constitutional amendment petitions • South Dakota Searchlight

Petitioners hoping to put state constitutional amendments on the ballot won’t need signatures from each of South Dakota’s legislative Senate districts.
After the governor vetoed a bill containing the requirement last week, the state Senate sustained the veto Monday at the Capitol in Pierre. The House voted earlier Monday to override the veto, but agreement from both chambers is required to overturn the governor’s action.
Michael Rohl, R-Aberdeen, was among the senators who opposed the bill and s...

State loan brings help to school preparing for Air Force base growth, but unknowns remain  • South Dakota Searchlight

BOX ELDER — A new state law brought a degree of certainty Friday to a situation filled with unknowns for the Douglas School District.
The law, signed by South Dakota Republican Gov. Larry Rhoden, authorizes a $15 million, zero-interest loan to the district from the state’s housing infrastructure fund. The money will help pay for the construction of a third elementary school.
The extra school is needed because the federal government is developing B-21 stealth bombers, and some of them will be sta...

Noem’s successor hits ‘reset’ after she insisted there was ‘No Going Back’ • South Dakota Searchlight

For a condemnation of Kristi Noem’s performance as governor, just look at what her former lieutenant governor is doing.
You won’t get him to admit that, of course. Larry Rhoden insists Noem did “great things” for South Dakota.
Yet Rhoden has also positioned himself as Governor Reset after taking inspiration from a Native American tribal leader, Chairman J. Garrett Renville of the Sisseton Wahpeton Oyate.
Noem’s departure to serve in President Donald Trump’s Cabinet was imminent when Renville del...

South Dakota governor asks Trump to build promised statue garden and put it near Mount Rushmore • South Dakota Searchlight

South Dakota Gov. Larry Rhoden sent President Donald Trump an invitation Tuesday to fulfill a promise from five years ago: the creation of a “National Garden of American Heroes.”
And Rhoden wants Trump to put the statue garden in South Dakota’s Black Hills.
“In fact, we have a plot of land available in sight of Mount Rushmore that would be ideal for this fantastic effort,” Rhoden wrote in a letter to Trump.
That plot of land, according to Rhoden, is privately owned by the Lien family, which is w...

Former Yellowstone, Rushmore, Badlands superintendents say DOGE wiped out a generation of leaders • South Dakota Searchlight

If Dan Wenk had been fired during his first year in a permanent job with the National Park Service, the agency would’ve lost his many later accomplishments.
He would not have gone on to help lead a public-private partnership that raised $75 million to redevelop visitor facilities at Mount Rushmore National Memorial, or a $300 million negotiation to improve amenities at Yellowstone National Park with private funds, or the acquisition of the United Flight 93 crash site in Pennsylvania for a nation...

New version of bill to aid Ellsworth Air Force Base specifies $15 million loan for school • South Dakota Searchlight

The effort to win state financial support for a new elementary school necessitated by growth at Ellsworth Air Force Base won a legislative endorsement Thursday at the South Dakota Capitol in Pierre.
The state House of Representatives’ 41-28 vote was the latest twist in a multi-year struggle. Legislation to provide $15 million of state funding for the project failed last year.
Earlier this week, Sen. Helene Duhamel, R-Rapid City, tried a new approach. She convinced the Senate to pass a bill that...

South Dakota should protect students from a dual-credit price hike, state Senate committee decides • South Dakota Searchlight

The state should maintain its subsidy for dual credit students, a group of South Dakota legislators decided Tuesday at the Capitol in Pierre.
The Senate Education Committee voted 4-3 to defeat a proposed reduction of the subsidy. That means the reduction is likely dead, barring the use of any procedural maneuver to revive it during the last two weeks of the annual legislative session.
Sen. Jamie Smith, D-Sioux Falls, was among the committee members who voted to retain the existing level of suppo...

Bill would transfer $15 million from SD housing fund to support Air Force base growth • South Dakota Searchlight

The South Dakota Senate advanced legislation Monday at the Capitol in Pierre that would take $15 million from a statewide housing infrastructure program and put it in a fund supporting the growth of Ellsworth Air Force Base.
The base near Rapid City is undergoing an estimated $2 billion worth of construction to accommodate the future arrival of B-21 bomber planes, which are under development. That activity is expected to grow the base and its surrounding civilian population significantly, puttin...

Lawmakers will ask SD voters for permission to end Medicaid expansion if federal support declines • South Dakota Searchlight

South Dakota voters will decide next year whether to continue requiring Medicaid expansion if federal support for the program declines.
The state House of Representatives voted 31-3 on Monday at the Capitol in Pierre to support a resolution that will send the question to voters. The Senate had already approved the measure, which does not require a signature from the governor.
The question will appear on the ballot in the November 2026 general election.

Medicaid is government-funded health insur...

South Dakota lawmakers send Mickelson Trail e-bike limitation to governor • South Dakota Searchlight

The two chambers of the South Dakota Legislature agree that only the slowest class of e-bikes should be allowed on the scenic Mickelson Trail.
They sent that limitation Wednesday to Republican Gov. Larry Rhoden, who will decide whether to sign it into law.
The trail, named for the late Gov. George Mickelson, runs 109 miles through the Black Hills on a former railroad route. As Rapid City Republican Rep. Tim Goodwin said Wednesday in the House of Representatives, e-bikes were “not even thought of...

Failure of task force bill complicates South Dakota’s prison construction impasse • South Dakota Searchlight

South Dakota lawmakers have reached an impasse on prison construction talks: They have a stalled $825 million plan, and no path to a new plan for replacing the aging penitentiary or addressing prison population growth.
The latest twist happened Tuesday at the Capitol in Pierre when the state Senate voted 20-15 against the formation of a task force to study new options.
Sen. Kevin Jensen, R-Canton, summarized the situation as he tried unsuccessfully to save his task force proposal.
“What next? We...

SD House endorses student-teacher stipends to address educator shortage • South Dakota Searchlight

With about 200 teacher openings statewide and neighboring states aggressively recruiting young educators, South Dakota needs to step up, said Rep. Chris Kassin, R-Vermillion.
The South Dakota House of Representatives agreed, voting 59-11 on Monday at the Capitol in Pierre to budget $500,000 for the creation of a statewide student-teacher stipend program. The legislation goes to the Senate next.
“Folks, this is a simple and strategic step to strengthen our education workforce,” Kassin said.
The s...

It’s not hard to figure out why young South Dakotans don't want to be teachers • South Dakota Searchlight

The leader of South Dakota’s public universities gave a telling answer recently when a legislator asked him why the higher education system isn’t churning out enough teaching graduates.
“We’re seeing a drop-off in interest,” said Nathan Lukkes, executive director of the Board of Regents. “If you go back 10, 20 years and you look at the percentage of students that were coming and wanted to be teachers versus today, the interest is going in the wrong direction.”
Gee, I wonder why.
Maybe it’s becau...

Lawmakers advance carbon pipeline moratorium and bill regulating land agents • South Dakota Searchlight

South Dakota lawmakers advanced bills Friday at the Capitol in Pierre that would put a moratorium on carbon dioxide pipelines until new federal safety rules are finalized, and would authorize landowners to sue pipeline companies for the alleged abuses of their land agents.
The bills don’t name Summit Carbon Solutions, but they’re a response to the Iowa company’s proposed $9 billion, five-state pipeline that would pass through eastern South Dakota. It would collect carbon dioxide emitted by more...

Push to ban lab-grown meat fails in South Dakota Senate • South Dakota Searchlight

A legislative effort to ban lab-grown meat in South Dakota failed Thursday at the Capitol in Pierre, after the success of earlier bills to require labeling and prohibit state spending in support of the product.
The ban’s initial failure was Wednesday on a 17-17 vote in the Senate, with one member absent. That was Sen. Kevin Jensen, R-Canton, who had voted for the bill when it advanced out of the Senate Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee.
A supporter of the legislation, Sen. Mykala Voita...

Legislative committee endorses prosecution of librarians who lend books deemed harmful to children • South Dakota Searchlight

A South Dakota legislative committee advanced a bill Wednesday at the Capitol in Pierre that would subject schools, universities, museums, libraries and their employees to criminal prosecution and jail time for allowing children to view material defined in state law as obscene or harmful to minors.
An opponent of the bill said it would put “librarians in handcuffs” for lending a book to a child that some adults might consider inappropriate. One member of the House Education Committee who voted i...

The simple solution for South Dakota’s budget woes: Restore the sales tax rate • South Dakota Searchlight

South Dakota legislators are suffering from all sorts of angst this winter over a seemingly complicated budget situation that many believe can only be solved by cuts.
In reality, the solution isn’t complicated at all. It’s incredibly simple: Just move the state sales tax rate back to 4.5%. That would wipe out all of the budget problems with money left to spare.
Confused? Don’t be. There’s an easy explanation for how we got here.
In the fall of 2022, then-Gov. Kristi Noem, a Republican, sensed th...
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