Category Archives: News

Gov. Kristi Noem Issues Honoring Marcella LeBeau

Governor Kristi Noem issued the following statement after learning of the death of beloved Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe member Marcella LeBeau:

“As a proud member of the Lakota, Wigmunke Waste Win (Pretty Rainbow Woman) served both her community and her country as a member of the Greatest Generation. Her service as a nurse during World War II has been chronicled by historians. Her dedication as a nurse in the Indian Health Services for more than 30 years has left a legacy that will live in our hearts and minds forever. In addition to keeping her people healthy, she protected their heritage by helping repatriate important cultural items belonging to the tribes. Through it all, it was her joyful spirit that connected her with many in her community.

“Bryon and I send our condolences to the entire Lakota nation as they remember Marcella. Her kind, servant’s heart will be missed.”

On October 12, 2019, the state of South Dakota proclaimed it Marcella LeBeau Day in honor of her 100th birthday. You may find that proclamation here.

SDSU Dairy Club Begins Annual Cheese Box Sales

Now through December 5, the SDSU Dairy Club will be conducting the annual holiday Cheese Box Sales. Funds from the sale support SDSU Dairy Club activities, trips, scholarships and more.

“As a Dairy Club advisor, it is pretty incredible to see the amount of work that goes into the Dairy Club’s Cheese Box sales,” said Lane Speirs, Club Advisor and Department of Dairy and Food Science Coordinator of Recruitment and Academic Services.

Orders can be placed over the phone at 605-688-4166, online at https://jackrabbitcentral.com/shop_package.asp?packageID=1508 or in-person at the SDSU Dairy Bar.

To ensure delivery by December 25, orders must be placed by December 1. Orders that do not need to be delivered by December 25 will be accepted until December 5.

“It’s great to see the hard work and dedication to a great tradition at SDSU come to fruition each year for the cheese box fundraiser that the Dairy Club puts on,” said Steve Beckman, Davis Dairy Plant Manager. “The Dairy Club students will benefit personally and professionally for years to come from working on this project from start to finish. I believe that quality products and quality students make a winning combination. The delicious cheese is just an added benefit!”

Customers can choose to include four, one-pound blocks of cheese in each box. The Dairy Club offers a choice of 12 different types of cheese: Mild Cheddar, Aged Cheddar, Bacon Cheddar, Smoked Cheddar, White Cheddar, Co-Jack, Black Pepper, Italian Herb, Jalapeno, Chipotle Garlic, Smoked Monterey Jack, and Prairie Fire. Boxes can have a mix of flavors or all one flavor.

“I got involved with Cheese Boxes because I saw how much if truly impacted the club, and it gave me the chance to interact with other members and make friendships,” said Hailey Hendrickson, Cheese Box Co-Chair and Dairy Club Secretary. “Without cheese box sales, we also couldn’t go on trips as a club.”

SDSU Dairy and Food Science students are involved in every step of the cheese box process. Students milk the cows at the SDSU Dairy Research and Training Facility which is then processed into the many varieties of cheeses available at the SDSU Dairy Bar. Dairy Club members cut and package the cheese and handle the billing and distribution of the cheese boxes.

“When everything is said and done, the Dairy Club turns the profit from the Cheese Box Sales right back to club members in the form of scholarships and educational experiences,” said Speirs. “Holiday Cheese Box sales have become a staple of the Dairy and Food Science Department at South Dakota State.”

USDA Invests $222 Million in Rural Community Infrastructure to Help People in 44 States, Guam, Northern Mariana Islands and Puerto Rico

United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Under Secretary for Rural Development Xochitl Torres Small today announced that USDA is investing $222 million to build and improve critical community facilities (PDF, 729 KB) in 44 states, Guam, Northern Mariana Islands and Puerto Rico. This community infrastructure funding will benefit nearly 2.5 million people in rural communities. It also includes $132 million to support health care, food security, and emergency response services for more than 850,000 rural residents in 37 states.
USDA is investing in 536 projects through the Community Facilities Direct Loan and Grant Program. The assistance will fund essential community services that will help keep rural America resilient in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic. The projects will finance emergency response vehicles and equipment; build or improve hospitals and clinics; and combat food insecurity.
For example:
  • In Iowa, Lee County will use a $165,000 grant to purchase six ambulances. The ambulances will help to provide emergency medical response services to nearly 36,000 rural people.
  • In Minnesota, Tri-County Hospital Inc. will use a $42 million loan to build a health care campus in Wadena. The facility will include three emergency bays; two trauma rooms; 14 inpatient rooms; three operating rooms; one endoscopy room; four suites for labor, delivery, recovery and postpartum; 50 clinic rooms; 10 major imaging modalities; and 14 universal platform spaces to support surgery, emergency, imaging, obstetrics and ambulatory services. The larger operating rooms will help expand services, improve technology, and enable robotic surgical procedures. This project will help to improve and expand access to critical health care services for more than 7,200 rural people.
  • In New Hampshire, the Taproot Farm and Environmental Education Center will use $37,490 in grants to purchase coolers and freezers to expand access to local food during the pandemic and times of food insecurity. The center’s Root Seller Marketplace also will expand its capacity to collect and safely store surplus produce from farms and gardens before distributing it to local food donor organizations. These improvements will benefit 3,507 rural people.
The investments announced today will support community infrastructure projects in Alabama, Arkansas, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Maryland, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Mississippi, Montana, North Carolina, North Dakota, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Vermont, Washington, Wisconsin, West Virginia, Wyoming, Guam, Northern Mariana Islands and Puerto Rico.
Background:
More than 100 types of projects are eligible for Community Facilities funding. Eligible applicants include municipalities, public bodies, nonprofit organizations, and federally recognized Native American tribes. Projects must be in rural areas with a population of 20,000 or less. For more information, visit www.rd.usda.gov/programs-services/community-facilities/community-facilities-direct-loan-grant-program.
Today’s investments complement the recently announced funding availability under USDA’s Emergency Rural Health Care Grant Program, which also is being administered through the Community Facilities program. Through this program, USDA is making up to $500 million available through the American Rescue Plan to help rural health care facilities, tribes and communities expand access to COVID-19 vaccines, health care services and nutrition assistance.
Under the Emergency Rural Health Care Grant Program, Recovery Grant applications will be accepted on a continual basis until funds are expended. For more information, visit www.rd.usda.gov/erhc.
Interested parties should contact their USDA Rural Development state office for information about additional funding, application procedures and eligibility. Also see the Community Facilities Direct Loan Program Guidance Book for Applicants (PDF, 669 KB) for a detailed overview of the application process.
Under the Biden-Harris Administration, Rural Development provides loans and grants to help expand economic opportunities, create jobs and improve the quality of life for millions of Americans in rural areas. This assistance supports infrastructure improvements; business development; housing; community facilities such as schools, public safety and health care; and high-speed internet access in rural, Tribal and high-poverty areas. For more information, visit www.rd.usda.gov. If you’d like to subscribe to USDA Rural Development updates, visit our GovDelivery subscriber page.
USDA touches the lives of all Americans each day in so many positive ways. Under the Biden-Harris Administration, USDA is transforming America’s food system with a greater focus on more resilient local and regional food production, ensuring access to healthy and nutritious food in all communities, building new markets and streams of income for farmers and producers using climate, smart food and forestry practices, making historic investments in infrastructure and clean energy capabilities in rural America, and committing to equity across the Department by removing systemic barriers and building a workforce more representative of America. To learn more, visit www.usda.gov.

Holiday Preview in Valentine Today

Holiday Preview takes place today in Valentine, Nebraska.  The hours will be 1:00 to 5:00 pm.  The Valentine Chamber  will be doing the Holiday Punch Card promotion.  Shoppers will be able to pick up their cards with each participating business on it that day.  They will have the rest of the week to get around to each business and then turn them in at one of those locations by the drawing on Saturday, November 27th for a chance to win $500 in Chamber Bucks. If you would like to be on the card, it is $50.  Santa will be at Viaero from 1:00 to 4:00 pm.  We hope to have some carolers around town as well.
Santa and his reindeer will be in the parking lot next to Security First Bank on Saturday, December 11th from 1:00 to 4:00 pm as well.

Farmers Union Celebrates Day County Farm Family

It’s Oct. 26, 2021. Zach Townsend his wife, Stephanie, and their young son, Henry, are in a corn field southwest of Andover combining. Zach’s mom, Jolene, just delivered lunch.
“This is a blast, especially considering what we went through this year. With no rain, then too much rain, I’d pretty much written this crop off,” says Zach, eyes on the yield monitor. “There should be nothing out here. And sure, in some spots yields are zeros, but in other spots the yields are average. And in spots, it floors me! I am completely shocked.”
It’s not just the yields that have his spirits up. It’s the fact that the people he cares the most about are harvesting with him. “This is something everyone dreams of. You always want to farm with your family and friends,” says the fourth-generation Day County crop and cattle producer.
Because Stephanie works full time on the farm with Zach, their son, 18-month-old Henry, spends his days in the combine too. In fact, he just woke up from a nap at his dad’s feet, snuggled up with a crocheted blanket his mom made him. “He’s with us seven days a week. The other night Henry baled until 10 p.m. with Stephanie. She also takes him out to check cows. He has combined wheat, sunflowers, soybeans and now corn. He’s not even 2 and he’s done it all.”
Grandma Jolene confirms this. “Even though I’m here, he doesn’t come often enough because he loves his mom and dad and he loves farming,” she says.
And Jolene knows this would make, her husband, Alan, happy. The only thing Grandpa Alan loved more than farming was his family. Alan passed away unexpectedly in the fall of 2020. He had a heart attack while fencing.
“Farming was his joy,” Jolene says. “He loved the land and his cattle. ”After high school Alan continued to farm with his dad, Russell. At 18, he bought his first tractor and piece of land.”
Zach followed in his dad’s footsteps. “We wanted him to go to vo-tech in Watertown,” Jolene says. “He was enrolled in agriculture classes, but when it got closer to the time, he said, ‘I can learn more from you and grandpa than I can in class. I am coming home every night and I’m not going to study, so you will be wasting your money.’”
From that conversation forward, Zach has been farming full time.
“He gave me a lot of free rein,” Zach says of Alan. “But, he would reel me in when I got a little out there and give me a reality check.”
“I always knew I wanted to farm,” he continues. “I just had the outdoors in me. I hunted and fished. I remember when I was 6 or 7 and we were combining, I took my fishing pole and would go down to the creek by Amsden Lake while dad filled trucks. And when the trucks got full, I would skedaddle up to the truck and ride along in the semi to the elevator.”
Stephanie has similar stories from growing up on her family’s farm near Leola. A second-generation cattle producer, by the time Stephanie left the farm to become a vet assistant, she already had a herd of her own. She manages the cattle side of the Townsend farming operation.
“I love cattle,” Stephanie says. And she explains that as long as they are docile and good mothers, she is not picky about their color. She refers to her cattle as a “rainbow herd.” “I have Shorthorns, buckskins, reds and speckled – there isn’t a bad one in the group,” she says. “If I can’t go out and tag and check them by myself – I don’t keep anything bad around. If I don’t trust it, I don’t keep it. They are all pets – every single one of them.”
And it seems Henry shares his mom’s love. “He loves going out in the Ranger to feed them ears of corn. Before he was born, I told Zach that I was going to teach him how to feed.”
Stephanie manages her rainbow herd and the cattle Alan and Zach had before they married in two separate groups. She rotates the cattle through pastures depending on grass height during the growing season.
In some pastures, the cattle share space with wind turbines.
“The wind turbine company came out and tested the wind speed in our pastures. It just happens the windiest spot in the area is on top of that hill,” Jolene says. “When Alan learned this, he said, ‘I could have told you that.’”
She adds that the cattle don’t mind sharing space with the turbines. “There were rumors the wind turbines bothered the cattle. But those rumors aren’t true. We often see the cattle napping and grazing right under them.”
When the turbines went in, so did maintenance roads. Zach says the roads make checking water and cattle a much easier task.
Turbines are among the many changes this farm has witnessed.
In the early 2000s, Alan began implementing no-till farming practices. Zach says this change was a bit tough for Grandpa Russell to accept. “Grandpa didn’t adjust to no-tilling well at all. You know farmers, they are pretty stubborn. I’m stubborn and set in my ways and I’m not that old,” Zach says.
Zach credits no-till with helping the soil hold enough moisture to support this season’s crop during the drought. He also credits no-till with allowing him to get into fields to harvest this fall.
“It didn’t rain all season and then we received 21 inches since August,” he says.
Rain is in the forecast for tomorrow. He and Stephanie are nearly finished combining this field. They are going to try and get a few more wrapped up before the imminent rain.
“We’re fortunate and blessed,” Zach says. “This is how we get to spend our days – farming together.”
To view more photos of the Townsend family, and read about other South Dakota farm and ranch families, visit www.sdfu.org. Farm and ranch family stories can be found by clicking on the About SDFU tab.

New Kids Reading Series Set in the SD Badlands

BADLANDS, SOUTH DAKOTA: Is James Bond coming to the Badlands? No, but JAMES BONE is! “James Bone – 007 years old – Licensed to Dig!” is a new 8-book graphic novel series for second and third graders in search of dino-sized adventure and a tremendous appetite for prehistoric puns, fun, and facts.
Created and written by Carole Marsh (author of many South Dakota titles for children) comes a delightful comic spoof that introduces kids to James Bone, the pint-sized paleontologist. The 8-book series invites readers to join James on an epic hunt to find dinosaur fossils for show-and-tell.
Each story follows a group of young excavators exploring an archaeological site and books 1 and 2 are both set in South Dakota. Along with his friends Pick, Shovel, and his dog Diggy, James heads for the Badlands in search of Allosaurus fossils. Like every good 007 mission, each story features a villain; bent on thwarting James at every turn, ensuring a wild adventure filled with dinosaur facts, puns and humor, a chase through the topsy-turvy terrain, and eventual success; all celebrated at the Dino Diner.
In addition to its ability to educate and entertain, the book’s real power is the ease with which even reluctant or struggling readers can breeze through the colorful and exciting visuals created by artist Lee Barrow, accentuated with dialogue and plenty of clues to help with reading mastery. According to the author, “Studies have shown that kids love dramatic visuals and will read the ‘sound bites’ that explain the action. It is an incredible eye-opener for readers this age to manage a book from start to finish in a short time and realize, ‘I can read a whole book!'”
Marsh, who has been writing books for children for over 40 years and has won multiple awards for her works, explains: “The real proof of the success of a book is if kids want to read another…and read it now! Kids this age love dinosaurs and are eager to read and learn and as independently as possible, and for it all to be a lot of fun!”
The author has spent a lot of time in South Dakota. “My husband was from western Iowa, so when we visited his mom, we just kept going. I’ve been all over the state and love it; South Dakota is always an adventure. That’s what I hope kids around the world discover when they
read this and the other James Bone books.”
“James Bone and the Awesome Allosaurus Adventure” is currently available for pre-order at gallopade.com and will be on sale for the holiday season on Amazon and Follett with eBook and audio versions coming in 2022; book 2 in the series, “The Tremendous Triceratops Trek” will be available later this year. The author is available for Zoom interviews from her home in South Carolina.

Computer Science Teachers Association Recently Launched in South Dakota

South Dakota is kicking off its “Computer Science Education Week – CS Everywhere!” celebrations a month early this year with the launch of the newly formed South Dakota Chapter of the Computer Science Teachers Association (CSTA-SD).
CSTA-SD recently launched to support computer science opportunities in K-16 classrooms in South Dakota. Data from 2021 shows that currently 40% of South Dakota high schools provide access to a fundamental computer science course, a slight increase from 2020 (2021 State of CS Report).
The mission of CSTA-SD is to promote computer science in K-16 classrooms, advocate for statewide standards and inclusion of computer science in all South Dakota schools, provide professional development to enhance the quality of computer science education, and create community partnerships that support the extension and growth of computer science.
CSTA-SD is comprised of educators from K-12 schools, higher education, and non-profit organizations. It is a collaborative effort between teachers who care about computer science in South Dakota and believe in the importance of learning computer science so that students become creators of technology, rather than just consumers.
CSTA-SD is launching professional development opportunities by providing a virtual professional development and networking session on Wednesday, November 17 at 7:00 pm MT / 8:00 pm CT. Join: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83977723707?pwd=RFhlZlBRVlY0VTBhRTA0RmpKeG1GUT09 to learn Code.org and computer science certification opportunities in South Dakota.

South Dakota Community Foundation Announces Round 2, 2021 Community Innovation Grant Recipients

 Round 2 of the South Dakota Community Foundation (SDCF) 2021 Community Innovation Grant (CIG) program has been completed. Eleven South Dakota nonprofits will receive grant awards. Offered in partnership with the Bush Foundation, the Community Innovation Grant program supports efforts to find breakthrough solutions to community challenges across the state.
“The South Dakota Community Foundation received forty-eight applications in Round 2 and selected these eleven nonprofits to implement inclusive, collaborative and resourceful solutions that will benefit all our state’s citizens,” stated Ginger Niemann, SDCF Senior Program Officer. “Round 2 resulted in $197,998 being distributed among the selected grantees. We are grateful to the Bush Foundation for their past and continued investment in our state.”
The review committee chose to support the following projects financially:
STATEWIDE
Black Hills Playhouse (Statewide) $20,000
Black Hills Playhouse partnered with Rosebud Elementary to create online curriculum based on the Oceti Sakowin Core Concepts-Essential Understandings and Standards (OSEU) for use in the spring of 2021. The result was the development of the Oceti Sakowin & Dakota Players Theatre Experience which involved creating and filming four Theatre Lesson Plans. An expansion of this project will include combining video, online and in-person learning with artists. Artists will go to Rosebud to work with schools in combination with teacher training for students in 3rd through 5th grades. A non-native community will be identified to replicate this training in. State and tribal leaders will be made aware of curriculum and input gathered.
Call to Freedom (Statewide): $20,000
Call to Freedom has spearheaded the development of the East River Human Trafficking Task Force (ERHTTF) since 2017. Their mission is to facilitate a collaborative effort to prevent trafficking of persons within the state and tribal nations, prosecution, education, awareness, and protection and provision of services to survivors. ERHTTF covers 44 counties in Eastern South Dakota. They are in Phase 2 of their strategic plan. Over 60 stakeholders are working collaboratively to reach all areas of South Dakota.
Native Governance Center (Statewide): $20,000
Native Governance Center, a Native-led nonprofit, founded in 2015 supports Native nations in Minnesota, North Dakota, and South Dakota in revitalizing their governance systems. They will provide customized, current, accurate, and culturally resonant governance training for partnering Native Nations. This project is rooted in the five principles of “Native nation rebuilding” as derived from research by the Harvard Project on American Indian Economic Development.
South Dakota Afterschool Network (Statewide): $20,000
The South Dakota Afterschool Network promotes afterschool programs, advocates public policy on behalf of afterschool programs, and encourages high quality in afterschool programs across South Dakota. Funds will help this nonprofit create a new partnership with Helpline Center’s 211 program to ensure the OST (out-of-school time) mapping database is accurate and inform parents and families of programs. They will also strategize with policymakers to invest COVID relief funds in high needs areas.
South Dakota Voices for Peace (Statewide): $19,810
This project will raise educator awareness and understanding of their impact on South Dakota’s growing demographic of youth of color (YOC). Educators will learn and explore ways to address biases, bigotry, policies, and systems that may not be supportive of youth of color. Five to seven South Dakota school districts will be identified for educator participation. In partnership with the South Dakota Education Association, they hope to increase districts and students impacted across the state.
EASTERN SOUTH DAKOTA
Conscious Youth Solutions (Sioux Falls): $8,438
The mission of Conscious Youth Solutions is to bridge the gap between employers and young adults entering the workforce. Funds will support immigrant/foreign professionals rebuilding their careers in the U.S. and help employers understand and tap into this hidden talent pool. They will help foreign/immigrant professionals translate their past educational degrees and experience into obtaining jobs that best match their qualifications.
Huron Housing Authority (Huron): $10,000
Huron Rising- Reimagine our Future identified a housing shortage in Huron through a housing study. The demand for housing is outpacing construction making housing rehab a necessity for future economic development. Low-income and very low-income minorities, immigrants, refugees, elderly or disabled often don’t have the funds needed to repair homes resulting in the number of dilapidated houses continuing to grow. They will focus on rehab activities for existing housing stock and the needs of the community.
CENTRAL SOUTH DAKOTA
South Dakota Discovery Center (Pierre): $20,000
The South Dakota Discovery Center’s Workforce Development project addresses barriers that rural and tribal students face accessing STEM (science, technology, engineering, and Mathematics) education. This project will provide 6th through 12th graders with access to diverse, authentic career exploration experiences.
WESTERN SOUTH DAKOTA
Ecotone Foundation, Inc. (Spearfish): $19,750
Ecotone Foundation was founded in 2016 and is organized to develop and provide education, research, and community programs around local food, specialty crops and natural building. They will hold community meetings throughout the next 18 months and start a conversation with farmers, ranchers, and like-minded supporters around the topic of Agritourism to better offer local food, local stay and local experiences to tourists visiting the region.
West Dakota Regional Water (western South Dakota): $20,000
Before the most recent renewal of their Future Use Water Permit from the Missouri River, the West Dakota Water Development District commissioned the South Dakota School of Mines to study the need for additional water supply in western Pennington County. The conclusion of the study was “a strong need for new sources of water within the study area exists. Local entities with a stake in water security should pool their resources to ensure that they are proactive in securing future sources of water”. Preliminary work is already underway, and this grant will lend support to those efforts.
Youth & Family Services, Inc. (Rapid City): $20,000
In a concerted effort to reach under-performing adolescents in school, members of the Rapid City Alliance for Early Adolescence representing out-of-school time service providers and Rapid City Area Schools began investigating social emotional learning and aligning curriculum between the schools and out-of-school time providers. This grant award will support broadening understanding of social emotional learning among all middle school youth service providers in Rapid City.
About our Donors
The SDCF distributed nearly $18 million in grants in 2020 which made a tremendous difference in communities statewide. This would not have been possible without the generosity of our donors. If you have a specific cause you would like to support or would prefer to give for the general good of our state, please visit   https://www.sdcommunityfoundation.org/giving to learn more or give us a call at 1-800-888-1842.
About the Bush Foundation
The Bush Foundation invests in great ideas and the people who power them. Established in 1953 by 3M Executive Archibald Bush and his wife Edyth, the Foundation encourages individuals and organizations to think bigger and think differently about what is possible in communities across Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota and the 23 Native nations that share the same geographic area.

Single vehicle accident on Saturday afternoon.

One person died in a single vehicle accident Saturday afternoon approximately 4 miles east of Winner on Highway 18 at approximately 2:40pm.  Preliminary crash information indicates the vehicle hit a tree.  The accident caused a fire, which was handled by the Winner Volunteer Fire Department.  Also responding to the accident was the South Dakota Highway Patrol, Tripp County Sheriff and Tripp County Ambulance.