Category Archives: News

Pro-Freedom Bills in South Dakota Now in Effect

Pro-freedom reforms promoted by Governor Kristi Noem took effect in South Dakota yesterday. July 1 marked  the start of the 2022 fiscal year and ushers in several changes to state law.

“‘Freedom’ isn’t just a buzzword for us in South Dakota. It’s our way of life. It guides everything that my administration does,” said Governor Kristi Noem. “I’m proud that we had the opportunity to advance freedom for South Dakotans this legislative session. And I look forward to continuing to work with the legislature to expand the freedoms of our people.”

The pro-freedom reforms that are becoming law include:

  • HB 1079 and SB 103, which protect the privacy rights of donors to charitable organizations, as well as the charitable organizations themselves.  Today, the Supreme Court of the United States recognized that the First Amendment protects this same information in their landmark AFP v. Bonta decision;
  • HB 1094 simplifies city zoning regulations and eases the permitting process for homebuilders and homeowners in South Dakota. This will help the cost of living remain affordable for South Dakotans and will spur additional housing development in South Dakota communities;
  • HB 1111 protects property rights by strengthening due process protections in instances of seizures and forfeitures involving the Department of Game, Fish and Parks (GFP);
  • HB 1140 protects property rights of landowners and codifies GFP’s policies pertaining to open fields, which will strengthen relationships between conservation officers and landowners;
  • SB 55 authorizes certain innovative insurance products and services through insurance innovation waivers;
  • SB 100 continues the prohibition on the seizure of firearms and ammunitions; and
  • SB 177 expands freedom and parental choice in homeschooling.

South Dakota State University’s Northeast Research Farm to Host Field Day on July 8

The South Dakota State University Northeast Research Farm Tour will be held on July 8 at 4:30 p.m. and run until dusk. The research farm is located 2.5 miles west of interstate 29 off exit 193 at 15710 455 Ave. South Shore, SD 57263.

The tours will run continuously, each lasting an hour.

Tour 1: Weed Management

  • Pre-emergent Herbicide Updates and Weed Management Strategies – Paul O. Johnson, SDSU Extension Weed Management Coordinator

Tour 2: Fertility

  • Nitrogen, Phosphorus and Potassium Use in Corn – Anthony Bly, SDSU Extension Soils Field Specialist and Peter Kovacs, Assistant Professor in the Department of Agronomy, Horticulture and Plant Science

Tour 3: Small Grains and Alfalfa

  • Small grains variety trials – Jon Kleinjan, SDSU Extension Agronomists
  • Growth Regulator Use in Oats – David Karki, SDSU Extension Agronomy Field Specialist
  • Alfalfa Issues and Concerns – Sara Bauder, SDSU Extension Agronomy Field Specialist

Tour 4: Pest Tour

  • Small Grain Diseases – Emmanuel Byamukama, Associate Professor and SDSU Extension Plant Pathologist
  • Insect problems in all crops will be covered by Adam Varenhorst, Assistant Professor and SDSU Extension Field Crop Entomologist

Connie Tande, SDSU Extension Plant Diagnostician, will be available between tours to discuss plant sample issues, identification of pests or field problems.

This year’s tour is being sponsored by the South Dakota Crop Improvement Association, South Dakota Wheat Commission and South Dakota Soybeans Research and Promotion Council. The field day will include a meal provided by the sponsors.

For more information, contact SDSU Extension Weed Management Coordinator Paul O. Johnson at paulo.johnson@sdstate.edu or 605-688-4591.

SD Farmers Union Hails Automaker Endorsement of High Octane Low Carbon Fuels “A Major Breakthrough for U.S. Corn Ethanol Industry”

South Dakota Farmers Union (SDFU) President Doug Sombke called the recent letter from the auto industry’s major trade group to former Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle a “major game changer” because it endorses the immediate use of high octane low carbon (HOLC) fuels like E30 to reduce carbon and toxics emissions. Sombke said the letter from the Alliance for Automotive Innovation (AAI) was perfectly timed because EPA is finalizing a fuel efficiency rule that is expected to shape U.S. gasoline composition during the decades-long transition to electric vehicles.
The AAI—whose members produce 99 percent of the light-duty vehicles sold in the U.S.—asserted in the letter that “…the use of high octane, low carbon liquid fuels… would simultaneously support vehicle performance, including fuel economy, and further reduce greenhouse gas emissions during vehicle use. Such benefits would be realized by new and existing internal combustion engines and therefore should be encouraged as additional solutions as soon as possible to maximize environmental benefits across the fleet.”
AAI also noted that “High octane, low carbon liquid fuels provide the benefit of lower aromatics, and therefore lower exposure to toxics, when combusted in a vehicle.”
In a recent letter to a senior EPA official, Daschle warned that if EPA does not move quickly to dramatically reduce gasoline aromatics levels, the rapid adoption of gasoline direct injection (GDI) engines will make the most dangerous urban emissions much worse. The Daschle letter warns that “Given the role of aromatic hydrocarbons in PM formation, and given the propensity of GDI engines to increase emissions of UFPs, EPA’s strategies for regulating fine particle pollution in urban areas are doomed to failure unless they significantly reduce gasoline aromatics.”
Sombke said the AAI’s letter was exactly what he’d hoped for when he urged General Motors CEO Mary Barra to correct one of her senior executive’s assertion that a nationwide E30 HOLC fuels “clean octane” standard was a “bridge too far.”
“The AAI letter’s endorsement of Daschle’s efforts—the centerpiece of which is to establish a national 100 RON higher octane gasoline standard using E30 HOLC fuels to replace carcinogenic aromatics—makes it clear that automakers recognize the important role ethanol can play during the lengthy transition to a decarbonized electric transportation system,” said Sombke. “In fact, the real “bridge too far” is the headlong rush to electric vehicles before all of the critical questions are answered, including serious challenges confronting the supply chain for rare earth metals such as lithium and cobalt used in batteries.”
“The use of slave and child labor, the hidden carbon emissions from lithium and cobalt mining and battery recycling, and the enormous infrastructure challenges confronting the electric vehicle age must be acknowledged and resolved,” said Sombke. “In contrast, U.S. corn ethanol is the most safe, secure, cost effective, and lowest net carbon fuel component. Just as importantly, ethanol is used in all gasoline nationwide today and U.S. farmers and producers can expand quickly.”
Sombke pointed out that advancing from today’s nationwide E10 to a nationwide E30 “clean octane” transportation fuels standard would reduce U.S. oil imports by one billion barrels per year and would double ethanol’s demand for corn starch over the next ten years, providing a substantial boost to the rural economy without need for taxpayer outlays.
SDFU salutes Senator Daschle and his HOLCA Alliance mantra: “E30 by 2030!”
To read the AAI letter to Senator Daschle visit cleanfuelsdc.org.

S.D. Farmers Union Celebrates Jerauld County Farm Family

Here’s a story from his youth that fifth-generation Jerauld County farmer Josh Bartel says pretty much sums up farming.
“When I was a kid, I had bottle lambs that I named Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. Luke died. I sold John for $50 and thought, ‘This is great! When I sell Matthew and Mark, I will get $100.’ Well, I took Matthew and Mark to the auction and the pair sold for $26. My dad always told me farming is a gamble, but this was when it hit me how much of a gamble it was. Our living depends on the market.”
With a clear understanding of what his future would be like if he chose to make farming his career, in 2006, Josh returned with his wife, Natalie, to farm with his dad, Neal, and grandpa, Irving Stolen.
“With college, Josh and I both experienced city lifestyle for a while, and neither of us liked it. We did not want to raise kids in town,” explains Natalie, who grew up on a farm 9 miles northwest.
Dating since high school, the couple always planned to return to Josh’s family farm. But, they took time out to further their education first. Natalie has a nursing degree from Dakota Wesleyan University and Josh has a general agriculture degree from South Dakota State University.
Today, Natalie spends her days helping on the farm, taking care of their three daughters, Taryn, 10, Kenzie, 7, and Emmie, 4, and she works part-time as a nurse at Avera Weskota Memorial Hospital. Josh and his dad have a backgrounding and finishing cattle operation and raise corn and soybeans on land that has been farmed by descendants of Josh’s mom’s great-grandpa H.B. Reese since 1902. H.B.’s daughter, Emma, married Martin Stolen, who had moved from Norway in about 1910. Martin started farming the land where Neal and Linda live now.
“It’s always been my goal to keep the farm alive and grow the farm as much as we can, but with integrity, take care of the land and be a good neighbor,” Josh explains.
When it comes to caring for the land, the family rotational grazes and has been implementing no-till farming practices since the mid ’90s.
“We have things the generations before us did not have – like soil testing,” Neal says. “When we started soil testing, we started working with an agronomist. With no-till, our organic matter has grown from 1 to 3.9 percent.”
And the increased organic matter, coupled with better seed genetics has paid off in yields. “I have seen a lot of change just since I came back in ’06,” Josh says. “That year we averaged about 75 bushels an acre and we thought, ‘what are we going to do with all this corn?’ Today, yields like that are borderline train wreck.’”
Answer to prayers
Neal became part of the farming operation when he and Linda Stolen married in 1979. The couple met while they were students at SDSU.
They finished college in 1982 and taking their twin daughters, Nicki and Angie, with them, they moved to the farm.
When they met, Linda knew Neal’s goal was to farm full time. “He always prayed as a kid that he would get to farm,” Linda shares.
But Neal’s family’s Beadle County farm was too small for him to return home to after college.
“When I was real small, my dad told me that if I wanted to farm full time, either land prices would need to change or I would marry into it. I happened to marry into it,” Neal says.
Neal got his start by working for Linda’s dad, Irving, and uncle, Harold. At the same time, he began building up a hog operation.
It was not easy.
“After paying for school, I had $2,500 left over so I bought six sows and started farrowing. It was a complete disaster. The sows had parvo lepto (Porcine Parvovirus and Leptospirosis),” Neal says.
What kept him going? “You can’t give up after the first year,” Linda explains.
After farrowing those original six out, he was able to save 17 pigs. At a neighbor’s farm sale, he bought a 16-crate farrowing barn. “I got good bloodlines, and in 10 years I was farrowing 60 sows and finishing them. We were pushing out a lot of hogs.
Neal continued to build up the farrow to finish hog operation, marketing 800 hogs a year – all the while working full time for Linda’s dad and uncle. Meanwhile, Linda, who is a nurse, worked off the farm.
“Linda’s nursing career allowed our equity to grow twice as fast. We lived on her salary and kept every sow we could to grow the operation,” Neal explains.
In 1993, when Uncle Harold was ready to retire, Neal began taking over his portion of the farm – buying his cattle on shares and leasing his farm ground. With the ever-expanding hog operation, crops and cattle, Neal was stretched thin.
“One day I woke up and thought, ‘this is too much.’”
He decided to sell his hog operation. “It shocked me when he told me, ‘we are going to get out of pigs,’” Linda says. “Up till then, for years he had been talking about how we were going to continue building the hog operation up.”
Not able to explain his reasoning, Neal says simply, “It was divine intervention. I got out before the hog market crashed. Right after I got out, hogs were selling for 9 cents a pound.”
Like his dad, when Josh returned to the farm in 2006, he got his start working on salary. Josh says growing up farming with his dad and grandpa gave him a good foundation and a conservative mindset.
“They are both frugal. They never took out an operating loan. So, I am the same way. I have always heard them say, ‘you cannot figure on prices being hot.’”
With five generations of farming experience rooted in Jerauld County soil and climate, the family is also careful when it comes to marketing and choose not to forward contract. “We don’t like to sell anything that is not grown yet or in the bin yet,” Josh says.
“There have been years when we had to windrow corn due to drought,” Natalie explains.
As the family visits about their farm today, they reflect on its beginnings with a solid grasp of its history, thanks to a book written by Linda’s great-grandpa, H.B. Reese, and great-uncle, J.B. Reese.
When her great-grandfather bought the land 15 miles southwest of Wessington Springs in 1902, he wrote, “If the land had seemed poor to us before, now it seemed only worse. We passed a considerable number of empty houses which indicate that the inhabitants had been forced to abandon the land on which these stood. It was in August and dry so that the prairie was quite seared over. …I bought a quarter section of it thinking it might do for pasture. I paid less than $5 per acre for it, so I felt that I could not lose money anyway.”
In addition to the history book, the family also has a vast collection of family heirlooms – farm logbooks, photographs and a grandfather clock featuring scenes from the Norwegian village where the family is originally from – all carved out of wooden fruit boxes by a farmhand. “During the Depression, he worked on the farm for room and board and evidentially thought that was too much, so he carved this clock as a gift to the family,” Josh shares.
And because he and Natalie’s children are now the sixth generation to grow up on the family farm, they get to not only hear the stories from the past, but create stories of their own on the farm, something Neal and Linda love being a part of.
“One of the driving reasons I wanted to retire was wanting to spend more time with my grandkids,” Linda says.
In addition to Josh and Natalie’s girls, their daughter Angie brings her two children, Aubrey, 17 and Evan, 14 back to the family farm often.
To view more photos and a video of the Bartel family, visit www. sdfu.org.

Sioux Falls Fireworks Back At W.H. Lyon Fairgrounds

One of the biggest fireworks shows in the state of South Dakota is back at the W.H. Lyon Fairgrounds for 2021. This year’s event is being hosted by a brand new non-profit “Sioux Falls Fireworks & Community Events”, started by John & Heidi Small, the owners of Sunny 93.3 in Sioux Falls, and by Matt Paulson, the owner of MarketBeat.

Last year when the Sioux Falls Jaycees canceled their annual fireworks event due to COVID, Sunny Radio decided to keep the fireworks event alive in 2020 with the help of many generous local sponsors. “MarketBeat, CarSwap and Grand Falls Casino & Golf Resort were all involved last year and we’re excited to have them sponsoring the event with Sunny Radio in 2021″ said John Small. “We’re also excited to be back at the W.H. Lyon Fairgrounds, and we would love to have people join us in person, but you can watch the fireworks from your vehicle while parked anywhere in northwest Sioux Falls, and hear the patriotic musical soundtrack on Sunny 93.3fm.”

This year a local company, The Fireworkz Store will shoot the fireworks, set to a patriotic music soundtrack at 10pm, but the event itself will start at 7pm with music and fun, the Sioux Falls Municipal Band plays at 8pm and the POET Ethanol Powered Vanguard Flyover is at at 9pm.

You’re encouraged to get involved through the “Giving Back” program at Grand Falls Casino & Golf Resort. You can donate $10 to the fireworks fund and they will give you $10 in free play in the casino. (details available at their Resort Club)

Updates are made daily on the event facebook page, a link can be found at www.SiouxFallsFireworks.org

SDSU Extension Urges Testing for Nitrate Due to Drought

More than 63% of South Dakota is now labeled as being in a Severe Drought (D2) or Extreme Drought (D3) region. While the intense heat and lack of precipitation is creating an adverse growing season for farmers, the weather conditions are also not conducive for putting up high-quality forage either.

“With the current drought conditions across the state, the risk of high nitrates in forages is increased due to slowed photosynthesis and conversion of nitrate into proteins,” says South Dakota State University (SDSU) Extension Cow/Calf Field Specialist Adele Harty.

SDSU Extension encourages producers to get standing forages tested before being harvested for hay or grazing. Available at various SDSU Extension locations and veterinary clinics across the state (extension.sdstate.edu/nitrate-quiktest-forages), the Nitrate QuikTest for Forages allows producers to make decisions based on the presence or absence of nitrates and appropriate timing for cutting.

“This is a qualitative test,” Harty says. “Therefore, if the results are positive, the recommendation will be to wait a few days and bring an additional sample in for re-testing. If it is negative, the hay can be cut without risk of nitrates.”

If the hay has already been cut and it tests positive, Harty says the recommendation is to send a core sample in after the hay is baled so that a representative sample can be collected and sent to a lab for quantitative analysis prior to feeding.

A representative sample needs to be taken from different areas across the field to reflect topography and soil differences, as these factors can affect nitrate levels. Harty advises selecting plants from at least 10 different areas and cutting the plant at ground level or pulling it out of the ground so that the lowest growth nodes can be tested, as the highest concentration of nitrate is in the lowest third of the plant. The more representative the sample, the better the test will work to identify potential nitrate concerns, she says.

“Be diligent about testing forages prior to haying or grazing to prevent the negative impacts that nitrates can cause, specifically in ruminant animals,” Harty says. “If crops, such as wheat, fail to make grain, and producers plan to utilize them for a hay crop, test them for nitrates prior to harvest to determine their safety level. The higher the level of nitrogen fertilizer that is applied, the higher the risk for nitrate toxicity. Always err on the side of caution and have feeds tested.”

To get a Nitrate QuikTest completed, contact your local Regional Extension Center (extension.sdstate.edu/nitrate-quiktest-forages). For specific questions on the test, contact Harty at 605-394-1722 or Adele.Harty@sdstate.edu or Jaelyn Quintana at 605-394-1722 or Jaelyn.Quintana@sdstate.edu.

South Dakota State University’s Southeast Research Farm to Host Field Day on July 6

South Dakota State University’s Southeast Research Farm annual field day will be held on July 6 at 1:30 p.m. The research farm is located at 29974 University Rd, Beresford, SD 57004.

The outdoor program and research plot tours will begin at 1:30 p.m. and 3:30 p.m. The indoor program will begin at 3:30 p.m.

Topics that will be discussed at the outdoor program include:

  • Herbicide Evaluations – Paul O. Johnson, SDSU Extension Weed Science Coordinator
  • Oat Nitrogen and Growth Regulator – David Karki, SDSU Extension Agronomy Field Specialist
  • Hybrid Rye at the Southeast Farm – Peter Sexton, Associate Professor and SDSU Extension Sustainable Cropping System Specialist
  • Cover Crop Herbicides – Gared Shaffer, SDSU Extension Weeds Field Specialist
  • Oat Breeding – Melanie Caffe, SDSU Assistant Professor and Oat Breeder
  • Alfalfa Trials at Southeast Farm – Sara Bauder, SDSU Extension Agronomy Field Specialist
  • Corn Fertility – Peter Kovacs, SDSU Assistant Professor in the Agronomy, Horticulture, and Plant Science Department
  • Soybean Gall Midge and Insect Updates – Adam Varenhorst, SDSU Extension Specialist Field Crop Entomologist
  • Corn Row Spacing – Bradley Rops, Southeast Research Farm Operations Manager
  • Soybean Maturity Group – Bradley Rops, Southeast Research Farm Operations Manager
  • Corn and Soybean Disease Updates – Emmanuel Byumkama, Associate Professor and SDSU Extension Plant Pathologist
  • Drainage Water Quality and Cover Crops – Kristeen Almen, Water Resources Research and Outreach Assistant

Topics that will be discussed at the indoor program include:

  • Feedlot Nutrition – Warren Rusche, SDSU Extension Beef Feedlot Management Associate
  • Market Updates – Jack Davis, SDSU Extension Crops Business Management Field Specialist
  • Weather Outlook – Laura Edwards, SDSU Extension State Climatologist
  • Horticulture Updates and High Tunnel – Kristine Lang, Assistant Professor and SDSU Extension Consumer Horticulture Specialist

Back to School Community Resource Fair in Rapid City

South Dakota Parent Connection would like to invite your organization to be part of the Back to School Community Resource Fair, hosted at the Rushmore Mall in Rapid City on Saturday, August 21, 2021 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. MT.
Our purpose is to bring together local organizations and community agencies that are dedicated to helping & supporting families in Rapid City and surrounding areas to share about their services.
Free tables/linens/chairs provided. For further information or questions, contact Lisa Merchen at (605) 348-0305 or email lmerchen@sdparent.org

South Dakota Farmers Union Says Competition & Fairness Are Needed to Keep Farmers and Ranchers in Business

South Dakota Farmers Union urged the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) to strengthen the nation’s food supply chain by restoring competition and fairness in markets that are dominated by a handful of multinational companies.
In comments submitted to USDA’s Agricultural Marketing Service, Farmers Union called for greater antitrust enforcement and outlined instances of growing concentration in agriculture and food supply chains that have jeopardized our nation’s food system resilience.
The most egregious event occurred during the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, causing meatpacking plant closures that resulted in major financial losses to ranchers when the spread between fed cattle and boxed beef prices soared by more than 300 percent.
“Throughout my entire farming career, this has been an issue,” said Doug Sombke, a fourth-generation Conde crop and cattle producer and President of South Dakota Farmers Union. “I know that Congress has held hearings on this topic. But even after 40 years of hearings, we still have not moved the needle. The time for restoring competition and fairness in today’s food supply is now. The consumer is being gouged and the producers are facing price fixing. We believe there is strong evidence to support an independent investigation by the Department of Justice – with subpoena power.”
Sombke points out that today, 85 percent of all foods processed in the United States, are processed through two foreign-owned companies. “We need to take a hard look at this for food security reasons,” Sombke said.
For decades, South Dakota Farmers Union members’ grassroots policy has called for USDA to take antitrust action against anticompetitive behavior in consolidated ag markets. While Farmers Union continues to urge USDA to act, it also is calling for expanded local and regional processing and supply chains, stronger truth-in-labeling laws, and relaxed barriers to intrastate and interstate sales of meat.
Additionally, Farmers Union is calling on USDA to immediately leverage existing rural development programs for investment in local and regional processing projects, and greater support for farmer-owned cooperatives.
“If we want our state’s number one industry of agriculture to succeed – if we want our nations’ food supply to remain safe and strong, our farmers and ranchers need to be able to make a living raising food. Young people need to see a financial future if they return to their family’s farms and ranches,” Sombke said.

Pime Time GALA Presents Check to Feeding South Dakota for $253,827

On Saturday night during the Prime Time Gala, the South Dakota
Cattlemen’s Foundation presented a donation to Feeding South Dakota, on-stage at the Denny Sanford PREMIER Center, in the amount of $253,827.

Of the 15.4 million pounds of food that Feeding South Dakota distributes on an annual basis to all 66 counties in our
state, only about 10% of that is protein. High quality protein, like beef, plays an important role in overall health, including weight control, by increasing satiety and helping to build and maintain muscle mass.

Prior to Saturday night’s donation, funds raised at the Prime Time Gala have helped to purchase and distribute over 1,112,412 pounds of beef for those that need it the most across South Dakota.
During the Prime Time Gala, a total of $15,000 in scholarships were awarded to five students attending South Dakota schools interested in the improvement of beef production and promotion to aid in their education.

This year’s scholarship winners included:
• $1,000 – Brianna Duerre – Bristol, South Dakota
• $2,000 – Collin Powell – Chamberlain, South Dakota
• $3,000 – Ryder Mortenson – Winner, South Dakota
• $4,000 – Matthew Bogue – Beresford, South Dakota
• $5,000 – Danika Gordon– Whitewood, South Dakota

That night, the Fed Cattle Challenge winners were also announced. The goal of this program is to help develop the next generation of feed yard owners and managers in our state. The Fed Cattle Challenge provided an opportunity foryouth, ages 14 to 18, to learn about the science and economics of finishing cattle by participating in a cattle finishingprogram. Those youth that were awarded included:

• $500 – Reese Voorhees – Onida, South Dakota
• $1,000 – Matea Gordon– Whitewood, South Dakota
• $1,500 – Morgan Mackaben – Belle Fourche, South Dakota
Before dinner guests departed the Little Big Town concert featuring

Tyler Farr, the gala concluded with Billion Chevrolet of Sioux Falls truck raffle drawing. Exactly 1,000 tickets were sold this year for a chance to win a 2021 Chevrolet Silverado 2500 Duramax Crew Cab 4WD LT. The lucky winner of the truck is Brandon Marlow of Sioux
Falls, South Dakota.

“The South Dakota Cattlemen Foundation is completely humbled by the generosity of everyone involved in the 2021
2021 Prime Time Gala,” exclaimed Ryan Eichler, President of the South Dakota Cattlemen’s Foundation.

“It was an atmosphere of genuine positivity and excitement. Gathering together after such tumultuous times in the name of giving was an unforgettable experience. The people that make up the beef industry in South Dakota can only be described
as exceptional. We’d like to thank every sponsor and attendee for making the gala great. We are energized by this
outpouring of support and can’t wait for June 18, 2022!”

For more information about the 9th Annual Prime Time Gala + Concert that will be held on Saturday, June 18, 2022
and for additional details about the South Dakota Cattlemen’s Foundation, visit http://SDCattlemensFoundation.com.