Category Archives: Story

Local Elections Tomorrow

There will be several local elections in our area tomorrow with polls opening at 7 a.m. and polls closing at 7 p.m.

There will be a Winner City Election for Ward 3 councilman between incumbent John Meyer and Brad Schramm. The polling location will be at the City Hall Council Chambers.

In Gregory, there is a Ward 3 Councilman election between incumbent Guyla Husman and James Sargent.  The polling location will be in the community room of the Gregory Memorial Auditorium.

In Presho, there is an election for Ward 1 councilman between incumbent Carl Brakke and Dan Meyer. The polling location is at Presho City Hall Community Room.

There will be a school board election for Platte Geddes Schools. There are 2 open positions for 3 year terms each.  Those running include:

Ross Varlilek, Incumbent

Steve Olsen

Tom Olsen

Todd Strand

Kipp DeGroot

Jeremy Rasmussen

Mark Petersen

The polling locations are at the Community Building in Platte and at the American Legion Building in Geddes.

Spring Vendor Show in Winner

There will be a Spring vendor and craft show in Winner on Saturday, April 17th from 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. at the Statewide Ag Building located at 201 Monroe St.  The event will include many various vendors as well as a quilt raffle  and a Spirit Gem fundraiser.

Governor Noem Names Aaron Scheibe as Chief of Staff

Governor Kristi Noem announced that she will name Aaron Scheibe as her chief of staff.

“Aaron Scheibe is a dedicated public servant with years of experience in state government,” said Governor Noem. “Aaron has a deep love for our state, and I appreciate his willingness to serve in this important role.”

Scheibe, an attorney, will leave his private legal practice to join the Governor’s Office. He previously served in Noem’s administration in 2019 as a senior policy advisor, working in policy areas including public safety, transportation, tribal relations, and energy. Prior to that, Scheibe served from 2014-19 as deputy commissioner of the Governor’s Office of Economic Development, and from 2002-13 as a diplomat with the U.S. Department of State.

“I am honored the Governor has asked me to rejoin her administration at this crucial time,” said Scheibe.  “I look forward to working with the Governor’s team, her cabinet secretaries and their dedicated staff, and the Legislature to ensure South Dakota is an example of responsible, and responsive, government for years to come.”

A Pierre native, Scheibe is a graduate of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and George Washington University School of Law. He and his wife, Laura, live in Pierre with their two sons.

Scheibe will assume his new role on May 1.

Platte-Geddes Prom Tomorrow Night

This year’s Platte-Geddes Junior/Senior Prom will take place tomorrow night.  Our theme is “A Night in the Spotlight” and the DJ is Garner Hanson with Dakota Entertainment. The AFTER-Prom Committe is hosting a supper for the Juniors/Seniors/and their dates at 5:30. Grand March begins at 7:30 in the PG Armory with the dance following until 11:30. At 12 am the AFTER-Prom party begins.

Update: Missing Winner High School girls are home safe!

Update to the story.  Karlee and Kendall are home safe!  

This message was sent out on the Winner School District’s school reach.  Karlee Brozik and Kendall Dice, two students from the Winner School District are missing.  They may be in danger.  They are traveling in a 2007 dark colored Pontiac Grand Prix.  Please question your children if they may know the whereabouts of these girls.  If you have any information, please contact the Tripp County Sheriff or the Winner Police Department at 842-3600.

Governor Noem to Name Venhuizen to Board of Regents

Governor Kristi Noem announced that she will appoint Tony Venhuizen to the South Dakota Board of Regents. Venhuizen will succeed Kevin Schieffer of Sioux Falls, whose tenure on the Board ended in March. He will depart his role as Noem’s chief of staff in late April, and his appointment will be effective at that time.

“Tony has been an incredible asset to our team, and he will be missed. I am so grateful for his leadership and service to the people of our state,” said Governor Noem. “His institutional knowledge and experience will be an asset to the Board of Regents, and I look forward to working with him in this new role.“

Venhuizen is a graduate of Armour High School. He earned his bachelor’s degree from South Dakota State University and his law degree from the University of South Dakota. Venhuizen has served as Noem’s chief of staff since April 2020, after having served in her office as a senior advisor. Prior to that, he served for eight years in the administration of Gov. Dennis Daugaard, including more than four years as chief of staff.

“It has been an honor to serve with Gov. Noem and her team over the past year, especially as our state confronted the COVID pandemic,” said Venhuizen. “I always intended for my return to the Governor’s Office to be for the short-term, and I am particularly honored that Gov. Noem has asked me to return to the Board of Regents.”

Venhuizen served previously on the Board of Regents from 2003-08, having been appointed three times by Gov. Mike Rounds as the board’s student member. He has served on the Board’s academic and finance committees and on three presidential search committees. While in the Governor’s Office, Venhuizen spent more than eight years as education policy advisor. He chaired the Council on Higher Education Policy Goals, Performance and Accountability and the Open Government Task Force. Venhuizen also served on the Blue Ribbon Task Force and the DakotaCorps Scholarship Board.

Venhuizen lives in Sioux Falls with his wife, Sara, and their three children.

Update: Missing Winner High School students are home safe

Update to the story.  Karlee and Kendall are home safe!  

This message was sent out on the Winner School District’s school reach.  Karlee Brozik and Kendall Dice, two students from the Winner School District are missing.  They may be in danger.  They are traveling in a 2007 dark colored Pontiac Grand Prix.  Please question your children if they may know the whereabouts of these girls.  If you have any information, please contact the Tripp County Sheriff or the Winner Police Department at 842-3600.

 

SDFU Celebrates Kimball Ranch Family

Visit the Ness ranch most any spring or summer evening after chores and you are bound to find siblings Swayze, 16, Shayda, 14, and Synch, 12, in the middle of roping practice.
“We rope a dummy every night and have contests to see who can rope better. Whoever loses has to do dishes,” explains 14-year-old Shayda.
Whether it’s rodeo, 4-H, fixing fence or working cattle, the Ness family enjoys the time they spend together on their family’s ranch, explains mom, Sasha. “It’s a good place to raise kids because there’s always something to do. Probably more than they would like some days. Always chores to do, cattle to work or move and horses to ride. It keeps them busy and out of trouble.”
A fourth-generation cattle producer, Sasha grew up on a ranch near Faith. She met LeRoy when they were both students at South Dakota State University.
The two had a lot in common. Both grew up raising cattle. Both were active 4-H members and enjoyed rodeo. Before they met, LeRoy had already decided he was going to continue the ranching legacy his dad began.
“When my dad bought this place in 1968, there was only a well and an old hog house,” LeRoy says.
His dad set right to work investing in improving two quarters of land. He implemented rotational grazing and planted several shelter belts. Tragically, when LeRoy was only 19, his dad was killed in a car accident. “I felt I needed to take on the family legacy.”
Following his dad’s death, the cattle and equipment were liquidated. So, in 1998, LeRoy began rebuilding – buying cows and leasing the land from his mom, Linda. In 2000 LeRoy and Sasha married.
Although he wanted to continue his dad’s legacy, LeRoy says it wasn’t obligation that brought him back to the ranch. He says raising cattle and caring for grassland feels like what he was always meant to do. “I enjoy everything about it – calving, processing, handling and working on corral systems,” he says. “And I’m very big into grass management.”
In fact, while ranching, LeRoy also spent more than a decade working as a range management specialist for the South Dakota Grasslands Coalition.
His interest in grassland management is also part of his dad’s legacy. “My dad was into rotational grazing and back in the ’80s, he was one of the first people in the county to buy a no-till drill.”
Over time, LeRoy has converted cropland back to pastureland and intensified the rotation schedule.
“We move the cattle every 3-7 days,” he explains. “I really enjoy seeing the grassland flourish as it returns to what nature intended it to be with a lot of different grasses.” His efforts are paying off. Today, several native grass species have returned, and the healthier rangeland can support more animal units. “My dad could run 160 cows for six months. On that same land, during my best year, I can run 240 cows for eight months.”
LeRoy says he still sees room for improvement. “The dung beetle has not returned yet,” he says, explaining that the work the beetle does to break up and bury manure improves soil health and reduces fly issues.
To further improve the land, he plans to intensify grazing even more. “Animal impact is a big deal. I would love to move my cattle twice a day to increase hoof action. My goal for most of my grass is to only have critters on it 10 to 14 days and otherwise leave it resting the remaining 350 days.”
Intense grazing does require more labor, and both LeRoy and Sasha spend some of each week working off the ranch. LeRoy is a fieldman for Kimball Livestock Exchange, he also sells semen for Genex. Sasha works for Kimball Livestock part time.
LeRoy and Sasha also have a feedlot where they background cattle and do some custom feeding.
To keep up with on-ranch work, the family all chips in to help with morning and evening feedings. They also breed their cows to calve in May. “We have nearly no calving difficulties and the weather lets us calve out on a quarter section of grass. And the cows need a lot less to make it through the winter so we save on feed costs,” LeRoy says.
“We can go out and check calves in short sleeves and on horseback,” Sasha adds.
This calving season things will be a bit different. Because after leasing land from his mom for more than 20 years, the couple sold their cow herd to help finance purchasing the ranch in fall 2020. “If it were not for my mom leasing this land to us all these years, we would not have been able to do this,” LeRoy explains. “Taking over ownership is kinda scary, but it is the right time.”
They are building their herd back by purchasing bred heifers.
“My vision for this place has always been to leave it better for the next generation,” LeRoy says.
And right now, the next generation appreciates the opportunity, explains their 16-year-old daughter, Swayze. “A 9-to-5 job sounds nice, but I really don’t see myself doing that after growing up outside with horses and in nature.”
A sophomore in high school, Swayze says she is exploring career options that will allow her to spend time with livestock or outdoors. In addition to chores and rodeo, Swayze and her siblings are also actively involved in 4-H.
“I enjoy being able to work with and show cattle – especially the people I get to meet doing it and friends I get to see,” Swayze says.
Through 4-H, the Ness kids have developed showmanship and public speaking skills, and most recently, Synch also learned how to trap. “I belong to a 4-H trapping club. We talk all about the traps, and what tracks to look for and how to set the traps,” explains the 12-year-old. “I like setting traps and coming in every day to see if I caught anything.”
LeRoy and Sasha appreciate the life skills their children gain through involvement in rodeo and 4-H. “It’s not all about purple ribbons. When they don’t win the ribbon they want, that’s how they learn how to handle hard things life throws them,” LeRoy explains.
And like everything on the Ness ranch, the entire family gets involved, Sasha and LeRoy serve as 4-H leaders.
View more photos of the Ness family and a video by visiting www.SDFU.org and clicking on the Celebrate Farm & Ranch Families link under the About Us tab.

SDSU Names 98th Little International Winners

South Dakota State University hosted the 98th Little international in Brookings March 26-27. While 4-H and FFA contests were held virtually this year, collegiate showing and fitting competitions took place in the Animal Science Arena.

“Even though we weren’t able to put the 98th Little International on in its ‘normal’ fashion, the staff and exhibitors were extremely excited and motivated to make this event happen any way we could get it done,” manager Jacob Rausch said. “We simply couldn’t go two years without Little International, and it felt very good to see all the hard work come to fruition.”

Results from collegiate showing, fitting and other contests are as follows:

Overall Awards:

High Point Freshman: Emily Nold – Rutland, SD

High Point Upperclassman: Adam Bierstedt – Pipestone, MN

Grand Champion Round Robin: Ryan Franz – Windom, MN

Reserve Champion Round Robin: Adam Bierstedt – Pipestone, MN

High Point Club: Sigma Alpha Sorority

The Pete Pritchett Memorial Award was established to recognize the outstanding accomplishments of a Little “I” staff member and is given in memory of Pete, the 1988 Little “I” livestock coordinator who was tragically killed in an auto accident that following summer. This year’s award, sponsored by Rosie Nold, was presented to executive committee member Luke Groos of Howard Lake, Minnesota.