Valley Queen Cheese in Milbank introduced not too long ago that it plans to spend $195 million in a three-year enlargement that gives a serious financial enhance to northeastern South Dakota.
Mixed with a latest $250 million enlargement by Agropur at its cheese plant in Lake Norden, South Dakota now could be a serious participant within the nationwide cheese market.
Set for groundbreaking in late Could, Valley Queen’s expanded plant will probably be operational by January 2025. The undertaking will permit the corporate to supply one other 125 million kilos of cheese yearly, bringing whole manufacturing as much as almost 325 million kilos.
Valley Queen stated its current operation requires milk from 82,000 cows from 42 farms inside 90 miles of Milbank.
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The corporate plans to rent 140 staff over three years to completely workers the expanded operation, a Valley Queen information launch reads.
“Along with a rising workforce, the undertaking may also assist appreciable development in dairy alongside the I-29 hall. An estimated 30,000 cows will probably be added to the area over the following three years throughout current herds and a few but to be established,” per the discharge.
When full, Valley Queen will make use of about 440 folks.
Greater than 400 folks are also working at Agropur’s cheese manufacturing unit in Lake Norden. Barely bigger than the expanded Valley Queen will probably be, Agropur’s enlargement tripled its capability to about 365 million kilos of cheese and one other 180 million kilos of whey powder. That enlargement required the milk output from about 85,000 extra cows.
Finding almost 115,000 extra cows within the Interstate 29 hall can have a serious financial influence on the complete area. Agropur’s enlargement was estimated to have a $1 billion financial influence.
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Already Lake Norden is seeing the advantages. A number of new condo buildings have been constructed, and a brand new three-story constructing housing flats, workplaces and retail goes up in town’s Important Road.
It’s the kind of growth hardly ever seen in small cities in South Dakota, which principally are dropping residents. In lower than 10 years, Lake Norden has added almost 60 residents. A latest housing research confirmed that the city’s median revenue doubled from $31,000 to $62,000 in 2018.
Agropur says its staff arrive every day from 30 completely different communities. Lower than 10 minutes west towards Bryant, Riverview opened the 9,500-head Garfield Dairy, the biggest single-site dairy farm in South Dakota.
Drumgoon Dairy, which began with 1,400 cows close to Lake Poinsett, now has grown to five,500.
Valley Queen’s enlargement is welcome information in Milbank, which has misplaced inhabitants throughout the previous 20 years. The enlargement will reignite the town’s actual property market as demand for extra housing will increase, in addition to assist business providers.
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Each Valley Queen and Agropur would require extra dairies to be positioned within the area. Presently, Minnehaha, Grant, Hamlin and Brookings counties host probably the most dairies. Entry to transportation is necessary.
Constructing a brand new 5,000-head dairy generates about $40 million in gross sales exercise. Working that facility helps an estimated 125 jobs yearly, in response to a report ready for the South Dakota Division of Agriculture.
The equal of six such services is wanted to assist Valley Queen’s enlargement. Correspondingly the demand for feed, forage and different assist services will drive job development.
Whereas the expansions are excellent news, the dearth of space housing and staff will probably be an issue. Each cheese factories already battle to fill open jobs and dairy farms creatively discover employees. The development business, struggling to maintain tempo, faces employee shortages for laborers, expert carpenters, concrete, plumbing and electrical.
The answer appears apparent – make it potential for immigrants to dwell and work legally within the nation. It should be the highest precedence for our congressional delegation. Personal business is doing its half to construct a stronger economic system, however standing in the way in which are politicians extra involved in self preservation than fixing issues.
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In the event that they did greater than merely present up for groundbreaking ceremonies, extra folks would have jobs, homes and higher futures and extra small cities can be rising.
Fortuitously, there are firms like Valley Queen and Agropur keen to make rural South Dakota stronger.
Brad Johnson is a Watertown journalist and businessman who’s lively in state and native affairs.
BROOKINGS, S.D. — — Jadyn Donovan finished with 23 points and 15 rebounds to help No. 16 Duke hold off South Dakota State 75-71 on Sunday.
Donovan hit 11 of 17 shots from the floor and added four assists and four steals for the Blue Devils (4-1). It was the second double-double this season for the sophomore.
Ashlon Jackson totaled 17 points and four assists for Duke. Vanessa de Jesus scored 13 off the bench.
Brooklyn Meyer scored 25 points on 9-for-13 shooting to lead the Jackrabbits (3-1). Paige Meyer had 12 points and seven assists. Haleigh Timmer scored 11 on 5-for-7 shooting. Kallie Theisen grabbed 12 rebounds but did not score.
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Jackson had nine points to guide the Blue Devils to a 23-18 advantage after one quarter.
Donovan scored off a rebound to give Duke a 10-point lead with 90 seconds left before halftime. But Brooklyn Meyer had the only basket from there and South Dakota State trailed 38-30.
The Jackrabbits grabbed the lead at 47-45 after Timmer’s layup and two free throws by Meyer. Donovan answered with a dunk off a rebound and finished off a three-point play, and Reigan Richardson and Toby Fournier sank shots in the final 44 seconds to send the Blue Devils to the fourth quarter with a 54-50 lead.
Mesa Byom hit a 3-pointer with 7:38 left to play to pull South Dakota State even at 59. Donovan answered with another rebound basket and a jumper, and the Blue Devils stayed in front from there.
The Jackrabbits stayed within striking distance by hitting 8 of 16 shots from beyond the arc while Duke sank just 3 of 11.
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The Blue Devils return home to play Belmont on Thursday.
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BROOKINGS, S.D. (AP) — Jaden Jackson scored 19 points as South Dakota State beat Southern Miss 101-76 on Wednesday night.
Jackson had 10 rebounds for the Jackrabbits (4-1). Oscar Cluff scored 16 points while shooting 7 of 7 from the field and added nine rebounds. Kalen Garry shot 3 for 8 (1 for 5 from 3-point range) and 7 of 7 from the free-throw line to finish with 14 points.
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The Golden Eagles (2-2) were led by Neftali Alvarez, who posted 13 points. Christian Watson added 12 points and two steals for Southern Miss. Denijay Harris also had 11 points and 12 rebounds.
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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.
SIOUX FALLS — As the curtain rises on the 2024 South Dakota high school volleyball state tournaments, all three class champions from 2023 return to defend their titles.
Harrisburg puts a lengthy win streak on the line while looking for three championships in a row in Class AA; Sioux Falls Christian attempts to extend its Class A reign of dominance; and Chester hopes to become the first Class B repeat champion other than stalwarts Warner and Northwestern since 2002.
Here’s what to keep an eye on Thursday through Saturday at the Premier Center:
Chargers aim for eight straight as No. 8
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For a decade and a half, Sioux Falls Christian has been the team to beat in Class A volleyball, winning 12 of the past 14 state titles and seven in a row entering this weekend.
But while most of those championships came from a favorable seed position, if the Chargers are to collect an unprecedented eighth consecutive title, they’ll have to do it as the No. 8 seed in the bracket. First up for Sioux Falls Christian is No. 1 seed Miller, which has just one loss on the season (to Class B No. 2 Warner), in the opening match of the tournament. Should the Chargers knock off the Rustlers, a meeting with rival and No. 4 seed Dakota Valley or No. 5 Mount Vernon/Plankinton would await in the semifinals.
This season, SFC is 25-12, with those 12 losses the most in any single season during their 15-year run of dominance. The Chargers lost just 14 total over the previous four seasons. But the record can be quite misleading. Seven of those 12 losses this season came to out-of-state foes, and an eighth came to Class AA No. 1 Harrisburg.
Class A 3-seed Dell Rapids split a pair of matches with the Chargers this season, and 4-seed Dakota Valley knocked them off twice, but no one else in the tournament field has seen SFC this season.
Harrisburg goes for back-to-back unbeaten seasons
To find the last time Harrisburg was on the losing end of a volleyball match, one must go back to Oct. 4, 2022.
Since then, the Tigers have stacked up 75 consecutive match wins and now stand three wins away from back-to-back perfect seasons. En route to a 28-0 record so far this season, Harrisburg has only dropped five total sets, sweeping 23 opponents, and has yet to be taken the distance in a best-of-five sets match. Of those five set losses, only one came against a Class AA foe, as Sioux Falls Washington, the No. 3 tournament seed, nabbed on Sept. 24.
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Of the other contenders, look to the winner No. 4 O’Gorman and No. 5 Watertown, which should be a hard-fought match and will likely have the winner carrying a “nothing to lose” feeling against the Tigers in the semifinals. O’Gorman has only lost once in the last six weeks, that being a 3-0 loss to Harrisburg on Oct. 29.
In the bottom of the bracket, Jefferson and Washington are the No. 2 and No. 3 seeds and seem likely to face each other. A sleeper to watch is No. 6 Sioux Falls Roosevelt, which is 19-9, and went five sets with the Warriors twice already this season, both won by Washington. Both lower seeds in that bracket have been trending strong, with eight-straight wins for No. 7 Brandon Valley and seven in a row for Roosevelt.
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Chester looks to defend title against deep field of contenders
Since 2003, no two consecutive seasons have passed without either Warner (eight titles in that span) or Northwestern (nine titles) winning a Class B championship, but Chester is looking to change that.
The Flyers took down Warner in a five-set thriller during last season’s championship match and enter this year’s tournament as the No. 1 seed. At 29-2, Chester’s lone losses this season came at the Pentagon Invitational tournament to a pair of Iowa programs. For the third year in a row, Chester enters the state tournament without a loss to another Class B team and the last such outcome was a 2022 state championship loss to Warner.
But even as the favorite, a championship repeat doesn’t figure to be a cakewalk. Six of the eight Class B teams in the field are back from 2023. No. 2 Warner surely wants to avenge its loss in last year’s title matchup, and No. 3 Hitchcock-Tulare also hails from the powerhouse Region 1B. Lower seeds Burke, Gayville-Volin, Colman-Egan and Castlewood are all among the experienced state tournament programs looking to make a run.
But the Flyers are loaded, have a lot of big-match experience at the state tournament and a veteran coach in Jean O’Hara. For all of the skill and ability, Chester still has only two seniors on the roster and the Flyers appear to be in position to go back-to-back.
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Dierks covers prep and collegiate athletics across the Mitchell Republic’s coverage region area. His focus areas include: Mitchell High School football and boys basketball; area high school football, volleyball, basketball, baseball and track and field; and South Dakota State football. He is also at the forefront of the Mitchell Republic’s podcasting efforts. Dierks is a Mitchell native who graduated from South Dakota State University with his bachelor’s degree in journalism in May 2020. He joined the Mitchell Republic sports staff in August 2021. He can be reached at ldierks@mitchellrepublic.com and found on Twitter at @LDierksy.