South Dakota
Empowering the next generation of women in sports in South Dakota
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (Dakota Information Now) – Equality in ladies’s sports activities took a giant step ahead 50 years in the past when Title IX was handed. However, although feminine athletes have come a good distance, there may be nonetheless work to be performed on this nation.
Now, collegiate athletes within the space are taking it upon themselves to empower the subsequent era of girls. Photojournalist Sam Tastad has the story, and you’ll solely see it on Dakota Information Now.
“Our daughters are what introduced us collectively a decade in the past, and soccer is a sport that has created that bond,” mentioned Sioux Falls Metropolis FC co-owner Melissa Nelson.
“I actually wished to do that as a result of ever since I used to be slightly woman, I wished to play on a crew like this,” mentioned Sioux Falls Metropolis FC participant Ella Smith. “I hope that little women see me and that they’ll accomplish this as nicely.”
“We’re celebrating and empowering ladies who’ve to consider what girl has impressed them,” mentioned Sioux Falls FC co-owner Emily Thomas.
“Mya Moore, we shared the identify, so I assumed that was cool,” mentioned South Dakota State senior Myah Selland.
“Mine was Lindsay Whalen being a Minnesota woman. So, it was surreal taking part in them within the WNIT match,” mentioned SDSU junior Tori Nelson.
“I assumed as a child I wish to be on that massive display screen to have little women look as much as me,” mentioned Smith.
“Empower not solely our women however all younger ladies. Title IX was a giant deal, however there may be nonetheless a number of work to be performed,” mentioned Melissa Nelson.
“50 years of Title IX, it’s loopy that it needed to one thing to return in impact to permit ladies the alternatives we have now,” mentioned former WNBA All-Star Tamika Catchings. “We speak about what impression and what South Dakota and having ladies’s sports activities being seen and profitable.”
“It’s such an honor to have a ladies’s sport be like a precedence, to be the large deal round city,” mentioned Sioux Falls FC participant Jozy Bardsley. “Our first sport, there was a fan part of youth gamers. After we had been that younger like we didn’t have this particular alternative. We needed to go some other place. We needed to go see an enormous stadium after which simply to have the ability to go to the USF stadium and see an idol or function mannequin, it provides me chills to consider that would have been you as a child.”
“Now we have to be a voice. Now we have to advertise these younger women and girls to offer them alternatives and them to talk as much as create extra fairness,” mentioned Melissa Nelson.
“We had nice function fashions rising up and that not solely formed me as a basketball participant I’m, however the particular person I’m. I feel it’s simply tremendous necessary to do this for the subsequent era of ladies,” mentioned Tori Nelson.
“Having that reference to little youngsters like they suppose we’re superstars simply because they see us pursuing stuff, conquering our targets and goals,” mentioned Bardsley.
Copyright 2022 Dakota Information Now. All rights reserved.
South Dakota
North Dakota tribal leaders see Burgum as ally in Interior, energy role • Alaska Beacon
Mark Fox, chairman of the Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara Nation, called Gov. Doug Burgum’s recent nomination for secretary of the Interior and National Energy Council chair a “match made in heaven” for North Dakota tribes.
President-elect Donald Trump announced his unique plans for Burgum on Friday. In the combined role, Burgum would not only lead the Department of the Interior — which includes the Bureau of Indian Affairs — but also wield power over all federal agencies that regulate energy.
Fox and other North Dakota and South Dakota tribal leaders welcomed the news.
Burgum, who first took office in 2016, is credited with improving North Dakota’s once-tenuous relationship with local tribes.
While in office, Burgum advocated for tax-sharing agreements with Native nations, added a permanent display of all five tribal flags outside the governor’s office and pushed for law enforcement partnerships to improve emergency response times on reservations.
“Governor Burgum understands Indian country and the challenges we face, such as the need for public safety, better tribal education, and economic development in Indian country, among other needs,” David Flute, former chair of the Sisseton Wahpeton Sioux Tribe, said Friday in a statement to the North Dakota Monitor. Flute is now secretary of the South Dakota Department of Tribal Relations.
Burgum will succeed Interior Secretary Deb Haaland of New Mexico, a member of the Pueblo of Laguna and the first Native American Cabinet secretary.
Tribal officials say Burgum could be a crucial ally in Washington.
“I would have been so disappointed had he not been appointed to a Cabinet position,” Fox said Friday.
Brad Hawk, executive director of North Dakota’s Indian Affairs Commission, said Burgum has a unique opportunity to reduce red tape for Native nations.
Hawk said he wasn’t familiar with every aspect of Haaland’s administration, but appreciated her department’s work investigating the history of federal Indian boarding schools and their impact on Native communities.
State Rep. Lisa Finley-DeVille, D-Mandaree, whose district includes Fort Berthold, recognized Burgum’s progress in establishing meaningful relationships with tribes, but said she worries about Trump administration policies.
“I hope that future Secretary Burgum remembers the trust and relationships that he’s built with North Dakota’s five Tribal Nations,” Finley-DeVille said in a statement. “My hope is that future Secretary Burgum will work collaboratively with tribes to ensure our voices are heard in decision-making processes. Together, we can address critical issues such as sustainable development, cultural preservation, and economic opportunity.”
Finley-DeVille added the Department of the Interior needs to protect tribal sovereignty, honor treaty rights, and ensure that development is conducted responsibly and with the full consultation of all impacted tribal nations.
Fox said Friday he’s hopeful Burgum will use his position in Washington to help create a friendlier regulatory environment for the MHA Nation and other oil-rich tribes. The MHA Nation is based on the Fort Berthold Reservation, home to nearly 3,000 active oil wells.
“We’re able to sit down and talk,” Fox, the MHA Nation chair, said of Burgum earlier this year. “That’s the key.”
Fox noted that in contrast, the MHA Nation has never gotten an audience with Haaland, despite several attempts to speak with her.
This past June, Burgum acknowledged at an event that relations between the state and tribes were at a low point when he took office in 2016. At the time, protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline in southern North Dakota were ongoing, involving thousands of demonstrators who flocked to the state to camp in solidarity with the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe in opposition to the pipeline.
Burgum said one of the first things he did as governor was reach out to Dave Archambault, chair of Standing Rock at the time, and offer to come meet with tribal leaders.
“That’s where we were starting from: with a commitment to each other to listen to each other,” Burgum said during this year’s Strengthening Government to Government conference, an annual event started under his leadership that brings together state and tribal leaders.
U.S. Sen. Kevin Cramer, R-N.D., said he thinks Burgum’s experience working with North Dakota tribal leaders makes him a good fit for leading Interior. He characterized the current BIA as unresponsive and bureaucratic.
“Doug has done more for Indian relations in North Dakota than any governor in my lifetime, for sure, and maybe ever,” Cramer said.
Michael Achterling contributed to this report.
North Dakota Monitor is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. North Dakota Monitor maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Amy Dalrymple for questions: [email protected]. Follow North Dakota Monitor on Facebook and X.
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South Dakota
Judge dismisses a lawsuit over South Dakota abortion-rights measure that voters rejected
A South Dakota judge dismissed a lawsuit that an anti-abortion group filed in June targeting an abortion rights measure that voters rejected this month.
In an order dated Friday, Circuit Court Judge John Pekas granted Life Defense Fund’s motion to dismiss its lawsuit against Dakotans for Health, the measure group.
In a statement, Life Defense Fund co-chair Leslee Unruh said: “The people have decided, and South Dakotans overwhelmingly rejected this constitutional abortion measure. We have won in the court of public opinion, and South Dakotans clearly saw the abortion lobby’s deception.”
Dakotans for Health co-founder Rick Weiland said he had expected the lawsuit to be dismissed.
“The Life Defense Fund’s accusations were part of a broader, failed effort to keep Amendment G off the ballot and silence the voices of South Dakota voters,” Weiland said in a statement. “But make no mistake — this dismissal is just one battle in a much larger war over the future of direct democracy in South Dakota.”
Life Defense Fund’s lawsuit had challenged petitions that got the measure on the ballot, saying they contained invalid signatures and circulators committed fraud and various wrongdoing. The anti-abortion group sought to invalidate the ballot initiative and bar the measure group and its workers from doing ballot-measure work for four years.
The judge initially dismissed the lawsuit in July, but the state Supreme Court sent it back to him in August. In September, an apparent misunderstanding between attorneys and the court regarding scheduling of the trial pushed the case back until after the election.
Even before the measure made the ballot in May, South Dakota’s Republican-led Legislature cemented its formal opposition and passed a law allowing people to withdraw their petition signatures.
A South Dakota law that took effect after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022 outlaws abortion and makes it a felony to perform one except to save the life of the mother.
South Dakota was one of three states where abortion rights measures failed this month. The others were Florida and Nebraska. Voters in six other states passed such measures.
___
Dura reported from Bismarck, North Dakota.
South Dakota
Cluff’s 14 help South Dakota State down Mount Marty 89-41
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