South Dakota
How will South Dakota’s abortion access change if Roe v. Wade falls?
If the U.S. Supreme Courtroom chooses to overturn the landmark 1973 ‘Roe. v. Wade resolution, as is essentially anticipated after a draft of that call was leaked not too long ago, abortion entry in South Dakota will come to an finish.
The ruling is anticipated to come back down someday this month. And whereas 13 conservative states with set off legal guidelines, together with South Dakota, are poised to ban abortion instantly after the SCOTUS ruling, as of at the moment abortion nonetheless stays authorized for South Dakotans.
The Argus Chief sat down with three leaders to speak about what sources can be found to folks looking for abortions in South Dakota and what might change if Roe is overturned: Deliberate Parenthood North Central State’s Chief Medical Officer, Dr. Sarah Traxler; a well being heart supervisor on the state’s lone abortion clinic in Sioux Falls, Misty; and co-founder of the biggest and solely abortion fund in South Dakota, Justice Empowerment Community, Kim Floren.
Extra:Here is how South Dakota’s abortion stance might prepared the ground for a post-Roe America
Here is what we discovered.
Editor’s be aware: The Argus Chief has agreed to make use of Misty’s first identify solely as a result of her issues for her and her household’s security.
Abortions are nonetheless obtainable, as SCOTUS ruling looms
The second an overturned ruling on Roe is introduced, abortions can be instantly banned in South Dakota.
However at the moment, South Dakota’s Deliberate Parenthood clinic in Sioux Falls remains to be offering abortions to folks looking for them. Workers has been working for months to tell sufferers on what an instantaneous ban appears like in South Dakota, defined Misty, who additionally oversees Sioux Metropolis, Iowa’s Deliberate Parenthood well being heart.
“[The immediate ban] is one thing our sufferers are conscious of,” acknowledged Misty. “We’re actively telling them as a result of it is extraordinarily necessary to be very clear.”
The information of the SCOTUS opinion leak, for essentially the most half, has not deterred South Dakotans from looking for abortions, stated Misty. Although some sufferers have determined to schedule with different clinics after they hear about South Dakota’s set off legal guidelines throughout affirmation calls.
“We’re mainly telling sufferers that while you present as much as your appointment on Monday, or earlier than then, the Supreme Courtroom resolution is perhaps out,” she defined. “Roe can be overturned, we might not be capable of see you in your abortion.”
Extra ladies selecting in-clinic abortions to keep away from SD’s strict abortion tablet legal guidelines, uncertainty of SCOTUS resolution
Amid the uncertainty of a looming post-Roe South Dakota, Misty says ladies are more and more selecting a one-visit, in-clinic abortion. A abortion through medicine requires a complete of three visits — the abortion session and the allotting of the primary abortion tablet on the second go to, with a 72-hour ready interval in between, and a 3rd go to, two weeks after the second go to, for follow-up.
Extra:Sens. Mike Rounds, John Thune say states ought to dictate abortion legislation, not Congress
What’s nonetheless being litigated is the state’s anti-coercion statute, including an additional go to for the allotting of the second abortion tablet. That is not together with the informed-consent session with a being pregnant assist heart inside the 72-hour ready interval.
Just some weeks in the past, Traxler noticed a South Dakota affected person who initially needed a medicine abortion, however bought a procedural abortion as a substitute. The affected person feared not having entry to an abortion supplier if there have been issues and follow-up wanted, particularly with the uncertainty of the SCOTUS ruling.
“[With the potential failure rate of a medication abortion], she needed a procedural abortion that day so she could possibly be performed and would not need to follow-up,” stated Traxler.
Minnesota might see as much as a 25% enhance in demand, short-term spike in Iowa
Deliberate Parenthood is giving South Dakotans at present scheduling abortion appointments the choice of retaining their appointment or rescheduling in neighboring, abortion-friendly states, like Minnesota and Iowa.
Extra:Gov. Kristi Noem’s attraction of abortion tablets order placed on maintain
Primarily based on the obtainable information projections, Traxler says Deliberate Parenthood North Central States, stretching throughout South Dakota, North Dakota, Nebraska, Minnesota and Iowa, is anticipating a 5-to-25% enhance in demand for abortion providers at Minnesota’s abortion clinic places alone.
“That is based mostly on a [national] projection that solely about 50% of these individuals who want an abortion would even have the power to journey,” acknowledged Traxler.
Which means the opposite half would not have the means to journey, and are left with the choice of continuous a being pregnant or discovering a method to self-manage one.
Extra:‘Coat-hanger cries usually are not far-fetched’: SD professors clarify context of individuals’s concern, anger about abortion
Within the short-term, Traxler and Misty say an uptick on the Sioux Metropolis clinic is probably going. Greater than 70% of sufferers on the Iowa clinic are South Dakota residents, stated Misty.
Sioux Metropolis, which solely supplies medicine abortions, is predicted to be pretty booked-out. The subsequent choices for South Dakota ladies looking for abortions, Misty says, can be the Deliberate Parenthood’s clinics in St. Paul and Omaha.
Sioux Falls has the biggest focus of South Dakota’s abortion-seeking inhabitants, based on an Argus Chief evaluation on state abortion information. The journey to Omaha or St. Paul is 180-240 miles away, and clearly will increase as you progress into extra rural elements of South Dakota.
South Dakota’s largest abortion fund hits document variety of calls final month
The fact, nonetheless, is that many ladies will not get the care they want, stated Traxler. They will have to decide on between retaining the kid, or self-managing an abortion, which might be unsafe, she stated.
The shortcoming to journey can be a further drawback for racial teams that have already got obstacles to health-care, acknowledged Deliberate Parenthood North Central State’s Chief Medical Officer.
“This is not the case for Black and Indigenous ladies… ladies who’re residing paycheck to paycheck who have already got kids,” Traxler stated.
Extra:We analyzed 5 years of South Dakota abortion information. Here is what we discovered.
Sioux Falls’ reproductive well being clinic works with Justice Empowerment Community, a neighborhood nonprofit devoted making abortions accessible to South Dakotans, to help folks looking for abortions with funds already “falling by the cracks.”
From elevating donations and reserving motels, to driving hours to state borders to get abortion tablets, JEN has been working since March 2020.
The abortion fund and help community, beneath the Nationwide Community of Abortion Funds, had its busiest month in Might with a complete of 90 callers, stated JEN co-founder Kim Floren. They sometimes common 25 to 30 calls a month.
Extra:Listed below are 4 pending abortion coverage battles that can come to South Dakota if Roe v. Wade falls
“I feel it is type of a mirrored image of the higher financial scenario that is been occurring [with inflation],” stated Floren.
Floren says people who find themselves calling and want funds to get an abortion do not simply want $100.
“They do not have something to place in the direction of it,” she defined, particularly with expensive fuel costs.
Floren is not anticipating the decision quantity to decelerate, and predicts extra folks must journey farther distance to get abortion care.
JEN’s volunteer workers will get calls from so far as Iowa and Nebraska, and will not be capable of meet the demand if it continues at its present price, except there’s an inflow of donations and sources.
“We assist prioritize South Dakota sufferers, however there simply aren’t loads of sources [in the Midwest],” Floren stated. “However yeah, there is not any approach we will sustain with it within the long-run.”
On the bottom, Floren says she’s been seeing extra ladies getting later abortions, or farther alongside of their abortions, on account of widespread-tightened abortion entry within the Midwest.
Extra:Ellis: Why South Dakota voters might relive abortion battles of 2006, 2008
“By the point a affected person will get to the clinic, they’re of their second trimester after which the prices go up,” she stated.
Within the meantime, with Roe on its final legs, JEN remains to be offering funds for transportation, meals, lodge prices and prescription drugs to ladies looking for abortions, and sometimes entrance further prices for touring out-of-state for abortions.
E mail human rights reporter Nicole Ki at nki@argusleader.com or observe on Twitter at @_nicoleki.
South Dakota
Former South Dakota DSS employee indicted for allegedly stealing voucher to buy groceries
A former South Dakota Department of Social Services employee was indicted on one count of social services fraud Thursday, according to a press release from the South Dakota Attorney General’s Office.
Amalia Escalante Barrientos, 28, allegedly used a stolen DSS voucher to purchase groceries for personal use, according to the press release. The incident occurred at a Brookings business Oct. 11.
The Brookings woman has not yet appeared for an initial hearing, according to Minnehaha County court documents.
According to Open SD, Barrientos’ wage is listed at $26.58 hourly.
If convicted, Barrientos could serve up to one year in the county jail, a $2,000 fine, or both, according to the press release.
South Dakota
South Dakota Lottery Powerball, Lucky For Life results for Jan. 8, 2025
The South Dakota Lottery offers multiple draw games for those aiming to win big. Here’s a look at Jan. 8, 2025, results for each game:
Winning Powerball numbers from Jan. 8 drawing
01-20-36-38-43, Powerball: 24, Power Play: 2
Check Powerball payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Lucky For Life numbers from Jan. 8 drawing
13-14-24-37-38, Lucky Ball: 13
Check Lucky For Life payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Lotto America numbers from Jan. 8 drawing
04-15-33-39-41, Star Ball: 07, ASB: 02
Check Lotto America payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Dakota Cash numbers from Jan. 8 drawing
05-15-25-26-33
Check Dakota Cash payouts and previous drawings here.
Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results
Are you a winner? Here’s how to claim your prize
- Prizes of $100 or less: Can be claimed at any South Dakota Lottery retailer.
- Prizes of $101 or more: Must be claimed from the Lottery. By mail, send a claim form and a signed winning ticket to the Lottery at 711 E. Wells Avenue, Pierre, SD 57501.
- Any jackpot-winning ticket for Dakota Cash or Lotto America, top prize-winning ticket for Lucky for Life, or for the second prizes for Powerball and Mega Millions must be presented in person at a Lottery office. A jackpot-winning Powerball or Mega Millions ticket must be presented in person at the Lottery office in Pierre.
When are the South Dakota Lottery drawings held?
- Powerball: 9:59 p.m. CT on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.
- Mega Millions: 10 p.m. CT on Tuesday and Friday.
- Lucky for Life: 9:38 p.m. CT daily.
- Lotto America: 9:15 p.m. CT on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday.
- Dakota Cash: 9 p.m. CT on Wednesday and Saturday.
This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by a South Dakota editor. You can send feedback using this form.
South Dakota
Noem’s former opponent heading back to Pierre as she prepares to leave • South Dakota Searchlight
SIOUX FALLS — Three years ago, Kristi Noem kept her job in Pierre, and Jamie Smith left. Now the situation is reversed.
Kind of like Smith predicted.
“Everyone knew she had national ambitions,” he said Wednesday.
Smith, a Democrat, gave up his legislative seat in 2022 and ran against Noem, a Republican, who wound up winning a second term as governor.
Now Noem is preparing to leave South Dakota for Washington, D.C., where she is nominated to serve as secretary of Homeland Security under President-elect Donald Trump. Her nomination hearing is scheduled for next Wednesday.
Smith, meanwhile, won a state Senate seat in a Sioux Falls district during November’s election. He’ll go back to Pierre on Tuesday for the start of the annual legislative session, where he’ll serve as Senate assistant minority leader.
Addressing members of Change Agents at a Sioux Falls library, Smith acknowledged the challenges he and the other Democrats face in the Legislature. They’re outnumbered 96-9 by Republicans.
“We are very limited in what we can do this year, with the number of Democrats that we have in the Legislature,” Smith said. “We are essentially left playing defense.”
Democrats lose ground in Legislature, but pick up seat in longtime Republican district
Members of Change Agents, formed in 2021, say they support pragmatic candidates and oppose extremist rhetoric and policies. Founders include former Sioux Falls Mayor Rick Knobe, financial planner Mike Huber and entrepreneur Craig Brown.
After the meeting, Smith told South Dakota Searchlight why he came back to politics.
“Because I truly believe that I have the skills to try and help people,” he said. “I do believe that one person can make a difference for the people of South Dakota.”
Smith said finding ways to build relationships across the aisle will be crucial for Democrats this session, like the one he said he built with incoming Senate President Pro Tempore Chris Karr, R-Sioux Falls, based partly on a simple starting point.
“We share a birthday,” Smith said.
Outlining his priorities, Smith said he plans to introduce a bill that would end incarceration for drug ingestion in South Dakota. South Dakota’s ingestion law is the only one in the nation that allows prosecutors to charge people with felony drug possession for a failed drug test.
Instead, he advocates for expanding treatment programs and diversion efforts, calling incarceration for ingestion punitive and ineffective.
Smith also addressed his desire to amend the state’s abortion ban, his opposition to Noem’s $4 million proposal to fund private and homeschool education, and his resistance to raising sales taxes as a means of lowering property taxes.
South Dakota’s near-total abortion ban allows an exception only to save the life of the mother and lacks clear definitions, said Smith, who called the ban “cruel and unusual.”
“We need to stop it,” he said.
Smith said women’s health care is a top priority for Democrats, but they don’t currently have a bill to increase access to abortion. He said some members want to introduce bills to expand exceptions beyond the life of the mother, while others are arguing for a broader abortion access ballot measure. Voters rejected an abortion-rights measure in November.
Smith also criticized a proposal from some Republicans to reduce property taxes by increasing sales taxes, calling it a potentially unfair shift that could disproportionately impact low-income people.
Smith attacked Noem’s $4 million plan for education savings accounts, calling it a voucher program that would divert public dollars to private schools and homeschoolers. Smith said the program would lack accountability, because alternative schools and homeschoolers are not required to follow the same transparency, testing and other standards as public schools.
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