South Dakota
More than half of states sue to block Biden Title IX rule protecting LGBTQ+ students • South Dakota Searchlight

WASHINGTON — Twenty-six GOP-led states are suing the Biden administration over changes to Title IX aiming to protect LGBTQ+ students from discrimination in schools.
Less than a month after the U.S. Department of Education released its final rule seeking to protect against discrimination “based on sex stereotypes, sexual orientation, gender identity, and sex characteristics,” a wave of Republican attorneys general scrambled to challenge the measure.
The revised rule, which will go into effect on Aug. 1, requires schools “to take prompt and effective action when notified of conduct that reasonably may constitute sex discrimination in their education programs or activities.”
The lawsuits hail from Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, West Virginia and Wyoming.
All of the attorneys general in the 26 states suing over the final rule are part of the Republicans Attorneys General Association.
Various advocacy groups and school boards have also tacked onto the states’ legal actions. The lawsuits carry similar language and arguments in vehemently opposing the final rule. They say the new regulations raise First Amendment concerns and accuse the rule of violating the Administrative Procedure Act.
LGBTQ+ advocates say the revised rule offers students a needed protection and complies with existing law.
“Our kids’ experience in schools should be about learning, about making friends and growing as a young person. LGBTQ+ students deserve those same opportunities,” Sarah Warbelow, vice president of legal at the LGBTQ+ advocacy group Human Rights Campaign, said in an emailed statement. “In bringing these lawsuits, these state attorneys general are attempting to rob LGBTQ+ students of their rights, illustrating a complete disregard for the humanity of LGBTQ+ students.”
GOP states band together against new regulations
In the most recent effort, Alaska, Kansas, Utah, and Wyoming sued the Biden administration on Tuesday, accusing the Department of Education of seeking to “politicize our country’s educational system to conform to the radical ideological views of the Biden administration and its allies.”
The lawsuit claims that under the updated regulations, teachers, coaches and administrators would have to “acknowledge, affirm, and validate students’ ‘gender identities’ regardless of the speakers’ own religious beliefs on the matter in violation of the First Amendment.”
In another lawsuit, a group of Southern states — Alabama, Florida, Georgia and South Carolina — sued the administration in federal court in Alabama over the new regulations.
Republican Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall said President Joe Biden “has brazenly attempted to use federal funding to force radical gender ideology onto states that reject it at the ballot box” since he took office.
“Now our schoolchildren are the target. The threat is that if Alabama’s public schools and universities do not conform, then the federal government will take away our funding,” Marshall said in a press release.
The lawsuit also drew praise from Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who said “Biden is abusing his constitutional authority to push an ideological agenda that harms women and girls and conflicts with the truth.” He added that the Sunshine State will “not comply” and instead “fight back against Biden’s harmful agenda.”
Individual states sue the administration
Meanwhile, some states have opted to file individual lawsuits against the administration.
In Texas, Republican Attorney General Ken Paxton sued the Biden administration late last month in federal court in Amarillo. Paxton filed an amended complaint earlier this week, with two new plaintiffs added.
In an April 29 press release, Paxton said the Lone Star State “will not allow Joe Biden to rewrite Title IX at whim, destroying legal protections for women in furtherance of his radical obsession with gender ideology.”
Oklahoma’s Republican Attorney General Gentner Drummond filed a lawsuit against the Biden administration earlier this month in federal court in Oklahoma. The state’s education department also filed a separate suit against the Biden administration.
A hodgepodge of states
In late April, Republican attorneys general in Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, Tennessee, West Virginia and Virginia filed a lawsuit against the Biden administration in federal court in Kentucky.
The states argued that the U.S. Education Department “has used rulemaking power to convert a law designed to equalize opportunities for both sexes into a far broader regime of its own making.”
Idaho, Louisiana, Mississippi and Montana also sued the Biden administration in late April, echoing the language seen in the other related lawsuits. Seventeen local school boards in Louisiana also joined the states.
Earlier this month, Arkansas, Iowa, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota and South Dakota also brought a collective legal challenge to the final rule.
A spokesperson for the Education Department said the department does not comment on pending litigation but noted that “as a condition of receiving federal funds, all federally-funded schools are obligated to comply with these final regulations.” They added that the department looks forward “to working with school communities all across the country to ensure the Title IX guarantee of nondiscrimination in school is every student’s experience.”
The department has yet to finalize a separate rule that establishes new criteria for transgender athletes. So far, 24 states have passed laws that ban transgender students from partaking in sports that align with their gender identity, according to the Movement Advancement Project.
GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

South Dakota
AG Jackley congratulates telecommunicator course graduates

PIERRE, S.D. (Dakota News Now) – Attorney General Marty Jackley made an announcement on Friday, congratulating the 24 students graduating from the state Basic Telecommunicator Certification Course.
“Telecommunicators are the first voice that people hear when they call 9-1-1,” said Attorney General Jackley.
The course features training and practical exercises covering topics like public safety telecommunications, responding to caller inquiries, managing both emergency and non-emergency service calls, and prioritizing multiple incidents occurring simultaneously.
Instructors for the course are staff from the state DCI Office of Law Enforcement Training and experienced 911 telecommunicators from across the state, as well as public safety stakeholders.
Members of the 77th session of the Basic Telecommunicator Certification Course and their law enforcement organization include:
- Rebecca Alexander, Central South Dakota Communications
- Kimberly Andrades-Zamora, Metro Communications
- Chaundra Barron, Metro Communications
- Dylan Bartram, Central South Dakota Communications
- Hannah Bates, Moody County Sheriff’s Office
- Amber Benway, Clay Area Emergency Communications
- Chloe DePew, Pennington County Emergency Services Communication Center
- Janita Holt-Yellow, Fall River County Sheriff’s Office
- Kayleene Holzer, Brown County Communications
- Maria Homola, Meade County Sheriff’s Office
- Izabel Johnson, Spearfish Police Department
- Jason Kraft, Spink County Sheriff’s Office
- Chel Larsen, Charles Mix County Sheriff’s Office
- Julie Lightbourn, Miner County Sheriff’s Office
- Kortni Nester, Metro Communications
- Amanda Perez, Mobridge Police Department
- Asa Pettigrew, Brown County Communications
- Cheyenne Pullman, Meade County Sheriff’s Office
- Camilla Searby, Rosebud Police Department
- Ethan Shelsta, Watertown Police Department
- Haylee Waldrop, Pennington County Emergency Services Communication Center
- Hunter West, Metro Communications
- John Yeary, Winner Police Department
- Jamie Zimmerman, Metro Communications
Copyright 2025 Dakota News Now. All rights reserved.
South Dakota
Obituary for James "Jim" Noonan at Miller Funeral Home & On-Site Crematory

South Dakota
SD Supreme Court Justice announces retirement

PIERRE, S.D. (Dakota News Now) – South Dakota Supreme Court Justice Janine M. Kern made an announcement on Wednesday that she will be retiring from the bench on Dec. 8, 2025.
Justice Kern was appointed to the South Dakota Supreme Court in 2014 by Governor Dennis Daugaard to represent the First Supreme Court District, which includes Custer, Lawrence, Meade, and Pennington counties.
“It is with a heart brimming with gratitude for the trust and confidence placed in me, which gave me the opportunity to serve the people of this great state, that I notify you of my retirement on December 8, 2025, nearly twenty-nine years to the day of my investiture as a circuit court judge,” said Justice Kern.
“Justice Kern has always had an unwavering commitment to justice, the integrity of the courts, and a deep compassion for the people we serve. Her passion for law and for people has impacted all of us and made the court system better,” said Chief Justice Steven R. Jensen.
Justice Kern was appointed a circuit court judge in 1996 in the Seventh Judicial Circuit, comprised of Custer, Fall River, Oglala Lakota, and Pennington counties.
Before serving as a judge, Justice Kern received a Bachelor of Science from Arizona State University in 1982 and her juris doctor degree from the University of Minnesota Law School in 1985.
She later worked in a variety of roles with the Attorney General’s office, such as the appellate division, drug prosecution unit, and as director of the litigation division.
Justice Kern is a member of the American Law Institute, the State Bar Association, the Pennington County Bar Association, the American Bar Association Fellows, and past president of the South Dakota Judges Association.
“She has been an incredible lawyer, prosecutor, and judge for 28 years. I work with several young attorneys who look up to her as a role model, so her steady hand on the court will be missed. As I review potential appointments to replace her on the bench, I will be hopeful that we can find a future Supreme Court judge of her caliber,” said Governor Rhoden.
Copyright 2025 Dakota News Now. All rights reserved.
-
West6 days ago
Battle over Space Command HQ location heats up as lawmakers press new Air Force secretary
-
Politics1 week ago
Red state tops annual Heritage Foundation scorecard for strongest election integrity: 'Hard to cheat'
-
Technology1 week ago
iFixit says the Switch 2 is even harder to repair than the original
-
Movie Reviews1 week ago
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Sinners’ on VOD, Ryan Coogler's ambitious vampire epic set in the segregated South of the 1930s
-
World1 week ago
EU-Ukraine trade reset: What comes after tariff-free access expires?
-
Politics1 week ago
Hawley clashes with UPenn law professor over judicial injunctions
-
Technology1 week ago
Anker’s rugged Bluetooth speaker can clean itself by shaking off dirt
-
Technology1 week ago
The single best wireless controller I’ve ever used