South Dakota
Petition returns Roe v. Wade to South Dakota ballot

RAPID CITY, S.D. (KEVN) – With Roe v Wade being overturned at the federal level in 2022, the pro-choice community has been working to bring back those rights. At South Dakota’s state level, Dakotans For Health put together a petition with more than 55,000 signatures to put the measure on the ballot.
Rick Weiland, Co-Founder of Dakotans for Health, believes these rights are important to protect women, living in a State that prides itself on freedom.
“We’ve spent millions of South Dakota tax dollars advertising what a free state we are. ‘come here and work in South Dakota, enjoy the freedom living in our state’, and then I look at the hypocrisy, and I think if you’re a woman and you’re raped and you’re pregnant, do you have freedom to make a choice of what to do? No, you’ve lost that,” Weiland said.
Travis Lasseter, executive Director of Black Hills Pregnancy Center, says no matter what happens with this initiative, their center will continue to answer all of their patient’s questions with medical facts, allowing women to make an informed decision.
Weiland says his group has faced backlash over potential late-term abortions. He went on to say the initiative is simply restoring women’s rights.
“I think this freedom amendment is so important to just restore the rights Women had for 50 years, we’re getting criticized for being too radical, that this goes way beyond Roe, which is just a bold-faced lie,” Weiland said.
Weiland says he is optimistic voters from both sides will bring women’s rights back to the most restrictive reproductive rights state of South Dakota.
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South Dakota
Dakota Conference explores settling & resettling the Great Plains

On today’s show…
The city of Sioux Falls and South Dakota State University hosted the Big Sioux Stewardship Summit this week. The summit explored the state of the river and how to be a better steward for the environment.
Travis Entenman, executive director of Friends of the Big Sioux River, offers a river health checkup (1:00 to 10:10).
The 57th Annual Dakota Conference is next Thursday. We get a preview from Harry Thompson, executive director of the Center for Western Studies at Augustana University (10:10 to 18:55).
A few presenters join us to discuss their research and work. Gina Palefsky, Ph.D., investigates what may have been on display in the South Dakota building of the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair (18:55 to 30:58).
Writers Norma and Jerry Wilson talk about settling and caretaking a piece of prairie and a piece of history (30:58 to 44:27).
Plus, John Esposti is heading to Mount Rushmore bright and early on Sunday. He talks about the sunrise Easter service this weekend (44:27 to 49:04).
South Dakota
Coveted transfer decommits from South Carolina

Back in March, North Dakota transfer guard Treysen Eaglestaff decided to commit to South Carolina, his agent George Langberg told On3. He chose the Gamecocks over schools like Kansas, Kentucky, Gonzaga, Iowa, and others.
Now, the 6-foot-6 junior from Bismarck, North Dakota has changed his mind. Eaglestaff has decommitted from South Carolina, according to On3’s Joe Tipton.
Speaking with Jeff Goodman of The Field of 68, the transfer guard highlighted how difficult of a decision this is, thanking the Gamecocks in the process: “This was a difficult decision, but after discussing this with my family this is the best course of action for my future”, Eaglestaff told Goodman. “Thank you to Coach Paris and the South Carolina staff for recruiting me during this process.”
Eaglestaff was one of the country’s leading scorers this season, averaging 18.9 points, 2.8 rebounds, and 2.4 assists per game. He scored 40 points on Alabama in December and had a 51-point outing against South Dakota State.
— This story is developing and will be updated.
South Dakota
‘After all our hard work’: Federal fallout leads to suspension of interlibrary loan courier service

Checking out some books through local libraries could soon cost more than a standard library card fee.
Libraries were instructed Monday to immediately suspend use of the state’s interlibrary loan courier program.
The courier service transports books and other library materials across South Dakota from the libraries that have them to those that don’t, typically faster and more efficiently than would be possible though the U.S. Postal Service.
The State Library relies on federal funding from the Institute for Museum and Library Services (IMLS) to pay for the program.
President Donald Trump signed an executive order in March directing the head of that federal agency — which provides a federal grant that funds around half of the South Dakota State Library’s services — to cut its operations to the “maximum extent allowable by law.”
Former Gov. Kristi Noem sought to cut state library funding in her proposed budget to a level too low for the state to continue receiving federal matching funds. The state Legislature, however, approved a pared-back library budget large enough for the state to maintain access to about $1.4 million in IMLS funding.
While South Dakota hasn’t gotten confirmation its funding is cut, Department Secretary Joe Graves told the state Board of Education Standards on Monday, the federal government notified other states they’re receiving cuts.
“South Dakota, at least to my knowledge as of 8 a.m. this morning, hasn’t heard. So we don’t know what’s going on with that,” Graves said Monday.
Email to librarians signals service loss
The State Library cannot renew the contract with its interlibrary loan courier service at the end of April because of “uncertainty” about funding, according to an email sent to librarians that same day, which was reviewed by South Dakota Searchlight.
The education department did not immediately respond to a request to verify the email, for details on why it was sent, or for any other impacts to the State Library expected as a result of the Trump executive order.
Department of Education Spokeswoman Nancy Van Der Weide told South Dakota Searchlight recently that “we do not have a clear indication” of what might happen with future grant funding.
Congress authorized grant funding through federal fiscal year 2025. The department “is waiting on a grant award” for 2025, Van Der Weide wrote in an email last month.
Libraries could charge for, limit service
About 70% of South Dakota libraries share books with each other through interlibrary loan, according to the State Library website. Without the courier service, local libraries and governments will need to pay to ship books to other libraries across the state, according to South Dakota Library Association President Elizabeth Fox. That costs an average of $5 an item each way, she said.
To pick up the new cost, local libraries could limit how many interlibrary loans an individual can make, or charge a fee when someone requests an interlibrary loan.
“Each library will have to determine how they deal with this,” Fox said.
Hill City Public Library Director Tammy Alexander plans to discuss the impact with members of her library’s board of directors next week. She sent requested books through the mail yesterday to Brookings and Chamberlain libraries.
“Like all budgets right now, even our small city budget will have cuts for 2026,” Alexander said. “My board will have to decide if they’ll allow me to include that.”
The State Library also pays for subscription-based academic databases, accessible at no cost through any public library in the state. It also provides support for summer reading programs, organizes professional development workshops, and offers Braille and talking book services for readers with disabilities.
Noem’s proposed cut would have pared down services to those last two items.
‘This is disheartening,’ lawmaker says
Lawmakers softened budget cuts this winter with the expectation they’d budgeted enough money to preserve the IMLS federal grant funding. The plan spared the jobs of all but 3.5 State Library employees, but dissolved the board that oversees the State Library.
Rep. Terri Jorgenson, R-Piedmont, worked closely with the Education Department on the compromise.
“After all our hard work we put into this to restructure and save this program, this is disheartening,” Jorgenson said.
Interlibrary loans are crucial for homeschool students as well as students in public and private schools, she told South Dakota Searchlight on Tuesday. Burdening local governments with shipping costs and potentially passing the cost onto families will add up quickly.
Jorgenson and other lawmakers will need to explore funding options for library programming in the wake of the news, she said.
“Ultimately, this means we’re going to have to get creative,” Jorgenson said, “to save money and work to still provide this important service.”
This story was originally published on
SouthDakotaSearchlight.com.
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