South Dakota
SD State Legislature Candidate Survey: Mary Weinheimer
PIERRE, S.D. (Dakota Information Now) – Mary Weinheimer is working to be elected to the South Dakota State Home in District 24. Cities in District 24 embody Pierre, Fort Pierre, Onida, Highmore, and Philip. Weinheimer faces three major opponents; Will Mortenson, Mike Weisgram, and Jim Sheehan.
1. Inform us about your self?
As a lifelong Pierre resident, I’m very blessed to name this neighborhood and South Dakota residence. My husband Mark and I’ve been married for greater than 23 years, and we’ve been blessed with 5 children — our biggest satisfaction and pleasure. My household enterprise, Morris, a building firm in enterprise for greater than 52 years now, is a robust supporter of the Pierre/Fort Pierre communities and central South Dakota. Although I nonetheless assist out with Morris, Mark and I are full-time farmers in Sully County.
2. Why are you working for this workplace?
As a spouse, a mother, a small businesswoman, and a farmer, I see firsthand the cultural and financial threats to our households and our neighborhood. I consider our legislature wants extra representatives with the imaginative and prescient and braveness to face these challenges head-on.
I consider our state motto, “Below God the Folks Rule,” ought to function the guidepost for policymakers’ decision-making (too many politicians neglect that they’re public servants). I consider the household is the spine of society, and it must be cherished and guarded. I consider South Dakota’s small, rural communities, like our folks, make this state distinctive and shouldn’t proceed to take a backseat to Sioux Falls or Fast Metropolis.
3. What could be your high three priorities if elected?
If I’m given the dignity to serve District 24 within the Home, I’ll combat laborious to maintain our communities thriving and our households robust. I’ll combat towards the erosion of parental rights, the financial erosion of our small, rural communities, and the growth of presidency into areas of our lives the place it doesn’t belong.
· I’m pro-life
· I’m pro-Second Modification
· I consider in restricted, accountable authorities
· I strongly help agriculture
4. What related expertise would you deliver to the workplace?
As a spouse, a mother, a small businesswoman, and a farmer, I’ve spent greater than ten years actively engaged within the state legislature. I do know dozens of legislators and have a great relationship with the Government Department. As a freshman, it’s seemingly going to be laborious to advance any main initiatives, so I’m going to align myself with those that consider within the platform I’m working on: concepts that can strengthen this neighborhood and assist our households compete so our neighborhood doesn’t grow to be an afterthought, however moderately grows strongly and thrives.
5. Do you help tax reduction for South Dakotans? If that’s the case, what kind and the way would you make it occur?
Sure, I help tax reduction. Tens of hundreds of thousands of {dollars} can’t proceed to exit the door with out first giving extraordinary South Dakotans a tax break. Each our representatives voted towards gross sales tax reduction (HB 1327), saying that reduction wouldn’t have accomplished a lot — it was a tiny quantity. I strongly disagree with that. Inflation and taxes are hurting hardworking South Dakotans in District 24. Our representatives’ repeated opposition to placing a refund into folks’s pockets was very disappointing.
Property taxes must be studied and completely reviewed as effectively.
When taxes are levied, keep in mind, somebody needed to work to earn the cash to pay them. With inflation inching its approach as much as 10%, there are some actual challenges our folks face. For instance, fertilizer costs are up 61%, and fuel costs are up 50%. And, moderately than discovering tasks for this cash, I consider our primary precedence must be to place a refund into folks’s pockets.
6. Housing availability has grow to be a difficulty for a lot of South Dakotans. How would you search to make housing extra reasonably priced?
First, when speaking about “affordability,” we have to keep in mind that the foundation reason for that drawback is nearly all the time not cash. The Governor’s Workplace pointed this out a number of instances when the housing invoice was being debated. There are zoning points native communities can take a look at and inventive options that may be adopted right here (similar to they did in North Dakota).
Second, it seems just like the housing invoice might be revisited subsequent yr due to the poor approach it was written. If the housing authority can’t work out find out how to resolve lots of the points with final yr’s invoice, no cash will go into infrastructure tasks till many, many months from now. So the second factor we have to do is keep in mind to draft laws rigorously and thoughtfully, so we don’t have to return to it repeatedly.
7. South Dakota correctional services have been coping with a lot of points, most distinguished amongst them overcrowding and staffing shortages. What would you do to assist fight these points?
I consider the household is the spine of society, and it must be cherished and guarded. The basis reason for our jail issues is that we have now approach too many individuals going into them. Our communities and our schooling system want to take a seat down collectively and assess what extra might be accomplished to forestall crime and finally, the expansion of our prisons.
Relating to the speedy want we have now with workers — they must be higher compensated.
8. What steps ought to the legislature take to entice younger folks to stay within the state?
South Dakota’s small, rural communities, like our folks, make this state distinctive. But, we – Pierre, Ft. Pierre, and all our surrounding communities – persistently take a
backseat to communities like Sioux Falls and Fast Metropolis. There’s no must “entice” younger folks if we arrange the foundations of the highway effectively – low taxes, affordable rules, and rising/thriving communities.
The second element to that is making certain our children have a robust schooling. Relating to state involvement in faculties (moderately than college boards), the right position for us is to make sure we’re offering glorious companies for fogeys and kids.
9. Do you help any modifications to the way in which elections are run in South Dakota?
I haven’t studied this query, so my preliminary reply isn’t any.
10. A U.S. Supreme Court docket resolution is looming on a landmark abortion case that would finally overturn Roe v. Wade. Governor Kristi Noem has indicated she want to ban abortion outright, and a “set off legislation” already on the books would so, with solely an exception in place when the mom’s life is in danger. Do you help banning abortion to this extent? If not, what exceptions would you wish to see made?
I’m pro-life. Prenatal science on this query will get stronger and stronger with every passing day. I’m comfy with each the set off legislation and Governor Noem’s stance on the difficulty.
11. What’s your stance on legalized, leisure marijuana in South Dakota?
I’m opposed.
State legislative candidates in contested districts this major season have been emailed the identical survey to finish for Dakota Information Now/KOTA Territory Information. Candidates have been requested to maintain their responses restricted to roughly 4-5 sentences for every query. Except a fast spelling and grammar examine, solutions weren’t edited by the poster. Those that responded to the survey questions had their outcomes posted.
Copyright 2022 Dakota Information Now. All rights reserved.
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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South Dakota
Court documents reveal more details about the Yankton man accused of murder
YANKTON S.D. (KTIV) -Court documents are now revealing more details about the man accused of murdering his girlfriend, last week.
In December of 2021, 32-year-old Craig Allen Nichols Jr. of Yankton, South Dakota was charged with four counts of felony aggravated assault and four counts of simple assault in Minnehaha County.
Documents say Nichols reportedly used a taser to assault another man, resulting in injury. Nichols was found not guilty by reason of insanity in June of 2023 and then committed to the Human Services Center, located in Yankton, for treatment.
Records report Nichols was released from the center in August of 2024.
As previously reported, Nichols is charged with second-degree murder, first-degree manslaughter, and two counts of contempt of court, after he was taken into custody by Yankton officials and accused of murdering 41-year-old Heather Bodden on Thursday, January 2.
The investigation began after three women told police they found Heather Bodden’s body inside the East Meadow Apartments at 1001 Memory Lane.
As of now, the case remains under investigation.
A GoFundMe has been started for Bodden, which can be found online.
Copyright 2025 KTIV. All rights reserved.
South Dakota
College football QB transfer tracker: South Dakota State QB Mark Gronowski commits to Iowa
It’s both transfer season and bowl season in college football.
The poor timing of the sport’s calendar means that players need to enter the transfer portal immediately after the end of the season to enroll at a new school for the second semester. That means players across the country have to leave their current teams before a bowl game to find a new school. And that coaches have to both prepare their current players for a bowl game while also recruiting transfers for the 2025 season.
Here’s our tracker of notable QB transfers across college football ahead of the 2025 season.
SDSU’s Mark Gronowski commits to Iowa
Iowa has landed a top transfer quarterback.
Former South Dakota State QB Mark Gronowski told ESPN that he’s committing to the Hawkeyes for his final season of eligibility. Gronowski entered the transfer portal after coach Jimmy Rogers became the head coach at Washington State following SDSU’s FCS semifinal loss to national champion North Dakota State.
Gronowski has been one of the best players at the FCS level over the past three seasons. In 2024, he was 206-of-338 passing for 2,721 yards and threw 23 TDs with seven interceptions. He also rushed for 10 touchdowns. In his career, Gronowski has thrown for 93 TDs to just 20 interceptions and has also rushed for 37 scores.
Iowa has been looking for an upgrade at quarterback in recent seasons. The team added former Michigan QB Cade McNamara ahead of the 2023 season, but McNamara suffered a season-ending knee injury a season ago and also dealt with injuries during the 2024 season before entering the transfer portal again for a potential seventh season of college football.
Overall, Iowa quarterbacks McNamara, Brendan Sullivan and Jackson Stratton were 163-of-260 passing for 1,711 yards and 10 TDs with eight interceptions during the 2024 season. The Hawkeyes finished the season 8-5 after losing to Missouri in the Music City Bowl.
Malachi Nelson transferring to UTEP
Former five-star recruit Malachi Nelson is heading to UTEP.
Per ESPN, the former USC and Boise State quarterback will continue his college career with the Miners. Nelson was the No. 2 QB at Boise State this season after transferring from USC following his freshman season in 2023.
Through two seasons of college football, Nelson has played in four games. He threw three passes in one game at USC and was 12-of-17 for 128 yards and a pick in three games at Boise State. He’ll have three more years of eligibility remaining.
When he signed with USC, Nelson was the No. 4 pro style QB in the class of 2023 and the No. 14 player in the country.
Dequan Finn transferring to Miami (Ohio)
Dequan Finn is heading back to the MAC.
The former Toledo star is transferring to Miami (Ohio) after spending the 2024 season at Baylor. Finn was the 2023 MAC player of the year with the Rockets as he was 201-of-317 passing for 2,657 yards and 22 TDs along with 563 rushing yards and seven scores on the ground.
However, he played in just three games at Baylor in 2024 as Sawyer Robertson emerged as the team’s starting quarterback during the season. In limited playing time at Baylor, Finn was 23-of-43 passing for 307 yards and three touchdowns and two interceptions. He also rushed 21 times for 66 yards and two scores.
Finn will be in his seventh season of college football in 2025. He has an extra season of eligibility because of the COVID-19 pandemic and also played in just three games in 2019 and reportedly applied for a medical waiver for the 2025 season.
Beau Pribula to Missouri
After leaving Penn State ahead of the College Football Playoff, Beau Pribula has found his new home.
Pribula is set to transfer to Missouri, according to multiple reports on Sunday night. Pribula served as Drew Allar’s backup quarterback this season at Penn State, though Pribula announced that he was going to transfer away before the Nittany Lions’ blowout win over SMU in the first round of the playoffs. Allar announced he will return to Penn State next season, too.
Pribula will have two years of eligibility remaining at Missouri, where he’ll likely replace Brady Cook. Pribula, a former four-star recruit, went 26-of-35 for 275 yards with five touchdowns and an interception this season. He had 242 rushing yards and four touchdowns on 38 carries, too. Missouri also has Drew Pyne, who backed up Cook this past season, on its roster.
The Tigers went 9-3 this season, the fifth under coach Eli Drinkwitz. They will wrap up their season against Iowa in the TransPerfect Music City Bowl on Dec. 30.
Michigan adds Fresno State’s Mikey Keene
Michigan was looking for a veteran quarterback who might provide a one-year bridge to five-star recruit Bryce Underwood. The Wolverines found one with Fresno State transfer Mikey Keene, who has one more year of eligibility.
As a two-year starter for the Bulldogs, Keene threw for 5,868 yards and 42 touchdowns, completing 68.7% of his passes. He is also familiar with Michigan’s new offensive coordinator Chip Lindsey, whom he played under at UCF in 2022.
Michigan’s QB play has major room for improvement after the 2024 season. The Wolverines ranked near the worst in the nation in passing offense, averaging 133.6 yards per game and 5.5 yards per attempt.
Davis Warren threw for 1,126 yards, six touchdowns and nine interceptions in eight games, while Alex Orji and Jack Tuttle also started games last season. Orji has entered the transfer portal while Tuttle retired from football due to injury. Warren has a fifth year of eligibility remaining and could return. Redshirt freshman Jadyn Davis will also be in the QB mix with Underwood and Keene.
Fernando Mendoza to Indiana
After a huge season at Cal, Fernando Mendoza is headed to the Big Ten.
Mendoza committed to play at Indiana next season, according to ESPN’s Pete Thamel. Mendoza, who was one of the top quarterbacks available in the portal this offseason, threw for 3,004 yards and 16 touchdowns at Cal. His younger brother is a freshman quarterback at Indiana, too.
The Hoosiers are coming off of their best season in school history. They won a program high 11 games and reached the College Football Playoff, though they fell to Notre Dame in the opening round. Kurtis Rourke led the Hoosiers in his final college season, and he racked up 3,042 yards with 29 touchdowns and five interceptions.
Maalik Murphy transferring to Oregon State
Former Texas and Duke quarterback Maalik Murphy is heading west.
Murphy committed to Oregon State on Thursday according to multiple reports. He joins the Beavers after one season in Durham following his transfer from Texas.
Murphy was 254-of-421 passing for 2,933 yards and 26 TDs with 12 interceptions in 2024. He spent the 2023 season as Texas’ No. 2 quarterback and started in Quinn Ewers’ absence when Ewers suffered a shoulder injury. However, due to the timing of the transfer portal, he left the Longhorns before the College Football Playoff.
Murphy will have two seasons of eligibility with the Beavers. Oregon State went 5-7 in 2024 as three different quarterbacks played in at least five games.
After Murphy entered the transfer portal at the end of the season, Duke moved quickly to secure a commitment from Tulane’s Darian Mensah.
Liberty’s Kaidon Salter heads to Colorado
One of the most productive QBs in college football during the 2023 season is heading to Colorado.
Liberty’s Kaidon Salter committed to Colorado on Wednesday for his final season of eligibility. Salter had 44 total touchdowns in 2023 as Liberty went undefeated and won Conference USA before losing to Oregon in the Fiesta Bowl. Salter returned to Liberty for the 2024 season after he briefly entered the portal following the Fiesta Bowl loss.
Billy Edwards commits to Wisconsin
Former Maryland QB Billy Edwards said Monday that he was heading to Wisconsin. Edwards was 273-of-420 passing for 2,881 yards and 15 TDs with nine interceptions over 11 games in 2024. He also rushed for 148 yards and five touchdowns. Edwards appeared in 15 games over his first two seasons at Maryland before becoming the team’s primary QB in 2024.
Wisconsin is undergoing an overhaul at the QB position as the team made a coordinator change at the end of the season. QBs Braedyn Locke and Tyler Van Dyke have entered the transfer portal already. Locke was the team’s starter for most of the season after Van Dyke suffered a torn ACL against Alabama.
Wazzu QB John Mateer enters portal
Washington State QB John Mateer was one of the most dynamic players in college football in 2024. He’ll be playing at a new school in 2025.
Mateer is entering the portal after leading college football with 44 total TDs. He threw for 29 scores and rushed for 15 others as he had at least one passing TD and one rushing TD in 10 of Washington State’s 12 games.
Penn State QB Beau Pribula leaves team before playoff
The Nittany Lions will have a new backup behind Drew Allar for the College Football Playoff.
No. 2 QB Beau Pribula announced Sunday that he was entering the transfer portal ahead of the postseason. Pribula lamented the timing of his announcement because of college football’s calendar, and his sentiments were backed up by coach James Franklin, who said he supported his QB’s decision to find a new school.
Pribula’s decision to transfer came a day before Allar announced he will return to Penn State for the 2025 season.
Pribula saw significant playing time in 2024 behind Allar. He was 26-of-35 passing for 275 yards and five TDs and rushed 38 times for 242 yards and four scores while appearing in all 13 of PSU’s games.
Miller Moss will spend final season at Louisville
The Louisville Cardinals will likely have a one-year transfer starting at quarterback for a second straight season.
Former USC QB Miller Moss committed to the Cardinals on Saturday. Moss was USC’s starter for much of the season in 2024 before he was replaced by Jayden Maiava. Moss was 233-of-362 passing for 2,555 yards with 18 TDs and nine interceptions across nine games.
The Cardinals and coach Jeff Brohm got an up-close look at what Moss can do in the Holiday Bowl at the end of the 2023 season. With Caleb Williams opting out for the NFL Draft, Moss started the game and was 23-of-33 for 372 yards and six TDs.
Tyler Shough spent the 2024 season as Louisville’s starter after stints at Oregon and Texas Tech. In his seventh season of college football, Shough has completed 63% of his passes and thrown for 23 TDs and just six interceptions.
Ex-Stanford QB Ashton Daniels joins Jackson Arnold at Auburn
Auburn added a second starting QB in less than a week on Monday when Stanford’s Ashton Daniels committed to the Tigers. In 11 games in 2024, Daniels was 170-of-271 passing for 1,700 yards and 10 TDs with 12 interceptions. He also was the Cardinal’s leading rusher with 148 carries for 669 yards and three TDs.
Daniels has appeared in 33 games over his Stanford career and is 366-of-602 passing for 3,986 yards. His commitment came days after former Oklahoma QB Jackson Arnold committed to Auburn. The Tigers will have a new starter in 2025 after Payton Thorne is out of eligibility and Hank Brown transferred to Iowa.
Utah adds New Mexico QB Devon Dampier and OC
Dual-threat QB Devon Dampier is heading to Utah.
The Utes got a commitment from Dampier on Dec. 11 after the Utes hired former New Mexico offensive coordinator Jason Beck to call plays.
Dampier thrived under Beck in 2024 as one of the most underrated players in college football. Dampier was 226-of-390 passing for 2,768 yards and 12 touchdowns and 12 interceptions. He also rushed 155 times for 1,166 yards and 19 scores. He was the only player to rush for over 1,000 yards while throwing for over 2,500 yards this season.
Dampier is set to be the presumptive starter for the Utes as they attempt to rebound from a poor 2024. QB Isaac Wilson was the team’s primary starter after Cam Rising’s multiple injuries. Wilson was briefly in the transfer portal before recommitting to Utah.
Thomas Castellanos goes to Florida State
After an ignominious end to his Boston College career, Thomas Castellanos is heading to Florida State.
The former BC QB entered the transfer portal at the end of the season after he lost his starting job in November. Through eight games in 2024, Castellanos threw for 1,366 yards and 18 TDs.
But Castellanos’ season was effectively over after Grayson James replaced him in a win over Syracuse. Castellanos stepped away from the team after BC coach Bill O’Brien announced that James would remain the team’s primary QB and announced he was heading into the portal a short time later.
Texas A&M QB Conner Weigman heads to Houston
Conner Weigman decided to stay in Texas after transferring from Texas A&M.
The former Aggies starter committed to Houston after putting his name in the portal. Weigman was the team’s starting quarterback but lost his job to Marcel Reed during the Aggies’ comeback win over LSU.
A former four-star recruit, Weigman has dealt with injuries during each of the past two seasons. He missed time in 2024 because of a shoulder injury and played in just four games in 2023 before a foot injury sidelined him for the rest of the season.
Maalik Murphy transfers from Duke, Darian Mensah commits
Duke effectively made an early transfer portal QB trade once the 2024 season ended.
Starter Maalik Murphy entered the portal after one season with the Blue Devils. Just days after Murphy said he was transferring, Duke added former Tulane QB Darian Mensah.
Mensah was one of the top-rated QBs in the portal since he announced he was leaving Tulane two days after the AAC title game. He threw for over 2,723 yards and 22 TDs as a redshirt freshman in 2024.
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