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SDHP announces November sobriety checkpoints

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SDHP announces November sobriety checkpoints


SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (Dakota News Now) – Sobriety checkpoints will be conducted in 17 counties in November.

Checkpoints will be conducted in the following counties:

  • Bennett
  • Brule
  • Codington
  • Davison
  • Hanson
  • Jones
  • Lake
  • Lawrence
  • Lincoln
  • Meade
  • Moody
  • Pennington
  • Roberts
  • Sanborn
  • Spink
  • Walworth
  • Yankton

The monthly checkpoints are designed to discourage people from driving impaired.

The checkpoints are funded by the South Dakota Office of Highway Safety and conducted by the South Dakota Highway Patrol with the help of local law enforcement.

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Obituary for Shirley Rae Miller at Miller Funeral Home & On-Site Crematory

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Obituary for Shirley Rae Miller at Miller Funeral Home & On-Site Crematory


Shirley Miller, 90 of Sioux Falls, SD, passed away on Tuesday, October 28, 2025, at Avas Hospice House surrounded by her five children. Visitation with the family present will begin at 1 pm with a funeral service at 2 pm on Sunday, November 2, 2025, at the Miller Southside Chapel,



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Obituary for Sharon Louise Ritter at Osheim & Schmidt Funeral Home

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Obituary for Sharon Louise Ritter at Osheim & Schmidt Funeral Home


Sharon Louise Roggow Ritter of Rapid City, South Dakota, passed away peacefully in her apartment surrounded by family on October 26. She was born on December 26, 1942, in Colorado Springs, Colorado, to Vernon A. and Vera M. Miller Roggow. She grew up in Gettysburg, South Dakota, and graduated from



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Feeding South Dakota prepares to meet growing need

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Feeding South Dakota prepares to meet growing need


RAPID CITY, S.D. — With the start of November this Saturday — 40-million Americans who rely on snap food benefits will see them reduced, or stop altogether — if the government shutdown continues..

As the deadline approaches — local food banks are preparing for what could be another strain on their resources.

Snap is intended to stretch a grocery budget, not cover all food costs, and provide low income families access to healthy food.

In South Dakota, about 75,000 people receive snap benefits.

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“It’s really hard to know what that could look like for us when it comes down to numbers of people. We’re spending some time this week getting very planful about contingency plans and and making sure that we can do all that we possibly can in the communities coming into November with those benefits changing,” said Stacey Andernacht, Vice President of Public Relations, Feeding South Dakota.

Feeding South Dakota distributes food to every county in South Dakota. providing nearly 12 million meals a year.

Snap benefits being withheld is one more stressor on the organization.

In April, Feeding South Dakota was notified they would not receive 11 expected loads of food through a federal program.

In July, cuts to federal food assistance programs resulted in more pressure on food banks.

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“It is a challenging time right now as a food bank, you know, we are the food safety net for South Dakota. Our goal, our mission, our focus, is making sure that every South Dakotan has access to the food that they need to thrive, and especially in times of uncertainty and and we’re looking at a couple of different, you know, groups of folks who are feeling some uncertainty right now, and we want to make sure that they don’t feel uncertain about putting food on their table,” Andernacht said.

Feeding South Dakota is navigating the changing landscape.

Donations of cash and food to the organization like the recent South Dakota Farmers Union donation of 35,000 pounds of pork will help Feeding South Dakota meet its mission in South Dakota.

“Really, as we come into November, we’re going to need community support in order to bring us across that finish line, in order to help us, you know, bring an influx of food into the community and across the state. I can’t tell you exactly what that looks like, but it’s going to be food, for sure. It’s going to be dollars to purchase food that’s going to be our greatest need, if the shutdown continues into November,” Andernacht said.

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Jerry Steinley has lived in the Black Hills most of his life and calls Rapid City home. He received a degree in Journalism with a minor in Political Science from Metropolitan State University in Denver in 1994.





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