South Dakota
South Dakota Penitentiary inmate letters reveal despair, call for change
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (Dakota Information Now) –
Our Dakota Information Now I-team continues to listen to from Correctional officers, inmates, and their households relating to the dearth of staffing on the South Dakota State Penitentiary.
Nobody is anticipating a fancy expertise whereas behind bars. Nonetheless, the declare is primary human dignity is unmet, primarily as a result of staffing disaster.
Lynn and her household have been a buddy with Paul, an inmate within the South Dakota state penitentiary in Sioux Falls, for years. The household was related to Paul via a church program. When Lynn’s youngsters had been younger, Paul created radios in lots of shapes, corresponding to planes and vehicles. He loved creating issues for others; nonetheless, these alternatives had been eradicated via the years. Lynn, her husband, and grownup youngsters at the moment are involved for his psychological well being and security. The first trigger could be attributed to a staffing scarcity.
“It’s type of human despair of eager to be related; even in the event you did one thing unhealthy, he acknowledges what he did,” stated Lynn.
He’s crafted and offered concepts for jail reform from the angle of a long-time inmate. Lynn believes he has good concepts that would profit the Penitentiary, however they fall on deaf ears.
“And he feels ignored on a regular basis when he tries to speak to the warden or use the correct channels in jail,” stated Lynn.
Paul copes with the stress and psychological well being challenges of being incarcerated by operating. Sadly, the dearth of employees has taken away many of the out of doors rec time. He writes to Lynn:
“I’m simply so uninterested in life being a relentless battle. During which I’m unable to make even the slightest little bit of progress. I’m not prepared to just accept defeat and quit on life, however proper now, I simply really feel so very defeated. And like I’ve been overwhelmed to the bottom,” Paul writes.
Struggles to obtain medical consideration compound the problem. His ongoing abdomen ache is dismissed in line with letters despatched to Lynn. He worries there could also be a severe well being downside.
“He feels handled like livestock,” stated Lynn.
Inmates proceed to put in writing in frustration over the dearth of hiring and sustaining correctional officer staffing ranges.
“Improved employees security and morale are issues our system really wants,” says an inmate in a letter to Dakota Information Now.
In one other letter, the offender says Governor Noem and the legislature shouldn’t be off the hook and continues:
“They’re those who want to extend wages for correctional officers,” he stated.
Frustration mounts with cutbacks on packages. Each a corrections officer and inmate are reporting inmates sporting soiled garments for 5 days in a row as a result of delay in receiving laundry returned after washing. Some inmates are washing their garments in a sink slightly than ready. The Division of Corrections says there isn’t a delay within the turnaround time for laundry, which is identical day.
From our stack of inmate letters is a remark about rigidity constructing resulting from an absence of packages tied to insufficient staffing.
“Inmates simply sit of their cells 21 1/2 hours a day. It breeds contempt,” stated the person.
DOC spokesperson Michael Winder responded to these issues saying:
“We are going to proceed to try for reaching staffing ranges applicable for reinstating all actions which have been modified or cancelled. That is an unprecedented labor market.”
A correctional officer informed our I-team, “the jail has at all times had points, however now it’s like a third-world nation.”
Lynn says the dearth of human decency in how inmates are handled creates hopelessness and despair as the stress rises all through the Penitentiary.
“By taking away the little they’ve to offer life any that means in any respect, it’s solely a matter of time earlier than one thing breaks,” says Lynn studying Paul’s letter out loud.
The correctional officer we spoke with didn’t need to be recognized resulting from attainable retaliation.
The advantages are protecting him there for now. However, he says, “I’m going to hold on so long as I can. I’m simply making an attempt to get via every week at a time.”
Copyright 2022 Dakota Information Now. All rights reserved.
South Dakota
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South Dakota
Carbon pipeline company formally asks SD regulator to recuse herself • South Dakota Searchlight
The company proposing a carbon dioxide pipeline has formally requested that a South Dakota regulator recuse herself from the project’s permit application, citing an alleged conflict of interest.
In a letter sent Thursday, Iowa-based Summit Carbon Solutions asked Public Utilities Commissioner Kristie Fiegen to disqualify herself. That would allow the governor to appoint another state official to fill in for Fiegen during the three-member commission’s consideration of the application.
Summit wants to construct a $9 billion, five-state pipeline to capture and transport some of the carbon dioxide emitted by 57 ethanol plants to an underground storage area in North Dakota. The project would capitalize on federal tax credits incentivizing the prevention of heat-trapping carbon emissions into the atmosphere.
Regulator stays on new carbon pipeline case after prior recusal, with no explanation this time
This is Summit’s second application in South Dakota, after the Public Utilities Commission rejected the first application in 2023. Fiegen recused herself from those proceedings and was replaced by State Treasurer Josh Haeder.
At the time, Fiegen wrote a recusal letter saying she had a conflict because the pipeline “would cross land owned by my sister-in-law (my husband’s sister) and her husband.” Fiegen also recused herself from an earlier, separate crude oil pipeline permit application for a similar reason.
Fiegen has not recused herself from the new application, but Summit said the same conflict exists.
“As with your previous decisions,” said the company’s new letter to Fiegen, “the facts and established South Dakota law support a decision that you should step aside.”
Neither Fiegen nor the Public Utilities Commission responded to South Dakota Searchlight messages about Summit’s letter.
Public Utilities Commission spokesperson Leah Mohr previously said “ex parte” rules bar Fiegen from discussing the matter. Those rules prohibit direct communication with commissioners about dockets they’re considering.
The Summit letter drew criticism from an attorney representing landowners opposed to the pipeline, Brian Jorde, of Domina Law Group in Omaha, who disputed the allegation that Fiegen has a conflict of interest.
“From my viewpoint she never had a conflict that rises to the level of recusal and certainly doesn’t now,” Jorde wrote. “The isolated fact that she is related by marriage to a trustee of a trust that owns land that signed an easement with Summit is not a direct conflict.”
The alleged conflict
The commission’s rejection of Summit’s first application was partly due to the route’s conflicts with several county ordinances. Those ordinances mandate minimum distances between pipelines and existing features. Summit’s new route includes some adjustments.
The original pipeline route crossed three parcels in Minnehaha County owned by Fiegen’s sister-in-law and her husband, Jean Fiegen-Ordal and Jeffrey Ordal, and three parcels in McCook County owned by the Jeffrey A. Ordal Living Trust, which lists the couple as trustees.
Summit said it paid a total of $175,000 for easements and future crop damages on that land, including $88,000 to the Ordals. Summit declined to tell Searchlight where the remainder of the money went, but public records show the Ordals sold their Minnehaha County land after signing the easement documents in 2022.
The new pipeline route would cross the same parcels — the Minnehaha County land that the Ordals no longer own, and the McCook County land that’s still owned by the Ordals’ trust.
Summit: Litigation possible
Summit’s new letter said the logic that motivated Fiegen’s prior recusal remains unchanged. The company said her involvement risks violating South Dakota law, which the company said bars officials from participating in matters where conflicts of interest exist.
The letter said Fiegen’s failure to recuse herself could lead to litigation, an appeal of the commission’s eventual permit decision, and delays in the permitting process.
“Because your family has a direct interest in the approval or denial of the permit, and because you previously recused yourself in two dockets based on the same facts, a court almost certainly would find it inappropriate for you to participate in this docket,” the letter says.
The Public Utilities Commission will host a series of public input meetings Jan. 15-17 in eastern South Dakota cities near the pipeline route. The project has a storage permit in North Dakota and route permits in North Dakota, Iowa and Minnesota, while Nebraska has no state permitting process for carbon pipelines. The project also faces litigation from opponents in multiple states.
GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.
South Dakota
Oscar Cluff goes off as South Dakota State hammers Denver in Summit opener
BROOKINGS — In 15 non-conference games, Oscar Cluff made clear he’ll be a handful this year for South Dakota State’s opponents.
In Thursday’s Summit League opener against the Denver Pioneers, Cluff sent a definitive message to the conference. He’ll be more than a handful. He’ll likely be one of the most unstoppable big men the league has ever seen.
Cluff had 30 points and 19 rebounds to lead the Jacks to a 91-70 rout of the Pioneers, going 11-of-14 from the floor and 7-of-8 at the line, even hitting his only 3-point attempt of the night.
That offensive dominance from the 6-foot-11 Australian helped the Jacks put this one on ice early, as a 21-4 run helped SDSU take a 42-19 lead into the break. Denver briefly got hot in the second half to cut a 27-point deficit to 12, but it was too little too late as the Jackrabbits start their conference slate at 1-0.
“There’s a lot of talk around the Summit League — what teams are gonna be good or bad,” Cluff said. “I think today was a statement game for us. We’re trying to let everyone know who we are.”
Owen Larson added 12 points and Matthew Mors and Stony Hadnot 11, as the Jacks outshot Denver 52 percent to 35 and had a gargantuan 53-24 edge on the glass.
The Pioneers were just 6-of-30 from the floor in the first half, shooting themselves out of it. The Jacks defense certainly had a hand in the bricklaying.
“We kept ’em out of the paint and we were challenging them on the arc,” said Jacks coach Eric Henderson. “Their guards are dynamic and we did a great job of keeping them out of the pint and making them shoot challenged shots. And then we got first-shot rebounds, which enabled us to play with great pace.”
Meanwhile SDSU’s offense faced little resistance as Cluff controlled the middle.
“He was incredible,” Larson said of Cluff. “We knew we had a height advantage and they had a couple bigs out, so he really got after it and right from the get-go he was terrific. When you’ve got him down low you can go to him and if they double him he’ll share it, because he’s very unselfish. And if it’s 1-on-1 he’s gonna get a bucket.”
The supporting cast was strong as well. Larson was 4-of-6 from 3-point range and had five rebound and four assists, while Joe Sayler had eight points and 10 rebounds and Kalen Garry had nine points and four assists. In 13 minutes off the bench, Damon Wilkinson had eight points and five boards.
Nicholos Shogbonyo had 18 points for Denver while Sebastian Akins had 17.
The Jacks (10-6, 1-0) are off this weekend, with their next game set for Wednesday at St. Thomas. The Tommies defeated North Dakota State on Thursday in Fargo. A big win for them, but Cluff will certainly present them with a unique challenge.
“His efficiency is off the charts,” Henderson said of Cluff. “He didn’t even play 25 minutes and did what he did. He impacts the game in big ways. He’s a physical presence, obviously, but the skill he has is very much underrated. He makes everyone around him better, he’s unselfish and tonight he was amazing.”
Matt Zimmer is a Sioux Falls native and longtime sports writer. He graduated from Washington High School where he played football, legion baseball and developed his lifelong love of the Minnesota Twins and Vikings. After graduating from St. Cloud State University, he returned to Sioux Falls, and began a long career in amateur baseball and sports reporting. Email Matt at mzimmer@siouxfallslive.com.
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