South Dakota
USD Sanford medical school location to open mid-2028 in Sioux Falls
The home for the University of South Dakota Sanford School of Medicine in Sioux Falls will be the Talley Building on the Sanford medical campus, university officials announced April 2.
This news came after the Aug. 14, 2025, announcement that the medical school would move the first 18 months of doctor of medicine training — Pillar 1 — from Vermillion to Sioux Falls by the summer of 2027. The last 30 months of M.D. training has long been in Sioux Falls.
At the time, officials said learning would continue in temporary locations in Sioux Falls on the Sanford campus while a new, permanent building was to be built in 7-10 years at a location to be determined, but the April 2 announcement about the use of the Talley Building “expedites” this part of the process, according to a release from USD.
Construction is expected to begin this summer, with all areas fully open and operational by mid-2028, USD spokesperson Alissa Matt said.
Students who start their doctor of medicine degree program in fall of 2027 will still complete their first year of Pillar 1 in Vermillion, and complete the last few months of the pillar in Sioux Falls. Students who start the degree program in fall of 2028 will learn in Sioux Falls.
The South Dakota Board of Regents signed off on a memorandum of agreement April 2 stating Sanford Health would fund the design and construction of a 4,400 square foot anatomy lab on the hospital’s main Sioux Falls campus, as well as renovate the 50,000 square foot Talley Building, named for former medical school dean Robert Talley.
Talley was a “driving force” in initially establishing the medical school in Sioux Falls, and the building named after him will now house the M.D. program and medical student support services, according to a release from USD.
USD’s medical school would use the spaces under a lease agreement that’s yet to be seen. The agreement also states that “additional research space not yet identified may be planned and designed in future phases as programmatic needs evolve.”
Facilities could include classroom and instructional labs, clinical training and simulation spaces, research and innovation areas, faculty and learner collaboration spaces, shared conference and meeting rooms, and technology infrastructure that supports modern medical education, according to the agreement.
In addition to the partnership with Sanford Health, Avera plans to provide classroom space in Plaza 3 on the Avera McKennan campus to “support collaboration and integration with health systems in Sioux Falls,” Matt said.
Avera Chief Medical Officer Dr. Kevin Post noted in a news release that Avera has a long history of working with USD’s medical school — including more than half of USD Frontier and Rural Medicine students in Avera communities — and views it as a vital state resource.
USD President Sheila Gestring said in a news release that the university and medical school are grateful for Sanford and Avera’s generosity in providing space to support medical education.
“These plans create a cost-effective path forward and enable us to expedite this transition — positioning USD to deliver the best possible medical education even sooner,” Gestring said.
Sanford Health President and CEO Bill Gassen said in a news release that expanding the medical school’s presence on the Sanford campus creates “an environment where education, research and clinical care come together in powerful ways.”
Medical school dean Dr. Tim Ridgway said in a news release that the support of Sanford, Avera, Monument Health, Veterans Affairs Health and independent providers is “critical in our shared mission to serve the state.”
“We could not develop physicians without the resources and residencies they provide or without our clinical faculty,” Ridgway said. “Together, we are shaping the future of medical education and improving quality health care for communities across South Dakota.”
South Dakota
Transparency, data protection laws take effect July 1
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (Dakota News Now) – Several new South Dakota laws officially take effect July 1 after being signed into law this session.
This includes new rules on government transparency, online safety, and data privacy.
The Attorney General’s office says the changes are designed to protect South Dakotans both online and in public institutions.
The following 10 bills go into effect July 1:
- Senate Bill 17: Prohibits a candidate or political committee from accepting contributions or loans made by a foreign national. It was unanimously passed by both the House and Senate.
- Senate Bill 41: Revise a provision related to criminal invasions of privacy, prohibit the creation and distribution of digitally fabricated material of an identifiable individual, and provide penalties therefor.
- Senate Bill 42: Enhance the penalties for ingestion, possession with intent to deliver, and delivery of a controlled substance in a state correctional facility.
- Senate Bill 43: Address search and seizure provisions applicable to digital currency.
- Senate Bill 44: Establish investigative subpoena authority to gather business records in certain investigations.
- Senate Bill 45: Revise a provision regulating delta-8 tetrahydrocannabinol, THC-O acetate, and hexahydrocannabinol for persons under the age of under the age of twenty-one and to provide a penalty therefor.
- Senate Bill 46: Modify the requirements for open meeting agendas and provide a penalty therefor.
- Senate Bill 47: Revise the requirements for executive sessions and closed meetings.
- Senate Bill 48: Clarify that an official open meeting agenda must be posted online at least seventy-two hours before the scheduled start of the meeting.
- Senate Bill 49: Safeguards the integrity, privacy, and security of genetic data and provides a civil penalty therefor.
“These bills protect our citizens from online predators, scammers, and illegal drugs, while they strengthen transparency within state government,” said Attorney General Jackley.
Copyright 2026 Dakota News Now. All rights reserved.
South Dakota
Vermillion’s Reuvers commits to South Dakota
Posted:
Updated:
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (KELO) — Vermillion guard Taylor Reuvers is staying home as the junior announced her commitment to USD via X on Tuesday.
Reuvers earned first team All-State honors as a sophomore, averaging 27.8 points, 6.8 rebounds, and 4.7 assists per game. The 2028 graduate led her squad to a 13-9 record for the 2025-26 season.
South Dakota
130 mph straight line winds devastate South Dakota wind farm – Oklahoma Energy Today
Oklahoma didn’t suffer any strong wind damage this week, but wind farms in South Dakota certainly did.
Several wind turbines were toppled by the 130 MPH winds that hit the central part of the state Monday morning. They were described as straight line winds and not tornadoes. But the winds compared to those recorded in some tornadoes.
The 131-mph wind was recorded at Holabird in Hyde County at 6:15 a.m. local time.
A picture of the extensive damage showed at least 7 of the wind towers were bent over by the powerful Mother Nature.
According to a report by Energy News Beat, storm chaser Jakob McMillin documented the scene in a widely shared post on X (formerly Twitter), showing multiple wind turbine towers collapsed or heavily damaged, with blades and structural debris scattered across the prairie. In replies to his post, McMillin stated he observed “over 20” turbines destroyed or critically damaged.
The Affected Wind Farm
The damaged facility is the South Dakota Wind Energy Center (also known as the Highmore Wind Energy Project or Highmore Wind Farm), located approximately 10 miles south of Highmore.
- Number of turbines: 27
- Turbine model: GE Vernova 1.5s (1.5 MW each)
- Total nameplate capacity: 40.5 MW
- Commissioning year: 2003 (South Dakota’s first major wind farm)
- Owner/Operator: NextEra Energy Resources (formerly FPL Energy)
- Power purchaser: Basin Electric Power Cooperative
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