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
South Dakota farmer: wet weather pushes soybean planting – Brownfield Ag News
News
South Dakota farmer: wet weather pushes soybean planting
A farmer in northeast South Dakota says soybean planting is dragging out beyond the final planting date due to consistent rains.
“From about May 25th on, whatever you don’t have done has been really difficult to finish up on.”
DuWayne Bosse, who’s also a crop insurance agent and market analyst, says there are only a few fields left to plant on his farm, but “I’ve got clients that have like 1,000 acres of beans left to go. I feel bad. The frustration level is high for those guys. And now, you’re past June 10, you know, if they wanted to prevent planted, they can, and a lot of them probably will.”
Bosse says he’s not expecting a lot of prevent plant in South Dakota, but some.
“Prevent plant will be lower probably even than last year (for the Dakotas), which was a low year number for total acres because North Dakota got quite a bit in. I drove through there last weekend and things look pretty good.”
He says the corn looks good, but is behind on progress along with the soybeans.
“We’re not in that really pretty stage yet, where corn roots down and hits the nitrogen that’s in the soil for it. So that’s probably why the crop condition scores in the Dakotas are, they aren’t bad, they’re just lacking the rest of the nation.”
Severe weather has been happening this spring, but Bosse says he’s not expecting any major events in the short-term.
South Dakota
Strong winds, rain expected Thursday across South Dakota
RAPID CITY, S.D. (KOTA) -A cold front moving through South Dakota will bring strong winds Thursday, with gusts up to 50 mph expected in northwestern parts of the state.
Wind advisories have been issued for Buffalo, Lemmon, Spearfish and areas near Rapid City. The strongest winds are expected in northwestern South Dakota, north and east of the Black Hills, up into the Buffalo area.
Wind timing and intensity
Winds are expected to build during overnight hours into Thursday morning and continue through midday. The strongest winds are forecast around 10 to 11 a.m. Thursday.
Winds will begin calming around 5 to 6 p.m., with breezy conditions continuing around 8 p.m.
The east side of the state could see some 50 mph wind gusts.
Rain and thunderstorms are possible
Showers are moving into the area, with heavy rain in northeastern Wyoming. Sheridan and Gillette could see heavy activity with possible thunderstorms.
Rapid City and western South Dakota will initially see dry conditions as upslope flow squeezes moisture out of the northern and western slopes of the Black Hills. Showers will move through the rest of Thursday, especially north of Interstate 90.
Some areas could receive about a half-inch of rain, though model data shows variations. Additional rain is expected Sunday, with temperatures about 10 degrees below average.
Front stalls across the region
The front is expected to stall over Ekalaka, Alzada, and Belle Fourche, and into central Meade County, including Union Center, and into Ziebach County.
Temperature outlook
Morning lows on Thursday will drop to 40 degrees in Gillette and 51 degrees in Rapid City. Temperatures will fall below average across much of the region after the cold front moves through.
Highs on Thursday will reach the 70s in Pine Ridge, Kadoka, Sheridan, and Belle Fourche. Temperatures will rise back to the 70s and 80s on Friday.
Another cooldown is expected Saturday with the next front. Temperatures in the hills could drop into the 50s, with highs of 56 in some areas and 62 in Deadwood. Spearfish and Hot Springs will see temperatures similar to the plains. Phillip and Pine Ridge will warm into the 80s by Friday.
Rapid City will hit 77 Tuesday and 83 Wednesday as high pressure moves into the area and temperatures stay moderate through the end of the week.
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South Dakota
South Dakota tribes revoice claim to Black Hills through joint resolution
All nine tribes located in South Dakota are unifying in their call to return the public, federal lands in the Black Hills to tribal entities.
Each tribe passed a resolution calling on Congress to act. Treaty rights mandate the Black Hills belong to tribes, although that treaty was broken long ago.
Organizers said the most important detail in this new legislative push is the focus on public, federal lands. Put simply, places where people do not live.
Valeriah Big Eagle is the director of He Sapa initiatives for Rapid City-based nonprofit NDN Collective. She said this not about private homes in the Black Hills.
“That’s the myth, that’s the misunderstanding,” Big Eagle said. “When they’re talking about landback in the Black Hills and we’re talking about the federal public land, essentially that is the lands that nobody is living on. It’s the federal, public lands so we can protect it from extractive activities.”
Regardless of outcome, advocates say the inclusion of all South Dakota’s tribes is a historic statement of tribal unity.
Joseph Brings Plenty is a tribal council representative from Eagle Butte. He said tribes have government-signed and guaranteed rights.
“That’s something that needs to be remembered — the treaties still exist,” Brings Plenty said. “That’s why we stand on this. For the United States to uphold their end of the bargain.”
Brings Plenty said it’s a chance for native peoples to have a meaningful say in the management of the Black Hills. With that, Brings Plenty said healing can happen.
“That’s a step forward, a positive step forward,” Brings Plenty said. “The Black Hills are not for sale. I mean, it’s not just in a Lakota or Indian sense. We all want clean water, we all want the air to be clear, we all want housing and grandchildren. We all want a life. The more and more, as is inevitable, the cultures mesh, I think this is all important. Why lose it?”
This comes on the heels of a mining effort near the Black Hills sacred site of Pe’Sla, where the company behind it withdrew after a legal battle and widespread opposition from the Indigenous community.
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