Articles
Wind farm wins electricity battle before SD regulators
Clark facility succeeds in forcing purchase by NorthWestern.
RELATED CONTENTGeese overpopulation targeted
Looser rules proposed to bring numbers down in South Dakota.
RELATED CONTENTGF&P eyes golf cart use by campers at state parks
Change would require sticker, lights, mirrors, insurance for electric carts.
RELATED CONTENTCuster State Park to get new visitor center
GF&P Commission advances plan for $3 million facility.
RELATED CONTENTFishing license sales trailing 2012 by significant amount
Among residents, sales of one-day licenses are down 60 percent and annual licenses are off 58.9 percent.
RELATED CONTENTGF&P seeks smaller deer harvests
Thousands of fewer licenses, tags could be available for 2013 seasons.
RELATED CONTENTSprucing-up planned for SD Capitol
Building’s third-floor repair plan to focus on legislative area.
RELATED CONTENTGovernor to keep fuel tax vow
DOT leader says Daugaard won’t raise motor fuels taxes unless emergency occurs.
RELATED CONTENTSD DOT switching to eight-year plan
Time for development, construction process increases from current 5 years.
RELATED CONTENTThune scrutinized on Web tax issue
Senate eyes bill that could bring millions in revenue to state.
RELATED CONTENTColumns
MERCER: Friends remember Ruth Karim
Ruth Karim left this world Feb. 10 at age 82. Her funeral Feb. 16 at Sts. Peter and Paul Catholic Church in Pierre marks the final passing of one of the co-founders of the South Dakota Right to Life organization.
RELATED CONTENTMERCER: Local control bottom line in armed sentinels issue
Think of the opposite side of the argument. The Legislature says no. There is a deadly incident at a school without a resource officer and without law enforcement within short response time.
RELATED CONTENTMERCER: To win and lose: Four greats who left us
Saturday marked one year since the death of Bill Janklow from inoperable brain cancer. His four terms and 16 years in the office made him South Dakota’s longest-serving governor.
RELATED CONTENTMERCER: Women indicate influence growing in SD Legislature
PIERRE — The 18 women who will be in the state House of Representatives for the 2013 session that starts Tuesday are the largest number in the history of the South Dakota Legislature.
RELATED CONTENTMERCER: Term limits pave fast path to power in SD Legislature
The old ways, of biding time and building respect while waiting a turn, are gone.
RELATED CONTENTMERCER: Christmas tradition shines on at Capitol
How state Buildings and Grounds staff got the massive tree, whose branches spread perhaps 20 or more feet wide, through a double-doorway that measures perhaps six feet wide at the Capitol’s front, is a feat remindful of Houdini.
RELATED CONTENTMERCER: Socialism in a democracy
PIERRE — As South Dakotans weigh the social merits and the financial perils of embracing expanded Medicaid coverage available under Obamacare, let us take a breath and look at two other federal programs that embody the same principle of offering a big benefit to all.
RELATED CONTENTMERCER: Sometimes a kiss isn’t just a kiss
Not since their first inaugural ball, when they danced together for the first time as South Dakota’s then-new first couple, did Jean and Mike Rounds have such a big public moment that seemed so personally genuine, as they did Thursday morning.
RELATED CONTENTMERCER: Is planning panel the Legislature’s fountain of youth?
The Legislature’s Planning Committee is off to a confusing start. The law creating the new panel was passed earlier this year. The law’s language has lawmakers baffled.
RELATED CONTENTMERCER: Giving thanks for life’s good, past and present
PIERRE — We shall speak only praise of turkeys, and welcome their imminent presence on our dinner tables, in these last days leading to our national feast. May our thoughts turn to the blessings received since we last gathered over cranberries and pumpkin pie.
RELATED CONTENT