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Commissioners approve new procedures moving public comment to end of meetings

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By Dave Baumeister, County Correspondent

            SIOUX FALLS – After many public comments about public comments, the Minnehaha County Commission voted 4-1 to approve their new booklet of procedures that will govern future meetings.

            The main point of contention surrounded limiting speaking time to three minutes, as opposed to the current five-minute limit.

            Various commissioners did say that people rarely speak more than three minutes, anyway, so an amendment was made to keep the time at the present five-minute limit.

            Two other areas of concern were limiting the overall time for public comment to 30 minutes, as well as moving the time for public comment to the end of the meeting.

            However, Commission Chairperson Cindy Heiberger explained that the new rules would allow for more comment time during regular agenda items, and the time at the end would just be a “wrap up” for anything that wasn’t mentioned.

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            However, no one had anything bad to say about any of the other procedures outlined in the new 22-page document.

            Although, during the Sept. 27 public comments some of the speakers likened the changes to what the city of Sioux Falls has often proposed, their meetings are in the evening, and moving public comments to the end could delay them until after 10 p.m.

            The change in comment time for the morning county meetings usually would only move them from 9:05 a.m. to around 9:55 a.m.

            In the end, commissioners voted 4-1 to accept the new procedures, keeping the five-minute limit.

            Commissioner Jeff Barth was the lone vote against the manual, as he had proposed doing public comment at both the beginning and end of the meetings.

            He did acknowledge that he liked the idea that the document could be amended at any time if commissioners didn’t like something about it.

            The next meeting will be on Tuesday, Oct. 4, at 9 a.m. in the third-floor commission meeting room at the Minnehaha County Administration Building at 6th and Minnesota in Sioux Falls.

Blue Dragon Academy Alumni

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            Garretson Alumni gathered for a picture at Blue Dragon Academy with their children that attend or are employed at the childcare center.  Classes from 1995-2014 were represented in this picture. 

BDAHomecoming

            Pictured from L to R: Sam, Theo and Eli Quaintance , Nikki (Westover) Kacen and Treyton Chester, Maddie (Johnson)  Victoria, Treyton and Kirby Lowe, Jordan  and Eliana DeWit, Nathan, Evie and Cade DeWit, Mary (Christensen) and Avery Thomas, Marcus  and Emily Nelson, Katie Willems, Chad and Noah Stoterau, Amber (Steckler) and Layton Schroeder, Amy  and Remington Heesch, Dominique Krueger, Levi  Allison, Josephine, and Veronica Scmid, Jake and Reese Tyrrell, Jacob  and Parker Snyder, Charlie , Evelyn and Rosie Vandersnick, Leah (Stensland), Quinn, Braelyn, Cohen and Madden and Jason Williamson,Jeff , Kennedy and Amber Frerk.

            Not pictured: Cade Nussbaum, Andrew Thomas, Brittany (Nussbaum) Lessman, Heather Tyrrell, McKenzie Decker, Courtney ( Westover) and Jace Kruid.

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Enjoy this free article! The Gazette is proud to present the local news of Garretson, South Dakota, giving its subscribers news of interest, school coverage, and local/statewide government coverage. Your support of the Gazette and its advertisers ensures this coverage will continue into the future. Consider getting your subscription today! E-edition subscribers get access to their issues sooner than anyone else, both on this site and in your email inbox.


Healing Hope Ministries brings Walk to Remember to Garretson

            The Walk to Remember that was held at the Garretson Sport’s Complex this past Saturday was the first event in Garretson to be hosted by Healing Hope Ministries.

Walk to Remember

            “It was the perfect setting today for a memorial walk, people supporting each other,” said Kris Frerk. “The children we’ve lost are in a better place, but we still miss them.”

            Denny and Karri Allen founded Healing Hope Ministries in 2016. They lost their own son back in 2012, after Denny had returned from a nasty tour in Iraq and had been working at Alliance Communications.

            “I was in a pretty dark place,” he said. “I most certainly had PTSD from the bloodshed I saw in Iraq. You see that kind of thing and you’re never quite the same. I did my best, and I did what they sent me there to do, but when they say war is hell, they are right. I had PTSD and I wasn’t dealing with it, and then we lost our son Asher. It was too much.”

            Allen said he’s not afraid to say he needed help. And Karri got that help from a place called Smile Again Ministries in Cross Lake, MN.

            “I wasn’t ready for it, but it’s what I needed,” he said. “There aren’t any easy answers, I certainly don’t have any. There never are any reasons for why bad things like this happen. There is no answer in this world you can give to a parent that lost a child that will satisfy them. The only thing I’ve learned, is that we’re not alone on this journey. We need to be transparent, open and honest with ourselves and our loved ones. And a burden carried together, a burden shared, is burden lessened. That and my faith, has helped me more than I can say.”

            This is why he and Karri formed Healing Hope Ministries, so that they could do the same for others with the same pain they felt.

            “We felt called to do it,” he said. “It was a risk, sure. But we both felt called to do it, because we’d learned so much, we figured we could use what we’d learned to help other people dealing with the same sorts of loss we felt.”

            Their non-profit does everything from grief groups meeting over coffee, to retreats and walks just like this one. This was their 6th walk of this season, with others in Tea, Winner, Madison, and Alcester to name a few.

            “It’s human nature to shy away from grief and sadness,” he said. “The problem is that people then tend to get isolated. The social cues are that, this person is grieving, so we should leave them alone and the person grieving may not want to deal with other people. They should have that space, sure, but we don’t want that to turn into isolation. And people who are isolated tend to shut down and more and more problems can pile up. That’s why these walks are so important. Members of the community who’ve had a loss can see each other, and know they can support each other. They can walk together awhile and it helps make them stronger, especially to know that though they may be hurting, they’re not ever alone.”

            These are the names of the children that were honored at this event:

Abel David Dolney

Asher Allen

Aja Deanne Kneip Pelster

Alexander Ryan Bindert

Archer Conrad Peterson

Benton Howe

Braeden James Anderson

Brooks James Linneweber

Caroline Adele Andrews

David Olson

Gabrielle Bohl

Hadley Ann Horn

Jacquie Zweep

Jeremy Franka

Jessa Mareen Olivier

John Donald Garry

Joshua Schmid

Kalee Ann Johnson

Kamden Jay Nytroe

Kimberly Ramse

Luke Alan Melius

Madyson Elon Barbee

Malin Bloom

Michael Duffy

Michael John Hillestad

Michael John Washburn

Michael Voetberg

Natali Charisse Berlin Reu

Robert William Nussbaum

Scott Michael Bauman

Shaunda Marie Frankman

Stephen James Andrews

Tayden Dale Grohs

Tina Sandbulte

And all children gone too soon.

GHS Homecoming Coronation 2022

GHS Homecoming Queen and King 2022
Rebekah Roth and Preston Bohl

            The Garretson High School Homecoming coronation was held Monday at the Garretson Athletic Complex. Rebekah Roth and Preston Bohl were named Homecoming Queen and King after a vote by their fellow classmates. The King and Queen were revealed by virtue of having a blue piece of tissue paper in a bag full of white paper after a game of random trivia was played. During the game, the royal court answered questions such as "Who writes their name in cursive repeatedly when they're bored in school?" (Carson Clark, who said he does know cursive, despite suspicion that none of the male royal candidates knew that handwriting style) and "Where would you go if you could just teleport there?" (Anna Jones said she'd teleport to Culvers, while Raegen Altman chose Bermuda). In other random trivia, Rebekah Roth would make an elephant an influencer, and Sam Schleuter's boy band name would be "Slammy Salsa."

            The Homecoming game against Hanson will be held Friday at 7:00 p.m. A parade will head down Main Avenue on Friday at 1:30 p.m., followed by a community pep rally at the school.

            The 2022 Royal Court members include Anna Jones, Logan Bly, Raegen Altman, Grace Hove, Rebekah Roth, Preston Bohl, Sam Schleuter, Carson Clark, Matthew Gilbert, and Hunter Abraham.

GHS Homecoming Royalty 2022

News for 9-29-2022

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9-29-22 front page

Homecoming at Garretson School is this week, with the football team taking on Hanson this Friday at 7:00 p.m. Coronation was held Monday, and a parade and pep rally will be Friday starting at 1:30 p.m. on Main Street. Also, get to know each of the candidates for the Minnehaha County Commission, which has three seats up for a vote in November.

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Homecoming at Garretson School is this week, with the football team taking on Hanson this Friday at 7:00 p.m. Coronation was held Monday, and a parade and pep rally will be Friday starting at 1:30 p.m. on Main Street. Also, get to know each of the candidates for the Minnehaha County Commission, which has three seats up for a vote in November.

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Letter to the Editor:

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Dear Editor,

            Approximately half of the kids who end up in our County Juvenile Detention Center are prescribed medication for their mental health. All too often their medications can't come with them and it takes a week or better to get the orders through the system. Quitting cold turkey is NOT recommended for most depression or anxiety medications and the same is true for other mental health care treatments.  We must do better.

            What's even worse is what happens to some of our kids in crisis who haven't committed a crime. Due to lack of resources and available bed space Minnehaha County has been locking kids up in jail cells when they need urgent help.

            Teenagers already are struggling to find their identity and their worth. If a child is feeling worthless and possibly having thoughts of suicide the last thing we should be doing is confirming the idea that they are bad, wrong or trouble by locking them up in isolation.

            Teenagers who believe they are bad can turn into young adults who behave poorly. This in turn lowers the quality of life and feeling of safety for all of us.

            Youth mental health and children with behavior concerns is a topic that needs more attention. We need leaders that are prepared to tackle these tough issues and work towards solutions that make Minnehaha County the best place to live, work and raise a family.

 -Nichole Cauwels, Brandon SD

Recent editorials elicit county action on public comment at commission meetings

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By Dave Baumeister

County Correspondent

            SIOUX FALLS – In putting together a document for future commissioners, a draft was presented this week which outlines and clarifies basic plans for how the Minnehaha Commission will operate.

            While this is just a draft document and has not yet been adopted, at first glance most of it just sets in writing the way the commission has always operated.

            Commissioners said that something like this was good to have for new commissioners, and as of the first meeting of 2023, the Minnehaha County Commission will have at least two, and possibly three, new members, as Commissioners Cindy Heiberger and Jeff Barth are not running for re-election.

The only incumbent on the Nov. 8 ballot is Commissioner Gerald Beninga.

            But in the draft “Rules of Procedure” document, two changes stand out that were referred in recent editorials in this newspaper.

            One is that time for public comment will be moved to the end of the meetings, which is a change that allows for everyone who has something to say to say it, even if it is already an “agenda item,” as not all agenda items come with the opportunity for public comment.

            That became an issue recently over comment on a proposed Summit Carbon Solutions CO2 pipeline that was not allowed.

            A second change makes clear that “video presentations will not be allowed.” Again, at a recent meeting, a group of people who question how elections are conducted mainly used internet videos for five minutes each and made no real comments of any kind.

            The new change would keep that from happening in the future.

            As the previous editorial mentioned, and some commissioners echoed at the Sept. 20 meeting, public comment is time for the public to talk to commissioners about concerns, not to waste time showing things people can see elsewhere.

            The one other change to public comments is to limit the time to three minutes for each person (down from the current five minutes) and cut the overall comment period to just 30 minutes.

            Now, these and other items in the draft document will be looked at and discussed by the commission before they adopt it to govern their operating procedures.

            The draft document can be found on the internet at https://www.minnehahacounty.org/commission/meetingInfo/meetingInfo.php as item No. 15 in the Sept. 20 meeting packet.

More affordable housing?

dustin powers speaking
Dustin Powers with the city of Sioux Falls briefs Minnehaha county commissioners on a proposed TIF district at Madison St. and Veterans Parkway in east Sioux Falls. -Photo by Dave Baumeister

            Even though everyone’s definition of “affordable housing” is different, commissioners were briefed by Dustin Powers with the city of Sioux Falls on plans to establish a Tax Increment Financing district for a housing development around Madison St. and Veteran’s Parkway in Sioux Falls.

            The proposal now calls for 65 houses, 39 single family and 13 twin homes in that development.

            Creating a TIF district still allows all property taxes to be collected, but it establishes that collected tax money will only be used on infrastructure development within the district.

            Although the houses would all sell for around $300,000 commissioners did agree that by today’s standards, that would be considered “affordable housing” for a new home.

            This item was only presented as a briefing to the commission, as it is a plan of the city of Sioux Falls. However, state law says that all affected taxing entities must be notified of such plans.

            Next week, Tuesday, Sept. 27, at 9 a.m., the public hearing for the proposed 2023 county budget will take place in the third-floor commission meeting room at the Minnehaha County Administration Building at 6th and Minnesota in Sioux Falls.

Medicaid expansion is on the November 8 ballot

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By Dana Hess

For the S.D. Newspaper Association

            BROOKINGS — Expanding Medicaid in South Dakota is either a prudent use of tax dollars designed to enhance health care coverage or a disaster that will bust the state budget. Those are the arguments offered by backers and opponents of Amendment D, a measure that would expand access to Medicaid in the state.

            Funded by the state and the federal governments, Medicaid provides medical coverage for low-income people. Amendment D expands Medicaid benefits to any person age 18 or under 65 whose income is at or below 133% of the federal poverty level. Amendment D is on the Nov. 8 general election ballot. Early voting begins Friday, Sept. 23.

            Tax dollars South Dakotans already pay into the federal government would be funneled back to the state if the expansion is approved, according to Zach Marcus of South Dakotans Decide Healthcare, a group that is advocating for the passage of the amendment.

            “It’s important to keep in mind that this is about keeping our tax dollars here in South Dakota for use by working South Dakotans to access affordable care,” Marcus said. “That’s what this is about.”

            Medicaid expansion has been approved in 38 other states, and not always with the best results according to John Wiik who is leading the opposition to Amendment D. The Republican state senator from Big Stone City said states consistently fail to predict the usage of Medicaid expansion, leading to budget shortfalls.

            “Every one of our neighboring states, they underestimated utilization,” Wiik said, predicting that passage of Amendment D would lead to state budget cuts by fiscal year 2026 or 2027 just like the state had to do in 2010. “I don’t remember that being particularly popular with people.”

            Wiik’s also concerned about writing a federal program—Medicaid— into the state constitution.

            “If expanding Medicaid is really the goal,” Wiik said, “we can do it under law. I really don’t want it in the constitution. It’s not something that’s going to stand the test of time like our constitution has done.”

            Expanding Medicaid through a constitutional amendment rather than an initiated measure ensures that the Legislature won’t be able to tinker with the program once voters have approved it, Marcus said.

            “I think it’s always important to keep in mind that fundamentally things that are placed in state statute can change,” Marcus said. “The purpose of a constitutional amendment is to ensure that South Dakota voters get what they vote for.”

            South Dakota already has a good system, Wiik said, where Medicaid recipients get prompt, quality care. The state estimates an increase of 42,500 recipients if Medicaid is expanded.

            “I can’t guarantee that we have enough providers to keep up with the level and quality of service we are able to provide to those who desperately need it right now,” Wiik said.

            An expanded program, according to Wiik, would mean that people on the Affordable Care Act’s silver plan and others who use a Farm Bureau insurance plan could lose that coverage and be forced on to Medicaid.

            “We’re taking health care away from people that have coverage that they like and works for them,” Wiik said. “I don’t think that’s ever a good idea.”

            Marcus counters that any changes would result in savings for the state without a loss of coverage for individuals. “It would be more efficient and cheaper for the state in the long run, which is part of the savings, to have all those programs consolidate through Medicaid,” Marcus said. “There are certain programs that would change, but nobody is losing health care as a result.”

            In their “pro” argument in the Secretary of State’s 2022 Ballot Question brochure, Amendment D backers say Medicaid expansion would be good for the health of citizens as well as the state’s economy. They cite one economic study that forecasts $3.5 billion in new economic output by 2025 with $800 million of that generated in 2023.

            The amendment backers also make a case for expanded Medicaid coverage strengthening rural hospitals and clinics. Wiik doesn’t see it that way.

            “If you look at the statistics, the rural hospitals and smallest hospitals close faster once states have expanded Medicaid,” Wiik said. “It puts more of a burden on the hospitals because everything is a fixed rate from the government.”

            Marcus sees Medicaid expansion as a way for workers in rural areas to set their sights on better jobs without the fear of losing their health care coverage.

            “Folks being able to access health care while they’re working multiple jobs and trying to make ends meet gives them confidence to be able to go out and improve themselves,” Marcus said, “seek that promotion rather than worrying about whether you can afford to risk your health.”

Voters to decide again on recreational marijuana

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By Dana Hess

For the S.D. Newspaper Association

            BROOKINGS — It may seem like deja vu for South Dakota voters this year as they will once again be deciding whether or not they want the state to allow recreational marijuana.

            Initiated Measure 27 is a scaled-down version of the Amendment A that voters approved in the last election. Despite finding favor with voters, the amendment was challenged in court and defeated. That scenario still rubs Matthew Schweich the wrong way. He’s the campaign manager for Yes on 27 for South Dakotans for Better Marijuana Laws.

            It’s not the Supreme Court’s ruling that rankles Schweich so much as the timing. The court got the case on April 28, 2021, and didn’t make its ruling until the day before Thanksgiving 2021.

            “The worst part of the Amendment A case as the South Dakota Supreme Court took so long and deprived us of guidance as to how we should draft our 2022 initiative,” Schweich said. “I think that was a pathetically shameful act. It was an attack on the initiative process, that delay.”

            Schweich describes Initiated Measure 27 as a shorter, simpler version of Amendment A. It allows for the possession of one ounce or less of marijuana by people over age 21, the possession of a limited number of plants for home growing and sets civil penalties for the violation of marijuana-related restrictions.

            Unlike Amendment A, Initiated Measure 27 does not include the regulation and licensing of retail outlets or a formula for the taxation of marijuana sales.

            No matter how the measure is written, Jim Kinyon thinks it’s a bad idea. He is the chairman of Protecting South Dakota Kids which opposes IM27. Kinyon notes that South Dakota voters turned down chances to legalize recreational marijuana in 2006 and 2010.

            In the 2020 election “they spent millions of dollars to confuse and make it unclear what they’re doing and what their intention is,” Kinyon said. “All I need is a handkerchief and I think I can wipe enough lipstick off this pig.”

            Schweich said most IM27 supporters are concerned about how arrests for violating marijuana laws can disrupt or ruin lives. He said legalizing cannabis will free up law enforcement and the courts to work on other crimes while ensuring that patients who need medical marijuana can get it without fear of arrest.

            “Not everybody that’s got a legitimate need for medical cannabis is able to get a card right now,” Schweich said. “By passing Measure 27, we’ll eliminate the threat of arrest for all medical cannabis patients in South Dakota over the age of 21.”

            According to Kinyon, emphasizing the fear of arrest is a scare tactic. “Has anyone talked to their sheriff or their local police department or their judges?” Kinyon asked. “We don’t lock up anyone in the state of South Dakota for an ounce of marijuana.”

            Regulating the retail sale of marijuana and the taxation that accompanies it will likely be something considered in the next session of the Legislature, Schweich said. If the Legislature fails to act, he said he’ll be back with another initiated measure in 2024.

            Kinyon points to the initiated measure’s rules about home-grown plants and asserts that retail outlets will be in South Dakota sooner rather than later. The measure says that home-grown plants are allowed in those communities that don’t allow for retail sales.

            “Clearly some of our convenience stores and some of our local businesses plan on peddling this product,” Kinyon said. “You’ll find people who are willing to crap in their own nest for their profit. By and large, most South Dakotans are better than that.”

            Both Schweich and Kinyon wrote “pro” and “con” articles about the initiated measure for the Secretary of State’s 2022 Ballot Question brochure. The “pro” article cites “public health reports analyzing tens of thousands of high school students in Colorado and Washington show that teen cannabis use did not increase after those states legalized cannabis for adults in 2012. National studies and research in other states have found similar results.”

            Kinyon has statistics of his own, citing South Dakota as having the 47th lowest marijuana usage rate of any state in the nation. Kinyon said the top 10 states in that have the highest concentrations of marijuana usage by children ages 12 to 18 are all the states that have approved recreational marijuana.

            “They pretend they aren’t targeting our kids,” Kinyon said. “That’s a joke. There’s not a single thing we can do in the state of South Dakota that will double the use rate of marijuana other than pass this bill.”

            Both men talked about homelessness in Denver, Colorado, a state that has legalized recreational marijuana. Denver has had a homeless problem for years, Schweich said, with the number of homeless fluctuating largely based on changes in the economy. “The idea that they legalize cannabis in Denver and all of a sudden it became a Mecca for homeless people is just a myth,” Schweich said.

            During his talks to groups, Kinyon has a slide he presents of a tent city in a Denver park. “Camping has changed in Colorado a little bit,” he tells them, noting that downtown Denver reeks of marijuana. “We don’t need the doobie smokers so that every time you walk in or out of our hotels and our restaurants they’re all smoking and blowing smoke on your kids as you walk through. Denver literally stinks downtown.”

            For some, that could be the smell of money. Schweich said marijuana legalization could lead to new industry, new jobs and new investments. “This is new sources of revenue,” Schweich said. “This is new clients. A whole host of businesses in South Dakota have an opportunity to benefit from this.”

            Election Day in South Dakota is Tuesday, Nov. 8. Early voting starts on Friday, Sept. 23.

            At this point, both men see their side prevailing in the election. Schweich looks ahead to a day when marijuana sales are regulated and taxed. “This is a big win for South Dakota’s economy,” Schweich said. “There’s a lot of tax revenue that’s going to be generated. So from a fiscal, economic perspective, this is definitely a winner for the state.”

            It’s safety, rather than the economy, that spurs Kinyon who notes that mental health facilities and services in the state are maxed out.

            “We’re in a mental health crisis,” Kinyon said. “Cutting loose this drug—which is associated with depression, psychotic symptoms and suicide for adolescents and young adults—is the last thing we need to do.”

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