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New elk hunting season proposed to reduce feed loss and property damage on S.D. prairies

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by Nick Lowrey, South Dakota News Watch

Elk in hills
North American elk, which can weigh up to 750 pounds, are fairly common in the Black Hills but are now migrating into prairie lands to the east, leading ranchers to experience feed losses and property damage. Photo: Nick Lowrey, South Dakota News Watch

North American elk are returning to the prairies of western South Dakota after more than 100 years of absence, a migration seen as a win for wildlife conservation but which has farmers and ranchers bothered by feed losses and property damage.

The herding of Rocky Mountain elk as far east as Jones and Stanley counties has led to calls for a new hunting season on the prairie to reduce elk numbers and the damage they are causing.

Landowners on the prairies north of Philip and west of Pierre say elk — one of the largest herbivores native to North America — are increasingly grazing in their fields and pastures and are damaging fences and eating food meant for their livestock. Previously, elk mainly resided only in the Black Hills region 175 miles or more to the west.

Spending by the Game, Fish & Parks Department Wildlife Damage Program on elk-related complaints jumped by nearly $100,000 in 2019. Wildlife damage specialists also covered 7,000 more miles to assist landowners with elk damage in 2019 than in 2018.

Partially in response to landowner complaints and in the wake of more elk sightings, GFP officials have proposed that the game and parks commission approve creation of a massive new elk hunting unit.

“We know there’s elk in there, and we’re actually talking about opening that up for hunting at some point,” GFP Secretary Kelly Hepler told News Watch in an interview.

Under the proposal, a total of 10 “any elk” hunting licenses would be made available for use in the new hunting unit. The unit would cover all of South Dakota west of the Missouri River that doesn’t already have an elk hunting season or isn’t managed by one of the state’s tribal nations.

Tom Kirschenmann, wildlife division chief for GFP, said the new unit would be something of an experiment.

The experiment is needed because the department doesn’t actually know much about elk populations outside the Black Hills. In that region, elk are counted every three to four years using aircraft flying low and slow over the mountains. The effort produces a reliable population estimate, biologists say. Current estimates put the number of elk in the Black Hills at around 7,200 animals, well within the population range sought by the GFP.

Out on the prairie, aerial surveys would be too expensive because there is too much ground to cover. Instead, GFP biologists have relied on landowners reporting elk sightings or damage.

If the new West River elk hunting unit is approved during the next GFP Commission meeting scheduled for March 5 and 6 in Pierre, it would be in place for the next two hunting seasons. Information on where elk are killed, when they’re killed and whether landowners still have problems after elk hunting occurs would be used to inform decisions on whether more targeted hunting will be needed, Kirschenmann said.

Hunters will likely be eager to help out. Last year, South Dakota residents sent in more than 17,000 applications for the roughly 1,500 elk hunting licenses issued by the state. Most of those licenses were issued for the Black Hills, where there is plenty of public land for hunting.

Outside the Black Hills, the vast majority of land is privately owned and getting access to that land can be a challenge, said Chris Hesla, executive director of the South Dakota Wildlife Federation, a nonprofit that advocates for wildlife and public hunting access.

“The easiest way to control wildlife damage is through hunting,” he said. “We need to look at getting more access so we can harvest enough animals.”

Landowners, though, are worried that 10 hunting licenses won’t be enough to affect what they say is a steadily growing population of large, wild animals that are competing with their cattle for food and decimating crops.

Eric Jennings, a cattle rancher near Spearfish who is president of the South Dakota Cattlemen’s Association, said elk populations in western South Dakota have grown faster than GFP has so far been able to respond.

“I have been advocating for them to do more for years,” Jennings said. “It’s just an issue that needs to be addressed.”

Ty Eisenbraun, who raises cattle near the Cheyenne River in northeast Pennington County is one of the landowners dealing with an elk problem. He said elk have shown up on his property every fall since 2012, and that at first he was happy to see the animals. But now that he has counted more than 100 elk at a time in his alfalfa fields, he sees them as a problem.

“I kind of enjoy them. I can step out of my house and hear elk bugling,” Eisenbraun said. “They’re cool, but they’re kind of destructive, too.”

Elk are native to South Dakota. Historical records show elk were hunted on both sides of the Missouri River in the Dakota Territory through much of the 19th century. Over-hunting before the creation of modern conservation practices eliminated elk from both Dakotas before 1900.

In 1916, elk were reintroduced into what would become Custer State Park and Wind Cave National Park in the Black Hills. The idea was to keep the animals contained to the parks so they wouldn’t compete with area ranchers’ cattle. After 1980, elk management priorities changed and the GFP began trying to expand the Black Hills elk herd to provide more hunting opportunities. Now, the state manages for a herd of between 6,000 and 8,000 animals, depending on weather and range conditions.

Yet elk are naturally transient. As the Black Hills elk herd has grown, more of the animals are moving out and away from the mountains into areas dominated by cattle ranching and farm fields.

Farmers and ranchers in South Dakota have always had to deal with wildlife, such as deer and antelope, eating food meant for their cattle or sheep and eating grain in their fields before harvest. Elk, though, are a little different. They can weigh up to 700 pounds and tend to graze more like cattle.

Unlike cattle, elk will run through fences or knock them over while attempting to jump them. Fence damage has been the biggest problem for Eisenbraun. This year, he’s had to replace more than a mile of fence because elk keep knocking it over. Fences are critical to ranchers because they keep their valuable livestock where they are meant to be, and can be expensive and time-consuming to fix.

“I can go out and fix a stretch of fence and within a few days, they’ll have destroyed it again,” Eisenbraun said.

Fence damage and some raids on his winter feed supply pushed Eisenbraun to start speaking with wildlife damage control specialists within GFP.

There are several things GFP can do to directly help ranchers such as Eisenbraun.

The department, through its wildlife damage program, will help pay for a strong cable to be strung across the top of a fence, which will help prevent elk from knocking the fence over.

To protect stored hay, GFP staff will provide exclusionary panels and help build a protected stack yard. To divert elk away from pastures and hay fields, GFP sometimes will pay up to $6,000 worth of food plots aimed at reducing damage to alfalfa and other crops.

“We want to be a good partner to these landowners,” said Keith Fisk, wildlife damage program administrator.

In the United States, wildlife is publicly owned. Private landowners don’t have any more rights to the wildlife on their property than anyone else. Landowners can control access to their land, but they cannot stop wild animals from leaving their land, they cannot sell wildlife and they cannot just shoot problem wildlife without getting permission from the agency that manages it.

Because 85% of South Dakota land area is privately owned, and because most of the state’s wildlife lives on private land, GFP has to work closely with landowners, especially when wild animals are damaging someone’s livelihood, Fisk said.

In 2019, GFP spent just shy of $300,000 working with farmers and ranchers to reduce and prevent elk damage to their property, up from slightly more than $200,000 spent in 2018.

In all, GFP spent a little more than $3.5 million on wildlife damage control in 2019, including nearly $1 million spent on deer damage complaints alone. Nearly all of the money the department spent on wildlife damage control comes from the sale of hunting and fishing licenses.

“We want to work with landowners,” Fisk said. “There’s a ton of value to having those critters on the landscape.”

Eisenbraun hasn’t taken advantage of wildlife damage assistance just yet. For now, he’s hoping a new hunting unit will help when the elk return to his land next fall.

SECOG helps add revenue to county coffers

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By Dave Baumeister, County Correspondent

crystal johnson
Newly appointed Minnehaha State's Attorney Crystal Johnson thanks county commissioners during the Jan. 21 meeting. Johnson was originally named as interim state's attorney to replace Aaron McGowan in December, and commissioners made that appointment permanent until the next election in November. (Photo by Dave Baumeister)

SIOUX FALLS – One of the better returns on taxpayer dollars spent by Minnehaha County comes from its association with the Southeastern Council of Governments.

According to a presentation by Lynn Keller Forbes of SECOG, in 2019, the county received over $70 million in grants and loans through the work of her organization for the $152,000 it paid in dues to belong.

Overall, Forbes said, the average return to local governing bodies is $294.92 for every $1 spent.

The SECOG website says its mission is to serve over 40 municipalities in Clay, Lincoln, McCook, Minnehaha, Turner and Union counties.

Every year, to help in budget preparations, organizations receiving money from the county make presentations on what their groups are accomplishing.

Forbes gave her SECOG briefing at the Tuesday, Jan. 21, Minnehaha County Commission meeting.

Through a variety of slides, she showed how SECOG helps entities with grants, loans and planning for water projects, transportation, planning and zoning, among other things.

One of the more recent projects that has been in the news, which SECOG is helping with, is the Maple/Park Street corridor between Brandon and Sioux Falls.

Another function of SECOG that Forbes told commissioners about is their work in selling the “Governor’s Houses” made by inmates at Mike Durfee State Prison in Springfield.

Another small piece of business at the meeting, which also tied into the county’s legislative agenda, was the approval of a contract with Testpoint Paramedical LLC to conduct on-call blood draws.

These draws are connected to alcohol abuse and related offenses, and that is why the county is closely watching – and lobbying for – a hopeful bill from State Sen. Wayne Steinhauer of Dist. 9 to allow counties to implement a “bed, board and booze,” or entertainment, tax.

In a letter from County Administrative Assistant Craig Dewey, he wrote that as the registered lobbyist for Minnehaha County, he was in Pierre on Jan. 21 working with Steinhauer helping to gather co-sponsors for the legislation.

Commissioner Jeff Barth mentioned the need for the county to be able to tax alcohol to raise revenue for alcohol-related expenses, such as the aforementioned blood draws.

Although it had been announced earlier, Commissioners made the appointment of Crystal Johnson as Minnehaha County State’s Attorney official, replacing Aaron McGowan, after he resigned in December.

Johnson, who has been part of that office since 2005, was named as McGowan’s interim replacement by 2nd Judicial Circuit Presiding Judge Robin Houwman.

As the “permanent replacement,” she will serve as state’s attorney until the next election, this coming November.

On Friday, Jan. 10, several candidates for the position of state’s attorney were interviewed, but at that time, commissioners decided to stay with Johnson.

After her unanimous appointment, Johnson spoke briefly on the work being done by the state’s attorney’s office.

“I look forward to moving that office forward,” Johnson said. “Last week we got convictions at a homicide trial and a violation of a protection order trial.

“We continue to work hard, and I thank you for the opportunity of leading that office.”

The Minnehaha Commission has its regular meetings each Tuesday at 9 a.m. on the second floor of the county administration building at 6th and Minnesota in Sioux Falls.

These meetings are open to all, and public comment is always encouraged.

Who is John Garretson?: Part 2 (Full Article)

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            Writers Note: Last week, we ran Part I about John Garretson from Eagle, ID, a man who has never visited Garretson, SD but has begun to invest in the town with the same last name. While he has recently discovered his ancestry to A.S. Garretson, the railroad investor who is the namesake of Garretson, SD, diverged in the late 1600’s in Pennsylvania, he still feels a connection to this community and has been deepening his relationships with different folks who live here.

John has lived a very interesting life, from experiencing the Roswell, NM “alien incident” of 1947 to his career as a nuclear engineer. The Gazette felt a full profile was a great way for our community to get to know the man with the last name Garretson.

John, who was born in Salem, IA in 1932, moved eight different times before high school due to his father’s job (his father, who was a mechanical engineer, was instrumental in starting three different companies- Bailey Meter Co., Phillips Petroleum, and Sacra Bros Propane and General Tank and Steel). During the years of World War II, he was in Detroit, Michigan before heading to Bartlesville, Oklahoma. However, John was able to settle for a few years in Roswell, NM, and he graduated from Roswell High School in 1950.

John Garretson Family 1965
Family 1965: John and Carolyn with their three daughters, Cathy, Leslie, and Debra in 1965. At this time, John was at Atomics International in Canoga Park, CA, working on early nuclear development for space-faring projects.

John, 14 years old at the time, was a newspaper delivery boy during the Roswell UFO incident of 1947, when a US surveillance balloon crashed at a ranch nearby, prompting stories and conspiracy theories about alien lifeforms and Area 51 that persist to this day, despite being debunked as Project Mogul.

Project Mogul was a highly classified project that was sending weather balloons into the ionosphere to monitor Russian nuclear activity, according to Smithsonian Magazine in an article written on the Roswell incident’s 70th anniversary.

In that article, author Donovan Webster wrote, “Everywhere you looked in 1947, the global, social and political chessboard was being re-divided. The Soviet Union began to claim eastern European nations for itself in a new post-war vacuum. Voice of America started broadcasting in Russian to the eastern bloc, peddling the principles of American democracy. The U.S. sent V2 rockets carrying payloads of corn seeds and fruit flies into outer space. The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists set the “Doomsday Clock” ticking, and the Marshall Plan was in the making to rebuild war-torn Europe. Small wonder that in the heat of summer that year, flying saucers became all the rage.”

It appears that truthfulness from the US government was low priority during that period of time, which is likely why the distrustfulness in the story continues.

“I arrived in Roswell from Bartlesville, OK in February, 1947 and finished the ninth grade,” said John. “The UFO incident occurred that summer. It was in the paper for a few days and then disappeared from the news cycle. The cover up was in place and nothing further was reported about UFO's. There were several articles about what it probably was (experimental balloon) and no one thought much about it after that.”

However, John doesn’t necessarily think the cover story put out by the U.S. government about the weather balloon and Project Mogul was complete.

“It was not until the 1970's that some of the locals got the ball rolling and the craze was on. Lots of books were written and it turns out that I knew a lot of the people that were interviewed about their knowledge of the event. They sure kept the secret of what they knew well. I had no personal knowledge, but happened to have gone rabbit and dove hunting in the following years several times in the area north of Roswell where the event occurred. I even found a weather balloon sender unit on the desert floor one time. I have read most of the books related to this event and am a believer that they were from outer space. It seems that everything recovered from the desert north of Roswell ended [up] at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.”

Roswell, which is actually not the home of Area 51 (that is 13 hours away north of Las Vegas, NV), was home to two military establishments during John’s childhood- the SAC Air Force Base (which housed the B-29’s that dropped the atom bomb), and the New Mexico Military Institute (NNMI). NNMI has both a high school and a junior college, and is the only state-supported military college located in the western U.S.

Roswell age 16
Roswell age 16: John, an avid hunter much of his life, shot a prong horn antelope at age 16 twenty miles east of Roswell, NM. His family settled there in the middle of John’s 9th grade year, and John graduated from Roswell High School. Mostly unbeknownst to him, he was intertwined in the Roswell UFO incident as a paperboy for the local newspaper, the Roswell Daily Record.

John lived two blocks south of the campus with his parents, brothers, and sister, and met wife Carolyn as a senior in high school, bringing her to prom that year.

“I started dating in the 10th grade and got to use the family car on special occasions. I was real bashful, so two or three dates with the same girl was about my limit,” John said. “It turned out that when I was a senior, my date for the Jr-Sr prom was my future wife. It was also our first date. We married later when I was in the Army at El Paso, TX.”

The lack of settling that he experienced as a child continued as John entered adulthood, though nowadays he stays put.

“Actually, I don't travel that much. We used to visit my parents during the summer and sometimes on holidays. I had a stretch where I joined my brother in Iowa for deer hunting. We have also visited Canada and made several trips to Mexico. Does a cruise to Alaska and a tour of Hawaii count? Our one big trip was a 10-day tour of England, Wales, Ireland, and Scotland.”

Before that, though, John attended three colleges, served in the Army, married Carolyn, attended two more colleges, and changed jobs several times.

After his Army service, John finished his degree at Texas Tech with a B.S in Mechanical Engineering. Prior to graduation, a new department head required the seniors to take a course on nuclear engineering. This one-off class didn’t seem like it would benefit him much, but only one week after John started as a draftsman at Douglas Aircraft, he was offered a new position as part of the Nuclear Effects Group that was headed by a Chemistry PhD who had just returned from the South Pacific.

Army 1954 Ft Bliss
Army 1954: John enlisted in the Army and married Carolyn Bradley in 1954 after attending his father’s alma mater, Iowa State College, and Colorado A&M. He graduated with a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering from Texas Tech in 1957.

“It seems that Douglas wanted to enter the nuclear field and this was their start. I found out later that when they were looking for candidates to staff this group, someone had looked at my grade transcripts and noticed the Nuclear course,” John said. “Anyway, this was my out from the drafting board and I accepted the position. There were only 4 people to start with.”

John worked happily in that area for three years, but then his father made him an offer he could not refuse- he would pay for John’s schooling if he agreed to obtain a Master’s Degree. This offer allowed John to obtain his Master’s in Nuclear Engineering at Oklahoma A&M. Upon graduation in 1963, he was offered a position at Atomics International in Canoga Park, CA, and began working on the SNAP 8 reactor project. SNAP, which stood for Space Nuclear Auxiliary Power, used a liquid metal mixture of Sodium and Potassium (NaK) as a coolant on a reactor. John’s job was to do a safety analysis in order to see if the reactor could be started safely in the facility where it was kept.

“You better not have any leaks,” said John. He notes that the reactor was later launched into space to simulate a vehicle failure. While the project passed its goals, the contract with the US government went to Russian scientists, who had developed a thermal reactor that used steam power.

John then learned FORTRAN, a computer language that allowed engineers to write their own instructions in order to interact with computers. Originally developed by IBM, FORTRAN was used for scientific and engineering applications for over six decades.

“I became heavily involved with writing computer simulations and followed that path the rest of my career,” he said. He left Atomics International and went back to the team he had worked with at Douglas Aircraft (which later became McDonnell-Douglas), working on projects such as studying electron interference and electronics shielding.

“There was an interesting event that occurred during a test in the South Pacific at Johnston Island,” said John. “We were using a Douglas IRBM Thor missile to launch a warhead into outer space. On the first try the Thor got about ten feet off the ground and blew up. This wiped out the launch and control facility. They went for replacement components stored at Vandenberg Air Force Base and airlifted them back to Johnston Island. After refitting, another launch was tried. This was successful and the warhead exploded in outer space. However, the electrons that were generated streamed down the earth's magnetic field and disrupted the communications in Hawaii and Australia for about two days.”

He also talked of his experience donning a hazmat suit to clean up a mishap in an underground nuclear testing facility in Nevada.

“Every time a new or modified weapon was created, it had to be tested. Companies were allowed to place specimens in some of the tunnels that led to the bomb. When the explosion occurred, the radiation would pass down the tunnel striking the samples mounted on racks. There was a mishap during the test and we had to go and recover our samples. The tunnel closure system partially failed. After the radiation had passed, the tunnel was supposed to collapse and prevent the following shock wave and debris from going any further. The closure was incomplete and the specimens were blown off the racks to the end of that tunnel and also contaminated. The biggest problem was the Beryllium dust, which is deadly if inhaled. We put on a breathing system and then a protection suit with all the joints taped. We then rode a miner’s rail cart to the debris site and gathered what we could find and exited. Once was enough. That was only time I had to do that,” he said.

He also worked with ICBM’s, moving over to Sparta, Inc, which later obtained the government contract for the Star Wars project proposed by President Ronald Reagan. His team studied the best location and methods of placing Minutemen Missiles, which were a major part of the American nuclear arsenal in the 1970’s.  A museum dedicated to their history is located by Kadoka, SD.

When work for the ICBM’s slowed, John started work at Northrop (later Northrop Grumman), working on the F-35 design. His project was on sensor fusion and it allowed aircraft to share enemy aircraft radar detection data with each other.

Unfortunately, Northrop “lost the competition with Lockheed due to politics,” despite completing the project successfully and on time (Lockheed was over a year late and crashed a plane), according to John.

He then worked on the Tri Service Standoff Attack Missile (TSSAM) program, which developed cruise missiles. Again, Northrop lost the contract to another competitor, and John moved to developing software for the defensive systems on the B-2 plane, a project that was highly classified until its public release in the late 1980’s. Other than a bomb, the B-2 does not carry any armament, so it relies on evasion to avoid enemies. John’s software helped determine the best flight profile to allow for evasion and help the bomb glide to its target. The B-2 officially went into service with the U.S. Air Force in 1997, though test flights were held in California in the late ‘80’s. The B-2 has enjoyed notoriety due to its high cost of development, which is estimated to be over $2 billion per plane according to the Government Accountability Office (GAO), and the program has been fought over by Congress since 1992, when the Cold War was winding down. While 132 aircraft were originally planned, only 21 were ever built. Twenty remain in service and will be retired in 2032.

“I lived near the El Toro Marine Base before I moved to Idaho,” said John, who retired in 1997 and moved to Idaho in 2003. “Before the base was closed, they used to have annual air shows. The test bed B-2 based at Edwards Air Force base was often used for a flyover during the show. On its way back to base it flew over a hill near my house. We would stand there and wave as they flew over. A spectacular sight since we were so close.”

For a man who had so much of his career shrouded in secrecy, John Garretson was extremely generous to tell us his story. A youth who moved often, enjoyed hunting, married his high school sweetheart, and became a family man with three daughters that enjoyed square dancing, and also worked on some incredible projects throughout his life. Despite not yet visiting Garretson, his legacy continues as he commits to more projects in the town that shares his name.

Obituary: Loren Schleuter, age 85

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Loren Schleuter

Loren Schleuter, age 85, of Estelline, SD, passed away on Tuesday, January 21, 2020 at the Sanford Hospital in Sioux Falls, SD. Celebration of life gathering will be 1:00pm to 4:00pm on Saturday, January 25, 2020 at the American Legion in Estelline, SD. Arrangements are entrusted with the Houseman Funeral Home-Birk Chapel of Hendricks, MN.

Loren Wiley Schleuter was born on February 17, 1934 in Clear Lake, South Dakota to parents Julius and Vera (Weisel) Schleuter. He graduated from Clear Lake High School in 1952.

On September 21, 1952, Loren was united in marriage to Marj Krause in Goodwin, SD and to this union they were blessed with six children. After their marriage, Loren worked for several farmers. He managed the municipal bar in Garretson, SD and then was employed by John Morrell for 19 years. While in Garretson, he served with the volunteer fire department for 19 years. In 1987, they moved to Estelline, SD where the couple owned and operated the Red Carpet Steakhouse for seven years. They then purchased and operated the Kozy Motel for numerous years.

Loren enjoyed life, socializing was his gift. Hunting and fishing brought years of enjoyment as well as his daily therapy coffee sessions at the C-store. Taking in his grandchildren’s events and activities was something he dearly enjoyed. Loren passed away on Tuesday, January 21, 2020 at the Sanford Hospital in Sioux Falls, SD surrounded by his family at the age of 85 years, 11 months and 4 days.

Grateful for having shared Loren’s life is his bride of 67 years, Marj Schleuter of Estelline; his six children: Randall (Char) Schleuter, Dell Rapids, SD, Rita (Darrell) DeBoer, Beaver Creek, MN, Roxann (Mark) Westover, Garretson, SD, Paula (Jim) Payne, San Antonio, TX, Kimberly (Royce) Harringa, Brandt, SD and Jay (Holly) Schleuter, Garretson, SD and 19 grandchildren and 24 great-grandchildren and numerous nieces, nephews, cousins and a host of friends.

He is preceded in death by his parents; brother, Vernon Schleuter; three sisters: Laurel Kaiser, Lois Stee and Darlene Teal and two great-grandchildren.

News for 1-30-20 (Subscribers)

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Jan 30 2020 Front page

Click to download and read Issue #5 Full Version

The school makes the decision to keep the current boiler and accepts bids for a chiller, the GHS one-act play had its public performance on Sunday and has its first competition today, the South Dakota legislative season is in full swing, and the boys and girls' basketball teams played three double headers last week, plus more!

There's a lot going on in our community. Keep up with all of it with the Community Events Calendar on page 4. You can download it here and have it easy to hand! Community Events Calendar


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News for 1-23-20

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Jan 23 2020 Front

Who is John Garretson? Most of us haven't heard of the man who has the same last name as our little town, but he's been making his mark over the past year. Plus, the Fireman's Annual Dinner and Dance, the city council hears about the need for a new community center, and winter sports stay in full swing!

There's a lot going on in our community. Keep up with all of it with the Community Events Calendar on page 4 in the on-line or paper version. With your on-line subscription, you can download it here and have it easy to hand!


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On-line Subscribers Get More!

On-line subscribers get access to a Subscribers' Welcome Area, and are able to view extra photos, articles, and an issue of this week's paper in both a Flipbook and PDF format.


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Fighting fires and winter’s chill with the warmth of comaraderie

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GFD Firemen

Garretson’s finest, our volunteer firemen, hosted their annual banquet and dance on Friday, Jan 17 at the American Legion Post #23 dugout. The event went forward despite winter storms looming and deadly cold windchills. Above is current and outgoing fire chief Jeff Frerk, awarding the Firefighter of the Year award to Mike Fetter. Below is new chief elect Dan Wagner, presenting the GFD’s Business of the Year award to Rusty Vandersnick of Vandersnick Excavating.

GFD Firemen

Who is John Garretson?: Part 1 (Preview)

By Carrie Moritz, Gazette

John and Carolyn
John & Carolyn Garretson. John has made a mark on the town bearing his last name with several generous charitable donations. (submitted photo)

Last year, the Garretson Area Historical Society received a phone call from a man named John Garretson. John, who hails from Eagle, Idaho, had contacted the Historical Society hoping to find some information on A.S. Garretson, a banker, businessman, and railroad investor who was from Sioux City, IA.

A.S., short for Arthur Samuel, was born in Ohio, and moved to Sioux City in 1874 at age 23. Becoming involved in banking, he was an instrumental investor in railroad construction with the Sioux City and Northern Railway, and was a driving force behind convincing the citizens of Palisades to relocate their little town from the banks of where Palisades State Park is now located, two miles north to the new railroad diversion and junction that was to be built. The new town was then named to Garretson in his honor.

John Garretson was fairly sure his family tree intersected with Arthur’s, but was still looking for that line.

“I have been looking at Garretson, SD for quite some time,” John wrote in an email to the Gazette in late December 2019. “Every now and then I would make a genealogy search to see where A.S. Garretson joined my family tree. I never was successful, but feel the connection is there.”

Eventually, the connection was made. On January 12 of this year, he wrote to the Historical Society (specifically, to Jakob Etrheim, one of its board members): “I have finally made the Genealogy connection between A.S. Garretson and my family tree. Had to go way back to find the common ancestor. That would be Casparius Garretson, born in 1684. My line starts from his first son John and his [A.S.’s] line starts from his second son William.”

Despite the divergence of the family line, however, John has now made his mark on the town of Garretson, South Dakota. The little town with his last name had sparked his interest, and he’s been becoming more and more involved over the past year.

“I contacted the Historical Society and ended up making a donation. As a result of this, someone paid for my subscription to the Gazette and I have been receiving it ever since,” he wrote. “I read it very closely to see who might need some help. This has resulted in donations to the Blue Dragon Academy, the Garretson Blue Jays, and the park bench.”

He’s no stranger to giving, though. He and Carolyn were the drivers behind Middleton, Idaho’s formation of a high school marching band and dance squad, and helped support their choir and Academic Decathlon programs.

He notes it was not complete altruism that set him on the giving path, but was more a way to support his granddaughters in their education and daughter in her dreams.

“We found out that two of our granddaughters had belonged to a marching band in California and were interested in continuing that activity [in Idaho]. Middleton had not had a marching band for 18 years,” John wrote. “So, we got together with the band director and with the help of some of the student parents that were interested [we] formed a marching band. I donated money for whatever was needed; uniforms, etc. Later, there was a need to haul band items from contest to contest and I bought a trailer for them.

“My youngest daughter had a degree in dance and volunteered to coach the dance squad that performed with the band at various competitions. I gave her the funds for this (costumes, props, etc.) rather than introduce a school employee and have to beg the funds from them. All the props, costumes, etc. were donated to the school when not needed any longer. This squad was winning 1st and 2nd place trophies at the various events and made a real name for themselves. It also turned out that 3 of my granddaughters held the Drum Major position with the band over a 5-year period.”

Two of his three daughters had moved to Middleton a few years before, and upon retiring as a nuclear engineer in 2003, he and Carolyn decided to move there, not only to be closer to his children, but because it was much more economically viable.

According to John, part of the reason behind his generosity was the attitude and culture of Middleton, which he says was fairly insular and relied heavily on “who you know” rather than skill or community growth potential. This meant that such things would not have gotten done if someone hadn’t stepped up and, essentially, pushed it along.

Continued on Part 2

Writers Note: Mr. Garretson certainly has made his mark on Garretson, South Dakota. He has lived a very interesting life, and the Gazette plans to continue this profile on him in Part II next week!

City plans for future projects, prospect of Community Center (Preview)

The Monday, January 13 meeting of the Garretson City Council focused mainly on a request for a variance on the Paterson-owned land located west of Granite Ave and on the need for a new community center/city hall.

Two councilmembers were absent from the meeting, along with City Maintenance Supervisor Craig Nussbaum. The council started by approving natural gas prices, and received committee updates.

Jeff Frerk with the Garretson Fire Department presented, noting that overall in 2019, the GFD put in over 1700 combined training and volunteer hours. They had 140 total calls, which was slightly above 2018’s 135 and 2017’s 134 calls, but still within average. Mayor Greg Beaner recognized the GFD for its service, noting that all of those hours are volunteer, and are valued at $150/hr.

The ambulance report was given by Anna Uhl, who noted that at 198 calls, 2019 was the second busiest year on record after 2015’s 225 calls. They are more stable financially, but they are still having trouble attracting and retaining qualified staff and volunteers. While this is an issue nationally, it is a trend the Garretson Ambulance would like to see reversed.

Continued on Part 2- Online subscription required

The next meeting of the City Council will be held at the Legion on Monday, February 3, at 6:30 p.m.

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West Central Dismantles Blue Dragons

by Tad Heitkamp, Head Coach

On January 16th, 2020, the Blue Dragons played host to the Trojans of West Central. The Blue Dragons struggled all night on the offensive side of the ball, which resulted in a convincing loss to West Central 53-32.

GHS Boys Basketball

“We played pretty well defensively all night, but we couldn’t convert anything offensively,” stated Heitkamp. “The kids did a nice job getting quality looks at the hoop, but it just wasn’t going through the net for us. A part of the problem is we are not taking the ball to the rim with authority and shooting with confidence, which is something we will be emphasizing the remainder of the season.”

Dylan Kindt led the way in the scoring column with 8 points, as Trey Buckneberg (4 steals) and Hayden Olofson added 7 and 6 points. Josef Zahn (6 rebounds) added 5 points of his own, while Cooper Long chipped in with 3 points. Triston Rekstad and Cole Skadsen rounded out the scoring with 2 and 1 points respectively.

The Blue Dragons played against Tea on Jan. 21 (results not available by press time).

The Dragons face Luverne in a double header tonight (1-23) at home! On Friday night (1-24) they travel to Vermillion and travel to face Flandreau on 1-28.

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