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The Henry G. Fix Post 23 American Legion Report for September 5, 2024

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            The Henry G. Fix Post 23 meeting opened on Thursday, September 5th at 8:00 pm.  The meeting was opened by Commander Jon Schmidt with a salute to the Colors, POW/MIA observance, the Pledge of Allegiance, and Preamble to the American Legion Constitution.  Chaplain Lampe offered the prayer.  17 members were present. 

            The Auxiliary was thanked for preparing a great meal.  Post 23 Firefighter of the Year Devon Huwe and his family were present as special guests.  Devon spoke of being honored as our selection.  Special guest Debra Stowe spoke on her time at the American Legion Youth Trooper Academy.  She was proud she made it through the challenges and thanked the Post for sending her.  That summer experience has opened a path for her future employment aspirations.     

            The minutes of the previous meeting were presented and approved. The finance and social reports were approved.  Bills were approved for payment. 

            Service Officer Nancy Grandy reported that thinking of you cards were sent to Don Debates and Chelsea Patrick.  Condolence cards were sent to the Dale Schmiesing family and to Post members Barbara and Louis Phipps on Dale’s passing.  It was reported that Neal Albers had been in the hospital.

            The membership report was given by Nancy Grandy.  She reported that our 2025 goal is 201 members.  Our September goal is 50% (101 members).  We currently have a total of 104 renewed members (54%) at this point.  Our October goal is 111 members.

Bob Bennett gave the Americanism report.  The school will host a Veteran’s Day program in the gym on November 11th at 2 pm.  They will also host meals with Veterans that week.  Bob Bennett will have sign-up forms for those meal times at the next meeting.   

            Legislative Officer Paul Evenson gave that report.  He reported on the National Convention.  James LaCoursiere Jr. of Connecticut was installed as the National Commander.  Fred Nelson was installed as the Department National Executive Committee Member, and Doug Feltman in place as the alternate.  The severe funding shortfall for the VA was a large topic.  The color guard performed military honors for Donald Edmundson and Dale Schmiesing. 

            Brian Siemonsma gave the baseball report.  There is an upcoming change to VFW baseball.  They plan to eliminate the 16U teams and add 17U teams.  This will align with the South Dakota High School Activities Association.  We will make plans to adjust our baseball program accordingly. 

            The bathrooms were discussed.  Gary Lyngen reported that the work is mostly done.  There is some painting and caulking to complete.  He has lined up a company to commercially clean the floors. 

            The Vietnam Vets Legacy MC Poker Run will start their ride at our Post on Saturday, September 7th.  Gary Lyngen and Josh Lampe will be there to make it all happen for our facility.

            Our next Post meeting will be Thursday, October 3rd with the meal at 7 pm and meeting at 8 pm.  The next Post breakfast will be October 6th from 9 am to 1 pm with scrambled eggs and ham.  The next County meeting will be held in Dell Rapids on October 29th with a start time of 7 pm.  The next District meeting will be held October 26th in Dell Rapids with a social at 11 am, meal at noon, and meeting at 1 pm.

            Rob Meyer brought up the Commercial Club’s Hometown Christmas schedule.  The Hometown Christmas will take place on December 14th.  A motion was approved to move our Legion Breakfast to that date so we could provide a breakfast option to those attending. 

            The monthly raffle drawing took place.  There were 4 drawings for September.  Winners were:  Lyle Rollag, Kiley Buettner, Ethel Kurtz, and Garrick Moritz.  Each will receive $150!

            Commander Jon Schmidt closed the meeting with the usual ceremony at 8:55 pm. 

Respectfully submitted,

Mark Wiesner, Post 23 Historian

Fourth Street Update:

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road torn open showing sewer replacement
//photo courtesy Sayre Associates

            First Rate has installed all the sanitary sewer main between Canyon Ave and Eastern Ave. A number of sewer services on this stretch of roadway have also been replaced.

            In addition, all residents along Fourth Street have been connected to the temporary water main.

            Next, First Rate will finish installing the sanitary sewer main and services within Phase 1.

            The Phase 1 project limits are 200 feet east of Eastern Avenue. Once all the sewer services are installed, First Rate will begin installing water main between Main Avenue and Eastern Avenue.

            Lastly, Xcel Energy will be relocating the power poles along Eastern Avenue. Their relocation is necessary for future curb and gutter and sidewalk installs.

            Sayre Associates is providing construction administration and on-site observation for the project. If you have any questions or concerns regarding this project, please contact Cole at (605) 321-3868 or .

            Construction bulletins will detail the progress of the project as it is constructed and will be distributed every two weeks on Tuesday. To be placed on the email distribution list, please contact Carrie at (605) 332-7211 or .

Ross Petrick re-elected as vice president on SDN Communications Board of Managers

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Ross Petrick
Ross Petrick //photo submitted

            Sept. 3, 2024 – The SDN Communications Board of Managers re-elected Alliance Communications general manager/CEO Ross Petrick to serve another one-year term as Vice President during its recent annual meeting.

            Petrick has been the general manager and CEO of Alliance Communications, based in Garretson, since 2015.

            The nine members on the Board of Managers oversee SDN Communications, which is owned by 17 rural broadband companies serving more than 80% of South Dakota’s geography.

            Other board members are:

•          President Denny Law, Golden West Telecommunications (Wall, SD)

•          Secretary/Treasurer Tracy Bandemer, Interstate Telecommunications Cooperative (Clear Lake, SD)

•          Fay Jandreau, Venture Communications (Highmore, SD)

•          Heather Kranz, TrioTel Communications (Salem, SD)

•          Steve Meyer, Swiftel (Brookings, SD)

•          Chad Mutziger, Midstate Communications (Kimball, SD)

•          Jeff Symens, Valley Telecommunications (Herreid, SD)

•          Ryan Thompson, Santel Communications (Woonsocket, SD)

            SDN Communications interconnects all 17 companies, creating a fiber-optic network of more than 50,000 miles that spans eight states: South Dakota, Minnesota, North Dakota, Nebraska, Iowa, Montana, Wyoming and Colorado. Together SDN and its member companies serve businesses with managed services and reliable connectivity.

            SDN specializes in serving banks, health care, agricultural businesses, government, manufacturing and education.

Letter to the Editor: Vote NO on Referred Law 21:

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A Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing

            Recently supporters of a controversial proposed hazardous carbon dioxide pipeline have been promoting Referred Law 21. However, before you vote on RL 21 this November you need to understand the rest of the story.

       RL 21 is a creation of Pierre Politicians and the mega-businesses they serve. Landowners who have been fighting for fair treatment and common-sense rules limiting eminent domain and supporting local control were not allowed to participate in the bill that became

      RL 21 – we did not have a seat at the table.

     Instead, RL 21 was promoted as something it is not. Supporters claim it is a bill of rights for landowners, when in reality, it largely restates what is already law and repackages protections landowners already have.

      This is the smokescreen to cover up the true intent of RL 21 which is to ignore the will of the people and the important role our counties play in determining where hazardous pipelines could be located.

      What RL 21 does is to concentrate power in Pierre and erode our ability to govern ourselves locally.

      RL 21 undermines the concept and practice of local control.  In order for the CO2 pipeline supporters to grease the skids in Pierre, RL 21 allows our “Public” Utilities Commission (PUC) to ignore local ordinance and zoning laws – because supporters of RL 21 believe Pierre knows best on how we in local communities and other places want to live.

     Under RL 21 the PUC does not have to even consider local rules, regulations or ordinances relating to hazardous pipelines in our communities. This is offensive – and worse yet, the PUC commissioners did not ask for this change and did not request this power to undermine every county in South Dakota.

      RL 21 forces this upon them and puts our so-called “Public” Utilities Commission in a position where county ordinances and local control are ignored if a hazardous pipeline is approved. I understand the Pierre political machine does not care about us in rural South Dakota but enough is enough.

     Vote NO on RL 21 so we keep at least the small amount of local control we have left.

RL 21 is bad for local control and bad for you.

-Kevin Roseland, Redfield, SD

News for 9-26-2024 (e-edition)

This Week's Issue

9-26-24 front cropped

In this week's issue: Two GHS seniors were chosen to be on the Youth Advisory Council, a new committee on city council that allows young people a voice in city governance; two young Garretson residents participated in a Strongman contest and placed well this past weekend; and Garretson Cross Country is running hard in competition. Plus, volleyball, soccer, openness in state government, and more!


This Week's Spotlight Photos


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Please support your local newspaper!

            Hello everyone. Over the last few years people have asked me how the paper is doing, and my answer is the same. We’re fine for right now, but as I’ve told several folks, just like everyone else we’re feeling the squeeze.

            My partner and I sat down and did the math for the next year, and it’s not pretty. We’re not in trouble at this very moment, but we can see the writing on the wall.

            The vast majority of the problem is mailing costs. Post Office costs went up outrageously, 76 percent between January 2023 and Sept 2024. So, for no reason whatsoever that we can discover, it costs us more to get you your newspaper every week.

            Most of this problem lies with Postmaster General Louis DeJoy and his “Delivering for America” policies. This is the same guy who wants to close mail distribution centers in Sioux Falls and Huron, so that our mail in South Dakota will be organized for distribution in Omaha and Fargo. That’s been put on hold for now because of a vast public outcry, but it’s still the plan.

            Far more insidiously, the USPS is allowed to raise rates without direct approval by the Postal Regulatory Commission, with only some review by the Commission for illegalities and errors. The most recent postal price hike, in July 2024, follows a pattern of twice-a-year price hikes under Postmaster General DeJoy with his Delivering for America plan and like many government policies, it does the exact opposite of what its name implies.

            The Delivering for American plan certainly hit the newspaper industry hard with price hikes for periodicals that are objectively punitive.

            This same sad and upsetting story I’m telling you here is the same one I’m hearing from other newspaper editors and owners across the state. Everybody has had to raise prices to cope and just do business.

            In the newspaper business, our main costs are the three "P"s: people, printing and postage. Printing costs went up 9 percent in 2022 and another 8 percent in 2023. We raised advertising rates 20 percent for 2023 and will be going up another 11 percent for 2025. Our subscription increases of 12 percent from 2023 to 2024 helped, but were unable to cover the cost of printing and postage increases.

            We raised prices, but have not given ourselves any cost-of-living or salary increase, and have actually cut back in as many other areas of the business as possible. Bluntly, I’ve had the same base pay for the last 9 years, with no raise. Neither has Carrie since she joined full time. Our advertising income has actually been decent, slightly better than the last two years, and that has offset the damage the postal increases have caused. However, when we look at the hard numbers we’re simply bleeding out slowly, and will burn through our reserves by spring if something isn’t done.  In order to continue to grow, get better, and ensure the future of the newspaper, this needs to change.

            So, we’re announcing the following price increases.

            Effective November 1, 2024, new subscription pricing will be $60 for in-state mailed and $65 for out-of-state mailed.

            To help reduce the burden of that increase, we're opening up monthly subscription options. Monthly subscriptions will be available for $5.50 (in-state; $5.80 out-of-state). Monthly payments are only available on our website and are recurring payments. The extra amounts in the monthly payments help pay for fees.

            On-line-only subscriptions will increase to $60. Mail+Online subscriptions (folks who get both the mailed paper and a full on-line account) will increase to $70 ($6.10 per month).

            Counter Sales will be $2.00 per issue ($2.50 for one-week online).

            Sustaining member subscriptions will now be offered for $250 (annual) or $21/mo (recurring). Sustaining members are covering their actual costs of producing a newspaper, without advertising or other revenue factored in. As a thank you, sustaining members will receive a Mail+Online subscription, your name / business name in our "crew" box, and a commemorative gift once per year.

            If you are unable to cover the cost of the increase, we will offer a "Hardship" option that will keep annual pricing at $45 until November 2025. Please only use this if you truly are unable to cover the increase due to fixed income or other hardship.

            When I cashed in my life savings to buy this business, I knew there were no guarantees. Again, we’ve quite literally done everything we can and put this decision off as long as possible to avoid increasing costs to our community, friends, and neighbors. We’re not doing this job to get rich. We’re doing it because we love it, we care and we believe in service to the public, our readers, and the highest American ideals of the Free Press. We’re the little guys, independent and independently-minded like most South Dakotans, and we want to stay that way. So, I’m asking for your help to do so.

            Thank you for your support for the past nine years. We can't do this without you!

-Garrick Moritz, Editor

2024 Homecoming Hijinks and Hoedown, happy fun for everyone

GHS Homecoming celebrations happened all week last week, making this our annual, photo-heavy issue. Enjoy!

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Garretson kids have a lot of character!

adults dressed in mickey mouse and paw patrol costumes with a yoda and princess in the background
//Garrick A Moritz, Gazette
young girl with dark hair and eyes in elsa costume holding out her hands
Ellie Liester uses her freeze powers as Queen Elsa. //Garrick A Moritz, Gazette

            On Sunday, young children from all over the area gathered at Blue Dragon Academy for the Character Breakfast and Touch a Truck event and had a great time. They were able to meet their favorite superhero and princess characters such as Anna from Frozen, members of the Paw Patrol, Yoda and Darth Vader, Spiderman, Captain America, Superman, Batman, and Baby Shark.

            At the same time, they were able to play games such as cornhole, get their faces painted, and receive a tour of the Garretson ambulance.

            All ages enjoyed the breakfast comprised of the infamous fireman pancakes thanks to the Garretson Volunteer Fire Department.

WANT TO SEE MORE?

More article below - Read with a mailed subscription or full on-line subscription!

Your financial support of this locally-owned, locally-run newspaper and its advertisers ensures we can continue bringing you great content. Thank you for your support!

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Garretson Oktoberfest Sept. 20th

            Oktoberfest is returning to Garretson! The Sports Cabin is hosting Oktoberfest this Friday, Sept 20, with festivities beginning at 5:00 p.m.

two women in german heritage attire dancing
Marilyn Flanagan (left) and Wendy Solheim dance on the street at 2023's First Annual Garretson Oktoberfest. //archive photo submitted

            Originally a festival celebrated in Munich, Germany, Oktoberfest is a way to celebrate German heritage, having run for over 180 years. The first Oktoberfest was held in 1810 to honor the wedding of King Ludwig I to Princess Therese of Saxe-Hildburghausen, and has been held yearly since. This year's German festival runs from Sept 21-Oct 6, making this Friday's Garretson version a perfect complement.

            Though many of the settlers of the area around Garretson were Norwegian, a large contingent of German settlers came to Garretson/Palisades as well, and this will be a great event for all to attend.

            Event organizer, LeRoy Austin, promises good food, plenty of beer, and great music along with lots of fun. The Larry Olson Band will be providing the music and games will be played. German-heritage attire is encouraged but not required, and a Beer Stein competition will be held beginning at 6:00 p.m.

Homecoming Heartbreak from the Blue Dragons

            The Garretson Blue Dragons had a case of homecoming heartbreak on Friday night, despite playing a very competitive game against a traditionally tough opponent.

football player running in for a touchdown while another player dives to stop him
Ian Buettner with a touchdown catch. //Garrick A Moritz, Gazette

            Head Coach Jerry Weiland was proud of how the team handled themselves, especially the defense teams really being vigilant and helping the team create opportunities.

            “It was a good week for homecoming with good weather,” he said. “All the Blue Dragon sports have been doing well and it was nice to have our stands full and cheering Friday night. This was a tough loss to a quality team.”

            After a whole first quarter with a zero score, the Blue Dragon defense checked the Hawks advance. Finally, the Hawks broke through during the opening minutes of the second quarter, but Blue Dragon defense denied them the two-point conversion.

football player kicking ball
Tyler Erickson on the extra point kick. //Garrick A Moritz, Gazette

            That defense pushed hard, and with about 3 minutes still on the clock the Blue Dragons gained possession less than 30 yards from the goal line.

            “This is your chance!” Coach Weiland was heard to yell, and then they delivered! Ian Buettner caught a nice 19-yard pass from Cole Jessen and scored the Blue Dragon Touchdown of the game. Tyler Erikson kicked it right in for an extra point.

            “We followed a solid game plan and ended the half with a 7-6 lead,” said Weiland.

            The Dragons ended the half with possession of the ball.

            But the third quarter was a rough one, as the Hawks found their momentum, scoring twice more, but only getting one two-point conversion leaving the score 7-20 by the 4th.

            “We had small errors at critical times that cost us,” said Wieland. “Nine penalties for 105 yards is too much to give up.”

            Though Jackson Arend was able to catch a 5-yard toss from Jessen and bring the score up to 13-20, Runningback Collin Olson was also badly injured. Coach Weiland said that Olson was still being assessed by medical professionals as of press time and had no information as to whether or not he was going to be able to play the rest of the season.

            Losing the homecoming game by one touchdown and sustaining injuries was certainly demoralizing, but now the Dragons have time to lick their wounds.

            “This is our bye week,” Weiland said. “It will allow us to mend some bruises and sharpen our skills going into the second half of the season.”

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