Governor Kristi Noem’s Weekly Column: Growing South Dakota’s Communities

Growing South Dakota’s Communities
By Governor Kristi Noem 

Communities are the heartbeat of South Dakota. As I travel across the state, I hear this over and over: people love our state, and they want to preserve our special way of life for generations to come.

I agree.

South Dakota’s communities are strong, and our people value the traditions rooted in our movie theatres, cafes, and landmarks. In order to preserve these treasures, though, and keep our kids and grandkids right here in South Dakota, we must continue to grow and expand opportunity for them.

At the end of January, I outlined a plan that would fix one of the problems holding back growth in our communities, the conditional use permitting process. My legislation protects local control by letting a local community decide what projects they want to support, rather than a fringe few. It would set up a fair, certain, and reliable system for everyone – the community members and economic developers. In short, as I laid out in my State of the State, it rolls out the red carpet, not the red tape for those who want to create or expand their business.

Thus far, we’ve received the support of county commissioners, agriculture associations, energy business leaders like the South Dakota Wind Energy Association, and many others from around the state.

Notably, Scott VanderWal, President of the South Dakota Farm Bureau said that the bill will “fix a lot of the issues and irritations we’ve had with our permitting process for many years.”

Pennington County Commissioner Gary Drewes supports the change, too, saying “timing is critical for developments, and this bill brings back more local control.”

Craig Anderson, the president of South Dakota Pork Producers, agreed. “This legislation will streamline the process for projects which will make job creation easier in rural South Dakota,” he said.

And Jerry Schmitz, executive director of the South Dakota Soybean Association said this “opens the gates of opportunity” for our hometowns and our way of life.

The most sure-fire way to strengthen South Dakota is to expand economic opportunity so our kids and their kids can stay here and raise their families. I love our state, and we’re working hard to ensure our communities stay strong for generations to come.

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There was a Liz May sighting this weekend after all. May says first action would to break up packers and stockyards.

In looking today, it appears that there was a Liz May sighting after all.  From Facebook, it appears she was out yesterday at the Black Hills stock show according to this interview.

In the interview posted by R-Calf, she indicates her first action if elected would be to pass the “packers and stockyards act,” and expresses her belief that she needs to break those entities up:

Not sure where Liz May is campaigning this weekend.

After I shared the Scyller Borglum post below, I went to Liz Marty May’s facebook page to see if she had shared any campaign activity from this weekend. With the big gun show in Sioux Falls, and a large GOP gathering in Pierre, I wanted to know what I could tell about what the Congressional hopeful was doing today.

And I really didn’t find much. They boasted about achieving 1000 facebook likes. And they posted a Trump meme.

I did see that under the comment section, she might have gone to a crackerbarrel in Newell that she was invited to. But, even that was not entirely clear.

We’ll report any sightings we hear about. But so far it has been silent.

Sioux Falls City Council intrigue… Should we take that to mean Theresa is bailing out?

Interesting post this afternoon from Sioux Falls City Councilwoman Theresa Stehly:

“It has been a privilege to serve” certainly sounds like she’s out of there, and not going to run. A possibility further borne out by the fact she has no campaign committee, and has so far refused to say she’s running in the face of a massive head of steam behind candidate Alex Jensen.

If Stehly is truly out, word is that former Mayor and radio host Rick Knobe came off of his boat long enough to toss out a few anti-Republican/ anti-trump social media posts to try to gain some attention, and may be a possible candidate in Stehly’s place. We’ll see. Knobe has some lingering name ID, but there’s no indication he’s got the drive to run a citywide contest at the level that Jensen has already prepared for.

There had also been some question about whether Democrat City Councilman Patrick Starr, who proposed punishing gun owners who were victims of theft, was going to run again. I’m hearing this afternoon that he is. Bigger question is who is planning to take him on, as that race is wide open at this point.

And City Councilman Greg Neitzert has reason to smile this weekend as his campaign sign was featured in a recent article at the Argus Leader. Sometimes good things happen for those who are prepared.

There’s Goldwater in those Black Hills..

At the risk of getting boring with the political pins, I had another recent purchase show up today – a pin I’d bought at an online auction that I hadn’t seen before for my South Dakota related presidential pins:

A spectacular Goldwater/South Dakota State Specific flasher pin, which I’ve never seen before. It’s in beautiful shape, it wasn’t expensive, and it’s a fun addition to my collection.

Noem Orders Capitol Flags at Half-Staff to Honor Former Legislator

Noem Orders Capitol Flags at Half-Staff to Honor Former Legislator

PIERRE, S.D. – Governor Kristi Noem has ordered flags at the South Dakota State Capitol to be flown at half-staff from 8 a.m. until sunset on Saturday, February 8, 2020, to honor the life of Bernie Christenson, a former state leader and legislator.

Christenson was a dedicated public servant, serving 20 years in the South Dakota Division of Criminal Investigation, where he worked as a special agent, training coordinator, and assistant director. Under Governor Richard F. Kneip, Christenson helped create the South Dakota Retirement System, later serving as chairman of its board of trustees.

Christenson served in the South Dakota State House of Representatives from 1985 to 1987.  In 1987, at the request of Governor George S. Mickelson, he resigned from the legislature to serve as the founding executive director of the South Dakota Community Foundation, a role he held until his retirement in 2003.​

Christenson also served for years as a part-time state pilot, flying with every governor since Frank Farrar.

A memorial service for Christenson will be held at 10:30 a.m. on February 8 at First United Methodist Church in Pierre.

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HB 1218 introduced to make school evaluations a “palms up” process for parents of children with disabilities

I haven’t mentioned much about it, but for a while now, my wife and I have been working on a measure to help parents of children with disabilities navigate an often intimidating process when parents are dumped into an educational system that isn’t always friendly, especially when you’re facing the reality of educating a child with a disability for the first time.

House Bill 1218 has been introduced to establish certain requirements for schools regarding parental notice of and access to certain tests, assessments, evaluations, and observations.   The measure is expressly designed to help families of children who receive special education in South Dakota schools under an IEP (Individual Education Plan) or other similar education plan. 

The goal of this measure is to provide parents with access to information regarding assessments being completed involving their child(ren) and to ensure parents are given adequate opportunity to review the results of any assessments completed prior to attending meetings where those results will be discussed and decisions made using those results.

Currently, under the IDEA (Individuals with Disabilities Education Act) federal law, which is about 16 years old, it mandates that schools are to provide notices of assessments.

BUT, here’s the catch. Federal law is silent as to when.  In fact, schools may claim that they’re complying with federal law but that’s not necessarily correct. Because IDEA also mandates that parents are to be equal partners in the IEP process. If parents lack the same information that schools have when sitting down to write the IEP, how can they be equal partners in the process? 

My wife and I found this out the hard way.

Our daughter has long been on a IEP, and recently, as we’ve been working through the proposed changes to her IEP, we had asked for a return visit/observation from an outside specialist in Autism Spectrum Disorders. We felt that the school had been dragging their feet in getting this accomplished, so we expressly noted that we wanted to be informed when it was scheduled.

At the next meeting to discuss our daughter’s IEP, we brought it up for purposes of finding out when it was scheduled for and not only had it taken place, but they had purposefully not told us when it was taking place because they didn’t want us to possibly affect the outcome. And without providing us a copy of the report, expressed that the results supported their position, and that’s the way it would be.

(In fact, we finally received the report we were seeking a month and a half later.)

Can you imagine a school doing testing of your child, and purposefully not telling you they did it? And then not being provided a copy of the results?  For a process where IDEA requires that everyone is equal in the process, it’s like an attorney withholding evidence that is required to be produced during discovery, only to withhold it from the other party, and use it in their argument to the court.

Judges don’t tolerate that in court. And parents shouldn’t have to fight for information they’re entitled to either.

An Individual Education Plan is designed to be a collaborative document where all parties, parents, teachers, and administrators (and when old enough students) are equal partners in determining the plan for the student’s education. By withholding documentation – particularly information that had been requested – the school turned what was supposed to be a collaborative meeting into an adversarial one.

We are not unsophisticated when it comes to special education. (At least my wife isn’t.) My wife Dr. Michelle Powers has been a special education teacher, a member of the Pierre School Board State Director of Special Education, Director of Special Education for the Brookings School District, and now an assistant professor of Special Education at Augustana University. This is what makes what took place all the more shocking to us.

While we resolved our issues with the school privately, the fact that it could occur concerned us enough to feel that a change in law needed to be made.  Because if it could happen to us, what’s happening out there with people who are new to the process?

So working with a few legislators, several who are sponsoring it, we broke it down and came up with a way to enhance the federal law in a way that would enhance open government, help parents of children with a disability, and not cost anything in terms of time or effort. And it’s done on an opt-in basis.

What House Bill 1218 does in Section 1 of the act is to simply ask for the assurance that if a parent wants to know the date the assessment is scheduled, they can make that request and the school will provide the date – it’s a simple exchange of information.

For the second portion of the bill – as noted, there are currently no timelines that require districts in SD to provide those reports to parents prior to IEP meetings where those results are discussed.  Section 2 changes this.

As noted above, IDEA federal law requires parents to function as equal partners in the special education process. By requiring that reports are provided to parents prior to IEP meetings, HB 1218 ensures school districts are acknowledging their responsibility to make that equal participation possible by sharing results beforehand, and giving families adequate time to review and consider before any meetings are held to discuss the results.

The bottom line is this proposal helps schools follow the IDEA requirement that parents be an equal partner at IEP meetings. It doesn’t request anything other than information federal law says parents are entitled to. There are also no specific delivery requirements for notice/reports, so they may be provided electronically.

We believe this is a positive step for schools, to require that information is provided on a “palms up” basis to help fully inform parents when it comes to the education of a child with a disability.

Thune, Markey Urge U.S. Attorney General Barr to Implement Interagency Working Group Required By the TRACED Act


Thune, Markey Urge U.S. Attorney General Barr to Implement Interagency Working Group Required By the TRACED Act

WASHINGTON — U.S. Sens. John Thune (R-S.D.), chairman of the Subcommittee on Communications, Technology, Innovation, and the Internet, and Ed Markey (D-Mass.), author of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act, today urged U.S. Attorney General William Barr to swiftly convene the interagency working group as required by their TRACED Act. The interagency working group, led by the Department of Justice in consultation with the Federal Communications Commission, was a key provision of the TRACED Act and was created to evaluate policies and resources needed to better prosecute and deter illegal robocalls.

“The interagency working group, under your direction, has enormous potential to help with the deterrence of illegal and abusive robocalls at home and abroad,” the senators wrote. “We encourage you to devote all necessary resources to vigorously carry out your duties required by the TRACED Act and look forward to reviewing your recommendations on the prevention and prosecution of illegal robocalls.”

Full text of the letter below:

The Honorable William Barr
Attorney General
United States Department of Justice
950 Pennsylvania Avenue, Northwest
Washington, D.C. 20530

Dear Attorney General Barr:

Implementation of our recently enacted Telephone Robocall Abuse Criminal Enforcement and Deterrence (TRACED) Act is critical to help reduce the billions of illegal and abusive robocalls received by Americans each year. We believe a credible threat of criminal prosecution is necessary and appropriate for those who knowingly flout laws to prey upon our most vulnerable populations, like the elderly.  Therefore, your duties required by the TRACED Act are imperative to the success of the law and the deterrence of illegal robocalls, and we urge you to swiftly and forcefully begin implementation of your new statutory obligations to stop this plague on American consumers.

As you know, the TRACED Act directs you, in consultation with Chairman Pai at the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), to convene an interagency working group to study the prosecution of violations of Section 227(b) of the Communications Act of 1934. Among other things, the interagency working group is required to examine existing and potential international policies and programs to deter robocalls since many illegal robocallers are based in foreign countries.

Although Congress has provided the FCC with the authority to go after foreign caller-ID spoofers, in order to have effective enforcement of anti-robocall regulations against bad actors based abroad, the FCC needs cooperation from foreign governments. To that end, the TRACED Act specifically requires the inclusion of representatives from the Department of State to help aid in addressing those needs.

The interagency working group, under your direction, has enormous potential to help with the deterrence of illegal and abusive robocalls at home and abroad. We encourage you to devote all necessary resources to vigorously carry out your duties required by the TRACED Act and look forward to reviewing your recommendations on the prevention and prosecution of illegal robocalls.

Sincerely,

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