Almost the Perfect Storm
Week 7- We completed days 25-28
Greetings! We’re at the end of week 7 of the 95th
Legislative Session. We completed days
25-28. Day 28 was “Crossover Day”. We wear black on Crossover Day in memory of
all the bills that were killed by each chamber.
Basically, crossover means all the House bills that made it through
committee process need to be voted on.
Those House bills that are passed then cross over to the Senate and the
Senate bills that have passed cross over to the House.
I think voting for the Senate bills is easier, as the bill has a track record, that being the committee vote and the Senate floor vote. When I’m voting on a Senate bill, I always look up who voted for or against the bill both in committee and on the Senate floor. Once seeing that, if I still have questions on the bill, I can reach out to those specific senators and ask them why they voted the way they did. In reverse, the senators can do the same to us House members.
One bill, of which I was the prime sponsor, was HB1263: An act to revise certain provisions regarding the dates on which certain school district elections may be held. This bill did pass the House. The problem this bill is trying to solve is special elections on school bond issues. Case in point: the February 25th bond issue vote for Rapid City schools.
I was concerned about a Feb. 25th election and had an article published in all the weekly papers in our district along with being published Dec. 18th in the Rapid City Journal. In fact, the Journal published point/counter-point with my article (my point of view) being point. Counter-point was written by Mike Roesler, the president of Rapid City’s School Board, from his point of view. I was even at a disadvantage in our writing duel because Mr. Roesler got to read my point article and pick at it, but I didn’t get to see his article, or know he had written one, until it was published next to mine in the Journal on Dec. 18th, 2019.
So much was written and said leading up to the Feb. 25th election! I quipped in that article that the “Vote Yes” people “might even get lucky and have snow, or better yet, a blizzard (not the blizzard sold at Dairy Queen).” Yes, I said it on Dec. 18th, 2019. So, what happened when Feb. 25th rolled around? We got a foot of snow starting on the evening of the 24th and on into Election Day. Weather conditions were so bad that Rapid City schools were closed. I assume the superintendent of schools makes that decision, or at the very least, she is responsible for it.
So, what about the polls? Surely, they were closed also because of heavy snow, right? Nope, polls remained open. Let me see if we got this right. Weather was so bad that schools were closed, but not bad enough to close the polls?! What is ironic here is the complete disregard for the elderly who are less likely to go out into bad weather. This is a safety issue as well. I will use my 88-year-old mother, who lives in her home in Watertown, SD as an example. To her and a lot of the elderly, Election Day is an event. They watch a lot of national news, be it CNN or Fox, and are dialed into the Primary Election and the General Election. To them, like a lot of us, we love Election Day. We go to the polls, then have coffee with our friends. Later, we are glued to the tv that night anxiously awaiting election results. When a group purposely schedules a Special Election away from the Primary and General Election dates, in this case at a cost of $67,000 to the taxpayers, they get a much lower voter turnout. That is a fact!
HB1263 changes Special elections, when they pertain to a school bond, to the General and Primary Election dates; the first Tuesday after the first Monday in June and November in off-election years. I have never said I was a yes or a no vote on Feb. 25th. In fact, I live in the Hill City school district, so I wasn’t even eligible to cast a ballot. However, a lot of my constituents live in the Rapid City school district, so that’s why I weighed in locally, and then decided we should look at special bond elections statewide.
Regarding the outcome of the Feb. 25th election, In the spirit of compromise, I think the “Vote Yes” people should look at the proposal the “Vote No” people had. Yep, there is a plan already written up. With the B-21 bomber (Raider), the training mission of all personnel working on the B-21 coming to Ellsworth in the near future, we need to do something, and do it now, to get ahead of all the infrastructure needs. Let’s, as a community, back a plan B and pass it in the June 2nd Primary or November 3rd General Election.
To the citizens of South Dakota and to the men and women in uniform, in honor al all who served, in respectful memory of all who fell, and in great appreciation to those who serve today, Thank You, for giving me the opportunity to represent you.
Tim R. Goodwin, District 30 Representative
Facebook: Goodwin In The House

