Catching up on the 96th Legislative Session
Greetings! In this week’s article, I will try to catch up and further inform on the 96th Legislative Session. To start off with we had retirements in two key cabinet positions.
Darin Bergquist retired as our Secretary of Transportations and has been replaced by Joel Jundt who was Deputy Secretary. Both men were remarkable on running this huge department. Best of luck Darin in retirement and thank you Joel for taking responsibility for the role as Secretary of Transportation.
The other retirement was with Secretary of Game, Fish and Parks where Kelly Hepler held the top spot the last 6 years. Kelly, you also did an outstanding job running our GF&P and I also wish you the best in retirement. Give me a call and let’s go fishing. Replacing Kelly is Kevin Robling. Kevin has a Bachelor and a Master degree from SDSU (Go Jacks!) in wildlife and fisheries science. He has been with the department the past 10 years. Kevin the offer is still on the table to go lion hunting. I know both of these gentlemen well and applaud Governor Noem’s selections for our two newest cabinet secretaries.
Now back to session! A couple of alibis please for leaving out bills regarding expenditures last week. We passed Senate bill 144 which authorizes a crisis stabilization unit. The cost is $4.6 million and the location is in Rapid City. This is desperately needed not only on the patient level but on the support level as well.
What is happening is if the sheriff’s office gets a call regarding someone having a mental illness issue, the closest facility is in Yankton, South Dakota. The state did provide sheriff’s departments with laptops that hooked directly to counselors 24 hours a day. If this didn’t work or the situation worsened, the patients needed to be transported from the Black Hills to Yankton. Pennington County sometimes bussed patients in conjunction with penitentiary prisoners. Most of the time the sheriff’s departments had to drive patients to Yankton only to have to retrieve them 3 or 4 days later. This facility will make a big difference.
Also passed was HB-1265 to improve radio systems mainly in the Black Hills. There are times where no communication is available, making first responders’ jobs much more difficult and dangerous. Hopefully this will eliminate that problem.
We passed HB-1110 making it illegal to have an abortion if the parent(s) found out the baby was diagnosed with Down Syndrome.
We defended property rights by stopping Game Wardens from coming onto your property without a search warrant; bill HB-1111.
We empowered parental rights by passing SB-177 regarding home schooling. This was hotly contested. I voted in favor as I looked at it as a freedom bill where if parents want to home school their children, they should have the right to do so. In our district the superintendents already were allowing home school kids to participate in extracurriculars. This looked to me as an I-90 – I-29 corridor bill where the Sioux Falls schools and smaller schools surrounding Sioux Falls were squabbling. Perhaps Rapid City as well. We’re very lucky to have the high-quality K-12 schools in our district. This is a credit to our teachers, administrators and parents.
Hemp. We passed hemp last session, meaning the 95th session, not this year’s 96th session. The rollout has taken time. We did amend last year’s bill allowing greenhouses to grow hemp plants. This wasn’t included in last year’s bill. We made the size of the greenhouse 2800 square feet or larger. A 30x90 greenhouse is 2700 square feet. This prohibits backyard sheds from declaring themselves as a greenhouse.
Lastly, medicinal marijuana. Whew! Like I’ve stated before medicinal marijuana was on the ballot in Constitutional Amendment A wrapped with hemp and recreational marijuana. This is before our state supreme court now waiting for a ruling as to whether or not it was constitutional.
Initiated Measure 26 (IM26) was stand-alone requiring a yes or not vote regarding legalization of medicinal marijuana. This passed by the voters by a 70% yes vote. Voters of South Dakota want medicinal marijuana. The Department of Health and Department of Revenue asked for an additional year to implement IM26. We worked with both of these agencies and did come up with a compromise for a 6-month extension, not a full year. However, when HB-1100 went over to the Senate, a section was added to legalize recreational marijuana as well. So, the long and the short of it is that we went back to what the people originally voted for in IM26. The start date is our state’s fiscal new year which is July 1st, 2021. There is a 120-day window for businesses to get set up with cards authorizing medicinal marijuana which would take it to Nov. 1, 2021.-
This is a good time to stop! More next week.
To the citizens of South Dakota and to the men and women in uniform, in honor of 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

