It's Official!
Kristi Noem is the 33rd governor for the state of South Dakota.
Kristi Noem is the 33rd governor for the st ate of South Dakota. One hundred years plus one day after South Dakota gave women the right to vote, we swore in our first female governor. It’s official. I was there and witnessed her oath of office on Saturday, January 5, 2019.
Before that, we House members took our oath of office in our chamber. The gallery was packed and it was a really great day. Next was the receiving line for Governor Noem and First Gentleman Bryon, Lt. Governor Rhoden and his wife Sandy, and the State Constitutional Officers. After that excitement was the Capitol Ball at, of course, the capitol building, and then on to the Inaugural Ball at the Ramkota.
I’ve been to a number of inaugurations. The first was for Governor Janklow in 1981. I’ve never seen the town so full, with parking spots at an absolute premium. Marcia was flying to Atlanta early Sunday the 6th, so we called it a night early (11pm for us older people) Saturday night at the Inaugural Ball.
What’s next? We start session on Tuesday, January 8th. I’m staying in Pierre to work on legislation Monday with our Legislative Research Council (LRC), plus I need to get my legislative laptop looked at, as I’m not receiving emails. Maybe that’s a good thing? Just kidding.
Since taking my oath of office two years ago, 28 seats out the 70 have turned over, included in that figure are the 4 tragic deaths: Craig Tieszen, Sean McPherson, Jim Schaefer and Chuck Turbiville. You can add that to legislators who were defeated, were termed out, or didn’t seek another term, and it comes up to 28.
The most asked question of me is, “What’s going to happen this session?” Well, I’ve heard of two gun bills, “capitol carry” and “constitutional carry”, which were both passed in the past, only to be vetoed. There are some abortion bills. We could this session pass laws making us the first state in the country that outlaws abortion.
Mental health will also be legislated. We do need some attention, especially west river. Having facilities in Yankton is a bit of a distance for us. Perhaps we could rent STAR Academy for that purpose.
Medicaid, or more specifically, Medicaid expansion, will be heavily debated.
Kindergarten through high school funding is a priority in our district. I feel the funding formula disproportionately favors the large schools and penalizes the small schools. In our district, we are all small schools. I’ve mentioned this to Gov. Noem and need next to sit down with the new Secretary of Education and see what we can work out.
Governor Noem has 4 pillars of governing. They are: #1 Total transparency in government, #2 No new taxes or fees, #3 To try and remove red tape from the state regarding businesses and their growth, and #4 Not to grow state government (meaning not hiring more state employees to the over 14,000 we have now on the payroll). I have no reason not to take the governor at her word on these pillars, and will do what I can to support her in this effort. Let the session begin!
Tim R. Goodwin, District 30 Representative
Goodwin In The House on Facebook

