John “Jack” Elder, 88

jack elder obit

Jack was born on June 21, 1928 in Winner, SD to John Melville and Elizabeth M. (Dougherty) Elder. He attended St. John’s the Baptist Catholic Church in Witten, SD throughout most of his life until the church closed and joined the Immaculate Conception Church in Winner, SD.

Jack attended schools in Progressive township (Red Hill) country school just a mile from his home and then attended Witten High School until his graduation.

After graduating from high school he stayed on the family farm north of Carter until the time of his death where he spent his life on the farm raising crops and cattle and attended most cattle auctions from Martin to Yankton and anywhere in-between. He and his father raised registered Hereford cattle and also had a large feedlot for fat cattle. Jack made many trips to Huron and Sioux City with butcher cattle.

On Feb. 23, 1952, Jack married Gladys Hansen of Carter, and to this union three children were born: Gary, Tammie and Lori.

Jack was a member of the Knights of Columbus, Elks Lodge, a school board member, township board, and was also a substitute rural mail carrier out of Carter.

Alice M. Petranek, 105

Alice Petranek. obit JPG

Alice (Gooby) Petranek was born Oct. 27, 1911 at KeyaPaha, South Dakota, the seventh child of William and Della (Rodd) Gooby.

She graduated from Colome High School in 1931 and attended Southern Teachers College at Springfield, SD, where she received her teachers certificate in 1932, teaching first grade. She taught six years in rural school in Tripp County. She received her state teachers certificate in 1937.

Alice married Kenneth Schweigert on August 21, 1937. He died on May 13, 1947. Alice taught in the Colome Independent School from 1941- 1949. During her time in Colome she taught 1st through 4th grades, high school business classes and coached girls basketball.

On June 23, 1948, Alice and Ed Petranek were married and a son, Rod, was born February 27, 1950. In August of 1950 the family moved to Belle Fourche.

Alice became a stay at home mother, but during this time she was a Sunday School teacher, MYF teacher, Brownie and Girl Scout leader, Den mother for Cub Scouts, substitute teacher, teacher for the Adult Education Program, which pertained to teaching literacy, typing and shorthand.

She went back to school and received her Bachelor of Science Degree from Black Hills College in 1961, and her Master Degree in 1971. After receiving her degree, she taught one year in rural Butte County and 17 years in Belle Fourche Independent School. She taught a total of 47 years before retiring in 1979. Alice enjoyed teaching and was dedicated to the teaching profession, always trying to make school work interesting and fun.

She was an active member of the community. She was a member of the United Methodist Church, United Methodist Women, American Legion Auxiliary, Alpha Delta Kappa, Eastern Star, Daughters of the Nile, Manthano Club, Business Professional Women, National and State Education Associations, Tri-State Literacy, Hospital Auxiliary, and the Cancer Society.

Her honors include, ADK Queen for the Day in 2004, Teacher of the Millennium in 2001 and she and Ed were Parade Marshals for the Black Hills Roundup in 2009.

SOUTH DAKOTA BECOMES 36TH STATE TO REQUIRE HANDS-ONLY CPR TRAINING IN SCHOOLS

 

CPR2

Governor Dennis Daugaard signed Senate Bill 140 on March 10, making South Dakota the 36th state in the nation to require that every high school student in the state receive training in Hands Only CPR prior to graduation.

The new law adds more than 10,000 Hands-Only CPR-trained young adults to South Dakota communities each year by requiring that schools offer a 30-minute Hands-Only CPR training class within a required course at some point in the students’ high school career. Individual school districts maintain control over when the course is offered, keeping local control over curriculum decisions. In addition, the trainings are offered to schools at no charge through a partnership with the South Dakota Emergency Medical Services Association. Local EMS agencies have agreed to provide the trainings to school districts free of charge.

“Having a new generation of lifesavers in our communities will have an incredible ripple effect for years to come,” said Eric Van Dusen, President of the South Dakota Emergency Medical Services Association. “We know that young adults trained in CPR at school will save lives by knowing what to do during those precious few minutes after someone suffers sudden cardiac arrest.”

Nearly 424,000 people have sudden cardiac arrest outside of a hospital every year, and only 10.4 percent of them survive, most likely because they don’t receive timely CPR. Given right away, CPR doubles or triples survival rates. Teaching students Hands-Only CPR in a rural state like South Dakota could save thousands of lives by filling our communities with young adults trained to give cardiac arrest victims the immediate help they need to survive until EMTs arrive.

“In addition to saving lives, this legislation will also give high school students the opportunity to have hands-on training and exposure to a career in healthcare and, possibly, on their local EMS agency. Our rural areas have a need for trained healthcare workers, and by exposing kids to Hands-Only CPR training, we are giving them an important glimpse into a potential career field,” said Van Dusen.

SB 140 unanimously passed the Senate last month and passed the House last week with a vote of 65-3. The bill was originally sponsored by 12 senators and 10 house members. Senator Larry Tidemann was the lead sponsor of the bill in the Senate and Representative Jean Hunhoff was the lead sponsor of the bill in the House.

HAPPY GOLD HUNTER

south dak mag photo

By Katie Hunhoff

We met the miners early on a Sunday morning on Rockerville’s only street. I was hoping they would look like miners because I knew my eight-year-old son Steven had some colorful preconceptions of how our first mining expedition might go.

Steven, a rock hound since the day he was born, wasn’t disappointed. Don Hamm and Gary Mallams weren’t riding mules or carrying shotguns, but the officers of the Black Hills Prospecting Club do look the part of rugged miners.

Off we drove, deep into the pine forest toward Deadman Gulch. Finally, after 10 miles of rugged mountain trails and a hundred questions from Steven, we arrived at the club’s Garnet Claim.

We parked along the trail, grabbed pails, shovels, pans and a pickaxe from Don’s truck, and hiked down into the cool gulch. A clear mountain stream ran on one side of a 10-foot high bank. “Watch for rattlesnakes and mountain lions,” cautioned Gary. Suddenly, Steven wanted to carry the axe.

At the claim, Don and Gary each shoveled a scoop of clay dirt from the bank into 5-gallon buckets. Wearing tall rubber boots, they stepped into the stream, which was inches deep but flowed fast, clear and cool.

They began the process of panning — swirling the dirt and minerals around and around — as they told their stories. Gary has been in the Hills for 46 years, but still calls himself a Missouri hillbilly. He worked for the U.S. Forest Service, and then became involved in manufacturing wood furniture parts for the lumber industry. “My regret is that I came here as a young guy and didn’t get involved until 10 years ago,” he told us.

They soon encouraged Steven to help. Gary showed him how to let the water fall away by holding the pan at an angle and swirling slowly. I was anxious that any gold specks might fly out of the pan with the muddy water and gravel. Gary insisted that gold is heavy enough to stay put while mica, the legendary imposter known as fool’s gold, will float away.

Gary said the tools of the mining trade can be expensive for serious prospectors. “My wife said, ‘I thought golf was expensive, until I got into this.’ There’s always a new thing to buy. But we enjoy it. It’s just like fishing or hunting, we’re enjoying the outdoors.”

Panning kits for children and adults new to the hobby can be had for the price of a pizza at outdoor stores in the Black Hills. Kids are not likely to find gold without some help, however, so you may want to consider a guided mining trip at the Big Thunder Mine in Keystone, Black Hills Caverns west of Rapid City or the Broken Boot Mine at Lead. Visit the Clock Shop in downtown Rapid City and take a look at the Icebox Nugget, the largest chunk of Black Hills gold found in the last 120 years.

Don was working with a sluice box in the stream as he told his story. He learned to pan and sluice from his father, Bob Hamm, who grew up working around his father’s steam-powered lumber mill in Deadman Gulch and watching miners working Spring Creek.

Bob — now 92 and still panning — and Don mined 50 ounces of gold in 1972, enough to give them bragging rights as the third largest gold producers in South Dakota for that year.” Though they still find gold on their private claim, Don said, “You’re not going to get rich.”

Steven was sorry to hear that, but Gary regained his attention when he said, “Look at that!” He pointed to a flake of bright yellow mineral in the bottom of Steven’s near-empty pan.

‘There are a lot of things that look like gold, but gold don’t look like nothing else,” said Gary as he scooped the flake and a bit of water into a vial and gave it to the happiest kid in the gulch.

Retailers Welcome Court Decision on Tax Fairness Law

Retailers

The South Dakota Retailers Association (SDRA) today welcomed a summary judgment by Circuit Court Judge Mark Barnett regarding South Dakota’s lawsuit against three large online retailers. SDRA says the ruling is precisely what is needed to move South Dakota one step closer to tax parity between South Dakota brick and mortar stores and giant out-of-state companies.

Although the ruling resulted in the entry of a judgment in favor of out-of-state online retailers, Judge Barnett’s Order specifically recognized that he was bound by existing United States Supreme Court precedent “…even when changing times and events clearly suggest a different outcome; it is simply not the role of a state circuit court to disregard a ruling from the United States Supreme Court.”

This week’s decision by Judge Barnett is an important and necessary step toward U.S. Supreme Court reconsideration of now-outdated tax precedents set by the Court in cases from half a century and a quarter of a century ago.

Last year, South Dakota passed a law, SB 106, requiring large out-of-state companies that sell goods into the state to collect and remit South Dakota sales tax on those purchases. The law applies only to businesses whose sales in the state exceed $100,000 annually, or that make 200 or more separate transactions in the state in a year.

Following passage of SB 106 last year, the State of South Dakota filed a lawsuit seeking a determination that the state may validly require out-of-state retailers that conduct significant business in the state to collect and remit the state’s sales tax on purchases made in the state, even if they do not have a physical location in South Dakota.

The state’s lawsuit was filed one year after U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy recognized in his concurring opinion in DMA v. Brohl that, “[t]he Internet has caused far-reaching systemic and structural changes in the economy” so that “a business may be present in a State in a meaningful way without that presence being physical in the traditional sense of the word.” Justice Kennedy called on the “legal system [to] find an appropriate case for this Court to reconsider” its prior decisions in 1967 and 1992.

When SB 106 was enacted last year, the bill itself and the State of South Dakota acknowledged that only the U.S. Supreme Court can overturn the 1992 Quill v. North Dakota decision that restricts states from requiring remote sellers that do not have a physical presence in the state from collecting the taxes already owed on those purchases. To reach the U.S. Supreme Court, however, the case must first go through the South Dakota circuit court and the South Dakota Supreme Court. Today’s ruling checks off that first step.

The South Dakota Retailers Association played a key role in the discussions that led the state to pass SB 106 and to file suit against out-of-state online retailers.

“Right now, giant out-of-state conglomerates are able to avoid collecting and remitting taxes only because of a loophole that was created before there was an internet, and before e-commerce,” said SDRA Executive Director Shawn Lyons. “Online commerce is expanding dramatically, and the tax inequity gap between in-state retailers and out-of-state online retailers is widening. We are encouraged that this ruling gets us one step closer to having the U.S. Supreme Court take another look at this crucial tax issue, and one step closer to tax fairness.”

State Senator Gary Cammack, owner of Cammack Ranch Supply in Union Center, South Dakota and president of SDRA’s Board of Directors, agrees.

“Only the U.S. Supreme Court can overturn the 1992 court decision, and Judge Barnett’s decision helps us move the issue along,” Cammack said. “Larger online retailers should play by the same rules as the small businesses on Main Street, and this ruling is one of the necessary steps in accomplishing that.”

South Dakota Attorney General Marty Jackley also praised the decision.

“South Dakota retailers should have a fair and equal playing field with other large out-of-state companies that have been benefiting from an outdated sales tax structure,” said Attorney General Jackley. “The South Dakota Retailers Association and their retail partners should be commended for their diligent work on this case and serving as a strong voice for South Dakota’s retail industry.”

Lyons said it’s important to note that the law passed by South Dakota last year did not implement a new tax.

“When South Dakotans make purchases, whether that’s in a store in their hometown or online from a company based in another state, the consumer has a legal obligation to pay taxes on those purchases,” he stated. “The law we passed in South Dakota in 2016 says the burden shouldn’t be on the customer, it should be the responsibility of those huge companies to collect and remit the tax. When you get down to it, this is just simply a matter of fairness all the way around.”

Keystone XL pipeline

Keystone

By the Associated Press

Opponents of the Keystone XL pipeline argued last Wednesday that a South Dakota judge should reverse state regulators’ decision last year to authorize again the portion of the project that would go through the state. A portion of the pipeline will go through Tripp County if construction is approved.

Here is a look at the pipeline proceedings: The Keystone XL project has prompted opposition from Native American tribes, some landowners and environmental groups concerned the pipeline would contaminate water supplies and contribute to pollution. Opponents appealed the South Dakota Public Utilities Commission’s decision to the state court which heard arguments in the case on March 8.

It is not clear when Judge John Brown of Pierre will rule.

The commission initially authorized TransCanada’s project in 2010 but the permit had to be revisited since construction didn’t start within four years.

The commission voted last year to accept the company’s guarantee that it can complete the pipeline project while meeting the conditions of the 2010 approval.

Former president Barack Obama rejected the pipeline in 2015 but President Donald Trump has said he supports it and in January moved to make it easier for the project to proceed.

The $8 billion project would go from Canada through Montana and South Dakota to Nebraska where it would connect with existing pipelines to crude oil to refineries along the Gulf Coast.

TransCanada said last month that it is once again seeking state approval for a route through Nebraska. It has also submitted a new presidential permit application to the U.S. Department of State for approval.

A company spokesman, Terry Cunha, said the company’s “commitment is to ensure we build a state of the art pipeline system that will be monitored 24 hours a day, seven days a week using satellite technology along with regular aerial patrols to monitor the pipeline.”

Robin Martinez, an attorney for conservation and family agriculture group Dakota Rural Action, said the commission’s decision should be reversed because it appeared to his clients that the regulatory panel was biased toward TransCanada during the proceedings and because the company failed to demonstrate that it could build the pipeline safely.

Tracey Zephier, an lawyer for the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe, said the commission abused its discretion by allowing an out of state company “drive the bus” in the pipeline permitted process.

Attorneys for TransCanada and the PUC asked the judge to uphold the order.

James Moore, a lawyer for TransCanada said the commission’s proceedings were fair and thorough.

More than 50 pipeline opponents gathered outside the Hughes County Courthouse in Pierre before the hearing.
Crow Creek Sioux Tribe Chairman Brandon Sazue called on South Dakota to “wake up.”

“It’s a human thing,” Sazue said. “It doesn’t matter what color you are. It matters if you drink water or not.”

Gov. Dennis Daugaard is pushing legislation preparing for potential protests in South Dakota like the demonstrations over the Dakota Access pipeline in North Dakota. The bill includes provisions that would make it a Class 1 misdemeanor for someone to stand in the highway to stop traffic or to trespass in a posted emergency area.

Gov. Daugaard Signs Surplus Land Bills

House Bills

Gov. Dennis Daugaard signed a package of bills which allow the sale of surplus lands owned by the state. The measures include lands and properties on the STAR Academy, State Veterans Home, and State Training School campuses.

“Though stewardship efforts such as these may seem run-of-the-mill during a busy legislative session, they are important,” Gov. Daugaard said. “We owe it to the taxpayers to keep the state’s footprint to a minimum, to avoid spending tax dollars on maintenance of unneeded facilities and to return these properties to the tax rolls when possible. It may be an unglamorous undertaking, but it’s a necessary one.”

The following surplus land bills were signed today:

· House Bill 1205 allows for the sale of unused property formerly belonging to Western Dakota Tech in Rapid City.

· House Bill 1206 allows for the sale of the former State Training School campus near Plankinton.

· House Bill 1207 authorizes the transfer of several vacant buildings and adjoining lands from the South Dakota Developmental Center to the city of Redfield.

· House Bill 1208 allows for the sale of underutilized buildings and land on the State Veterans Home campus in Hot Springs.

· House Bill 1209 allows for the sale of STAR Academy property near Custer.

· House Bill 1210 allows for the sale of South Dakota School for the Deaf property in Sioux Falls.

The bills do not require any sale, and provide for an appraisal process to ensure the state receives fair value for the property.

The proceeds from the sale of STAR Academy and Aurora Plains would be deposited in the DOC training school trust fund to support juvenile services. Proceeds from the Veterans Home and Western Dakota Tech land sales would go to the general fund. The bill pertaining to the South Dakota Developmental Center directs any profit to the SDDC trust fund. Proceeds from the sale of the School for the Deaf property would be deposited in a trust fund for the benefit of School for the Deaf programming.

Focus Group Meetings Planned by Healthcare Center

Focus Group

Winner Regional Healthcare Center is looking for community members to participate in a focus group to discuss healthcare experiences and expectations.

Four different sessions will be held and focus groups will be conducted in two hours.

All focus groups will meet at the Holiday Inn Express. The dates and times are: March 17 at noon, March 18 at 9 a.m., March 21 at noon and March 21 at 5:30 p.m.

As the size of the focus groups is limited, persons must register in advance to guarantee space. Persons can call Jody Engel at 842-7231

At each session food and drinks will be provided and all participants will receive $20 in Winner Cash.
Persons do not need to be a Winner Regional patient in order to participate.

“Providing quality healthcare is our upmost priority and your feedback on how we’re doing is important to us,” said Jody Engel, communications director at Winner Regional Healthcare Center.

“We’d love to hear your thoughts and share how you think we’re doing or what services you wish we offered,” said Engel.

Persons are encouraged to register to take part in the focus group.

Students Learn about Welding through Colome Class

koty dougherty colome welding class

This year Colome is offering welding class for high school students. The class is part of the CTE West River Consortium, which include four schools: Colome, Gregory, Burke, and South Central.

The program is aligned with state standards that surpass manufacturing welding and ag metal fabrication standards. The class is eligible for concurrent credits through Mitchell Technical Institute.

Brian Jorgensen, who has had many years of practice in welding, is the teacher for the course.

Welding students have been working on multiple projects while learning new techniques. So far, CTE students have worked on a destructive bend test with 1/4” metal, and they have had exposure to all the facets of welding (flat, vertical, horizontal, overhead). The students are expected to be proficient with SMAW and CMAW oxy acetylene torch (cutting, bronzing, and shaping).

Past and present completed projects have included pickup racks, four-wheeler ramps, cattle gates, a calf shed, table of miscellaneous iron, and horseshoe creations (crosses, angels, Christmas trees, deer).

Senior Nathan Krumpus, a CTE welding student, said, “When I took welding class, I already knew the basics, but then I realized there was so much more to learn.”

When asked what the hardest project was, senior Will Cahoy replied “Learning how to weld over my head was tricky, but I did it.”

Noah Hermsen then added “I have learned that welding takes time. You have to be patient and take it slow.”
Students have gained much knowledge in the field of welding. CTE students are thankful for the opportunity to take the class and the privilege to learn more about welding.​