Current:Home > MySouth Dakota Legislature ends session but draws division over upcoming abortion rights initiative -VitalEdge Finance Pro
South Dakota Legislature ends session but draws division over upcoming abortion rights initiative
View
Date:2025-04-15 17:11:20
South Dakota’s Republican-led Legislature wrapped up on Thursday after about two months of work in a session that largely aligned with Gov. Kristi Noem’s vision and drew division over an abortion rights ballot initiative voters could decide in November.
Lawmakers sent a $7.3 billion budget for fiscal 2025 to Noem, including 4% increases for the state’s “big three” funding priorities of K-12 education, health care providers and state employees. The second-term Republican governor, citing, inflation, had pitched a budget tighter than in recent years that saw federal pandemic aid flow in.
The Legislature also passed bills funding prison construction, defining antisemitism, outlawing xylazine showing up with fentanyl, creating a state office of indigent legal services, ensuring teacher pay raises, and banning foreign entities such as China from owning farmland — all items on Noem’s wish list.
“I think she had a good year,” Republican House Majority Leader Will Mortenson said.
Lawmakers will be back in Pierre later this month to consider overriding any vetoes and to officially adjourn.
Abortion
Republican lawmakers cemented official opposition to the abortion rights initiative with a resolution against it.
A Republican-led bill to allow signers of initiative petitions to withdraw their signatures drew opposition as a jab at direct democracy and a roadblock on the looming initiative’s path.
Lawmakers also approved a video to outline South Dakota’s abortion laws. South Dakota outlaws all abortions but to save the life of the mother.
Republicans said a video, done through the state Department of Health with consultation from the attorney general and legal and medical experts, would give clarity to medical providers on the abortion laws. Opponents questioned what all a video would include.
Medicaid expansion work requirement
In November, South Dakota voters will decide whether to allow a work requirement for recipients of Medicaid expansion. Voters approved the expansion of the government health insurance program for low-income people in 2022.
Republicans called the work requirement measure a “clarifying question” for voters. The federal government would eventually have to sign off on a work requirement, if advanced. Opponents said a work requirement would be unnecessary and ineffective and increase paperwork.
Sales tax cut
What didn’t get across the finish line was a permanent sales tax cut sought by House Republicans and supported by Noem. The proposal sailed through the House but withered in the Senate.
Last year, the Legislature approved a four-year sales tax cut of over $100 million annually, after initially weighing a grocery tax cut Noem campaigned on for reelection in 2022.
Voters could decide whether to repeal the food tax this year through a proposed ballot initiative. If passed, major funding questions would loom for lawmakers.
Leaders see wins, shortcomings
Republican majority leaders counted achievements in bills for landowner protections in regulating carbon dioxide pipelines, prison construction, boosts for K-12 education funding and literacy, and a college tuition freeze.
“The No. 1 way you improve the future of every blue-collar family in South Dakota is you help their kids get an education and move up, and we’re doing that,” Republican Senate President Pro Tempore Lee Schoenbeck told reporters Wednesday. “The tuition freeze, the scholarships we’ve created — we’re creating more opportunities for more families to move up the ladder in South Dakota and stay in South Dakota. That’s our No. 1 economic driver.”
Democrats highlighted wins in airport funding, setting a minimum teacher’s salary and pay increase guidelines, and making it financially easier for people for who are homeless to get birth certificates and IDs.
But they lamented other actions.
“We bought a $4 million sheep shed instead of feeding hungry kids school meals for a fraction of that price. We made hot pink a legal hunting apparel color, but we couldn’t keep guns out of small children’s reach through safer storage laws,” Democratic Senate Minority Leader Reynold Nesiba told reporters Thursday. “We couldn’t even end child marriage with (a) bill to do that.”
As their final votes loomed, lawmakers visited at their desks and recognized departing colleagues.
veryGood! (8)
Related
- Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
- Brian Austin Green Sends Message to Critics of His Newly Shaved Head
- Busta Rhymes says asthma scare after 'intimate' act with an ex pushed him to lose 100 pounds
- Researchers create plastic alternative that's compostable in home and industrial settings
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- Appeals court upholds Josh Duggar’s conviction for downloading child sex abuse images
- Crossings along U.S.-Mexico border jump as migrants defy extreme heat and asylum restrictions
- Half a million without power in US after severe storms slam East Coast, killing 2
- Big Lots store closures could exceed 300 nationwide, discount chain reveals in filing
- Shop 22 Backpack Essentials for When You'll Be Out on Campus All Day: Headphones, Water Bottles & More
Ranking
- Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
- Book excerpt: Somebody's Fool by Richard Russo
- USWNT must make changes if this World Cup is to be exception rather than new norm
- NFL training camp notebook: Teams still trying to get arms around new fair-catch rule
- Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
- The best strategies for winning the Mega Millions jackpot, according to a Harvard statistician
- A year after a Russian missile took her leg, a young Ukrainian gymnast endures
- Once Colombia’s most-wanted drug lord, the kingpin known as Otoniel faces sentencing in US
Recommendation
Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
Pregnant woman’s arrest in carjacking case spurs call to end Detroit police facial recognition
Busta Rhymes Details Mindf--k Moment During Sex That Kickstarted Weight Loss Journey
Teen said 'homophobic slurs' before O'Shae Sibley killing: Criminal complaint
Boy who wandered away from his 5th birthday party found dead in canal, police say
Pope Francis restates church is for everyone, including LGBTQ+ people
Boater missing for day and a half rescued off Florida coast in half-submerged boat
Ciara Is Pregnant, Expecting Baby With Husband Russell Wilson