-
Tribal leaders want more than conversation from elected officials. The request for action comes after meeting with the U.S. Attorney General and U.S. Senator Mike Rounds to discuss public safety challenges facing the tribes.
-
Nine of South Dakota’s tribal leaders meet with the United States Attorney General along with U.S. Senator Mike Rounds to discuss law enforcement and public safety issues plaguing tribal land.
-
The Crow Creek Sioux Tribe is joining six other tribes located within South Dakota in banning Gov. Kristi Noem from its reservation.
-
A bill encouraging the Bureau of Indian Affairs to establish law enforcement training in South Dakota advances through the Senate State Affairs committee.
-
As the US Mint continues its American Women Quarters Program, one of the new faces to enter circulation has South Dakota roots.
-
A major winter storm has struck South Dakota this week, this time targeting East River. One reservation community is seeing cooperation while facing more than two feet of snow.
-
NewsRoads and highways around the state are in rough shape - with some still flooded from heavy rains and last winter’s ice melt. Reservation roads face the…
-
NewsThe Nebraska Supreme Court heard arguments on Thursday, Nov. 1, about the permitting process for the Keystone XL pipeline. One attorney in the courtroom…
-
The Yankton Sioux Tribal chairman says understanding the misunderstanding between native and non-native cultures is a first step in closing the gap…
-
NewsA witness called by TransCanada on Tuesday has been bumped to later in the week. Rick Perkins was called to provide rebuttal testimony to a witness for…