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ACLU ND NEWS
 
11/28/2011
US Senate considers National Defense Authorization Act
The National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) is being considered on the US Senate floor as we speak and may come up for a vote as soon as Monday, Nov. 28. Sens Conrad (ND), Johnson (SD), and Hoeven (ND) are key targets for the ACLU on this bill, and we need YOUR HELP in reaching out to their offices and urge them to vote the right way.
11/01/2011
SD Secretary of State's Office Fails Voters (Again)
State Has One Week To Fix Breach of Contract
SIOUX FALLS - South Dakotans with felony convictions continue to have their voting rights crushed by the Secretary of State's office despite a lawsuit agreement with the American Civil Liberties Union of South Dakota.

This voting rights infringement is most clearly evidenced on the Secretary of State's Web site, which states: "In order to register [to vote] you must… not serving (sic) a felony sentence." The statement is false and is not the law in the state of South Dakota, which allows for certain classes of felons and those who have completed their sentences to vote.
10/27/2011
Indian Child Welfare Act Violations Prompts ACLU Investigation Into South Dakota Foster Care System
ACLU Seeks Input from American Indian Families With Children in DSS
SIOUX FALLS, SD - The appalling treatment of American Indian children, family, and tribes by the South Dakota Department of Social Services as described in recent NPR News reports has prompted the ACLU of South Dakota to investigate the actions as violations of the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA).

The NPR News series, "Native Foster Care: Lost Children, Shattered Families," explains how American Indian children represent more than half of all children in foster care, yet account for less than 15 percent of the state's total child population. The report also features interviews from tribal members who recall DSS officials driving onto the reservation, removing children from homes, and preventing contact with family.
10/17/2011
ACLU of South Dakota Announces New Communications and Advocacy Directors
SIOUX FALLS – The American Civil Liberties Union of South Dakota announced today the recent hiring of Tiffany Campbell and Taté Walker as directors of advocacy and communications, respectively.
10/13/2011
Protecting Protest at Occupy South Dakota
The Occupy Wall Street movement has spread to South Dakota's Main Streets and the American Civil Liberties Union of South Dakota is standing beside demonstrators and defending your right to speak out.
09/21/2011
Town hall meeting to discuss LGBT hate crime prevention
SIOUX FALLS - The ACLU of South Dakota is excited to announce a special town hall meeting with U.S. Attorney Brendan V. Johnson discussing issues important LGBT communities and supporters, including hate crime prevention.
09/20/2011
Legislative redistricting: What is it? Why should YOU care?
Watch ACLU of SD communications director Taté Walker on a recent panel regarding legislative redistricting filmed live on South Dakota Public Broadcasting. Get the nuts and bolts of redistricting, including history and importance to minority voting rights and power.
06/08/2011
South Dakota Legislature Redistricting Meetings
Redistricting season is upon us as the 2010 census has been completed and all of the information has been reported.

On June 8th, 2011 the South Dakota Legislature had the first of several redistricting meetings. The June 8th meeting largely revolved around the issues of American Indian population figures and discussion around redistricting legislative districts that encompass large American Indian populations. The ACLU was present and listening to all of the discussion and debate. Attached below are some preliminary maps that the South Dakota Legislature is using to discuss redistricting and American Indians. We will keep you up to date on the latest redistricting and voting rights news!

Redistricting Maps 2011
05/27/2011
ACLU and Planned Parenthood Federation of America asks SD federal court to prevent Abortion Bill
On May 27, the ACLU joined Planned Parenthood Federation of America (PPFA) in asking a South Dakota federal court to prevent the enforcement of House Bill 1217, a recently enacted law that imposes onerous and humiliating obstacles in the path of any woman in South Dakota seeking to exercise her legal right to have an abortion.
03/30/2011
Check out our revised Privacy Statement
We have revised the South Dakota Chapter Privacy Statement because we want to clarify and provide more information about our collection, use and protection of information collected on this website, particularly as technology has evolved. In addition to clarifying our collection practices, the revisions include a description of our use of Short-Term Cookies.
03/22/2011
We'll See You in Court: South Dakota's Governor Signs Outrageous Law Restricting Abortion Care
Today, South Dakota's governor, Dennis Daugaard, signed a bill that creates unprecedented restrictions on access to abortion care. As we've blogged before, this law requires women to wait 72 hours between the first counseling session with the doctor and the abortion; it also requires women to first visit "crisis pregnancy centers," entities that are notorious for providing false and misleading information; and requires doctors to tell the woman of any possible risk factor published in medical and psychological journals since 1972. These new restrictions are on top of the long list of abortion restrictions in South Dakota, and come from a state that has one abortion provider.
03/22/2011
Daugaard signs 3-day wait for abortion into law
Gov. Dennis Daugaard signed a bill Tuesday requiring women seeking abortions to go through additional steps before having the procedure - but opponents will file a lawsuit to prevent the law from taking effect. The bill, House Bill 1217, requires women to wait 72 hours between contacting an abortion provider and having an abortion. It also requires them to seek counseling with crisis pregnancy centers, groups that consult "with women for the purpose of helping them keep their relationship with their unborn children," before undergoing the procedure.
03/14/2011
Judge allows lesbian couple to use married names on driver's licenses
Two Sioux Falls women who were legally married in Iowa were granted the right to use their married names today. Jessica and Aundrea Dybing-Jorgensen petitioned for a name change in Minnehaha County in late January after the Department of Public Safety refused to issue them driver's licenses in their married names.
03/11/2011
Gov. Daugaard signs change to concealed weapons law
PIERRE -- Gov. Dennis Daugaard has signed a bill that will allow legal immigrants in South Dakota to conceal and carry a handgun.
03/02/2011
SD Legislature Approves Law to Create Barriers to Abortion Care
PIERRE, S.D. -- The South Dakota legislature today passed a law that would require any woman seeking an abortion to first visit anti-abortion "crisis pregnancy centers (CPCs)" and report the name of her abortion provider to CPC staff. CPCs are unregulated facilities that are not required to have trained medical personnel counsel women, and are primarily run by private groups that seek to discourage women from having abortions, often by promoting false information. CPCs are also not required to follow standard medical privacy procedures that ensure a patient's medical information is kept confidential. The bill would also require abortion providers to discuss the entire body of research literature related to possible health risks with their patients, even though much of this information may be outdated, irrelevant, false or misleading. The American Civil Liberties Union and the ACLU of South Dakota strongly denounced the law.
02/19/2011
Why legislators love social issues
It's almost as if there are two concurrent legislative sessions in Pierre this year. In one session, state lawmakers are wrestling with competing ideas of how to erase a $127 million structural deficit without tapping reserve funds or raising taxes. The other session, however, has dealt with several socially oriented proposals such as legislation that attempted to safeguard South Dakota from Sharia law, allow for justifiable homicide in the protection of an unborn baby, set mandatory gun ownership - a proposal that was introduced as a protest to the federal health care law - and bring an Arizona-style immigration law to the state.
02/16/2011
Lawmakers reject bill targeting Islamic law
PIERRE -- The South Dakota Senate State Affairs Committee has rejected a bill that would have prohibited state courts from using certain foreign laws, including forms of Islamic law known as Sharia.
02/16/2011
ACLU Decries Proposed South Dakota Law That Places Abortion Providers In Danger
PIERRE, S.D. -- A law being considered by the South Dakota House of Representatives today would provide legal protection for committing murder in order to prevent conduct "likely to result in the death of" an embryo or fetus. The law raises serious concerns about the safety of abortion providers. The language of the bill is such that if a woman chooses to end a pregnancy, the new law would provide protection to her husband or boyfriend for killing the medical personnel involved. The law would classify such an act as "justifiable homicide."
02/14/2011
Arizona-style immigration bill fails in South Dakota House
SIOUX FALLS -- South Dakota lawmakers have rejected a bill to establish immigration standards that mimic laws enacted by Arizona last year.
01/21/2011
South Dakota Legislators Threaten To Introduce Arizona-Style Immigration Bill
Several South Dakota state legislators have threatened to introduce an Arizona-style racial profiling immigration bill here in South Dakota this legislative session. Before our state adopts a similar law that could cost the state hundreds of thousands of dollars to implement and defend in court, read the projected economic and legal costs of immigration policies to small American communities.
South Dakota Immigration Facts
12/21/2010
Summer Legal Internship Opportunity
Position Announcement: Summer Legal Internship
The ACLU of South Dakota seeks highly motivated law students for internships in the Sioux Falls office. Legal internships are part-time, approximately 10 to 20 hours a week, and run the length of the students' summer break. Virtually all intern work involves civil liberties and constitutional law. Educational benefits include obtaining hands-on experience in applying constitutional theories and case law to legal problems, and learning how to conduct factual investigation of complaints. Students become familiar with administrative regulations and agency protocols, while developing a practical understanding of constitutional law. The interns will be supervised by an ACLU staff attorney.
12/18/2010
Senate Votes To End Discriminatory "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" Policy
WASHINGTON - The Senate today voted to pass legislation repealing the discriminatory "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy, sending the historic bill to the president's desk for signature. The "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" Repeal Act of 2010 (H.R. 2965) was passed in the House of Representatives on Wednesday. The American Civil Liberties Union lauded the vote and urged President Obama to swiftly sign the bill into law.
11/24/2010
ACLU Reports More Than 900 Complaints This Month Over "Enhanced" TSA Security Measures
NEW YORK -- The American Civil Liberties Union has received over 900 complaints in the month of November from travelers who have been subjected to the Transportation Security Authority's (TSA) new "enhanced" screening procedures. The procedures include sending travelers through backscatter X-ray machines that produce naked outlines of travelers' bodies and subjecting them to thorough pat-downs that include TSA agents touching their breasts and genitals on the outside of their clothing.
11/12/2010
Film Raises Awareness about Anti-LGBT Violence
The compelling documentary, "Two Spirits" will be shown Wednesday, November 17th at 7pm in the Main Library located in downtown Sioux Falls. The free showing is sponsored by the ACLU of South Dakota as part of an ongoing visibility initiative for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgendered (LGBT) individuals across the state.
"Two Spirits" tells a nuanced story of what it means to be poor, transgendered, and Navajo, and examines the lives of Fred Martinez, his friends, family, the police, and those in the larger community who were most affected by his murder.
11/05/2010
ACLU Office in South Dakota Expands
SIOUX FALLS, SD -- The American Civil Liberties Union of South Dakota has expanded recently after opening an office in Sioux Falls only two years ago. Since launching in 2008, two additional full-time staff members have been added to fill the roles of staff attorney and program coordinator. Within the past three months, the ACLU of South Dakota has revamped their website, created an email messaging campaign to directly contact South Dakota members, and begun several programming and advocacy initiatives. The staff also moved into a larger office space to accommodate the additional work and resources that are being brought into the state by the National ACLU and local donors.
09/27/2010
ACLU Sues For Information On American Indian Women Pressured To Induce Labor
Pregnant Women On South Dakota Reservation Denied Freedom To Make Medical Decisions
PIERRE, SD -- The American Civil Liberties Union and the ACLU of South Dakota filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit today against Indian Health Services (IHS) seeking information about reports that pregnant women on the Cheyenne River Sioux Reservation are being pressured into taking medication to induce labor against their wishes. The FOIA lawsuit also seeks information on plans to build a birthing unit on the reservation, funded in large part with federal stimulus dollars.
09/20/2010
South Dakota Election Scandal: Are Oglala Sioux Voting Rights Doomed?
Native Americans have long faced police harassment, illegal voter challenges, and election-day chaos on the way to the polls in South Dakota. Those problems may soon be over on the Oglala Sioux Tribe's Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. That's because South Dakota has no clear plan to provide any voting at all in this fall's election.
09/09/2010
Limbo Continues for Shannon County
Shannon County commissioners failed to settle their differences with contracted officials during a special meeting Thursday in Hot Springs, and that failure could jeopardize the county's ability to hold the general election in November.
09/08/2010
Shannon County, Pine Ridge move to protect voting rights
PINE RIDGE, S.D. -- Native Americans have never had easy access to the ballot in South Dakota. However, with the official responsible for elections in Shannon County giving 30 days' notice of intent to resign, the county's commission is working quickly to ensure its residents -- almost entirely Oglala Sioux Tribe members living on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation -- will get to the polls at all this fall. Time is tight. The national election is about to begin in South Dakota, starting with six weeks of early voting on Sept. 18 and finishing on election day, Nov. 2.
09/02/2010
ACLU Asks Supreme Court To Review Case Concerning South Dakota Elections System That Dilutes The American Indian Vote
WASHINGTON -- The American Civil Liberties Union petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court late yesterday to review a case concerning an elections system that dilutes the American Indian vote in the city of Martin, South Dakota.
09/01/2010
Controversial Film on Gay Rights in Small Town America to Tour Eastern South Dakota
A Call for Inclusion, Fairness & Equality for GLBT People
Sioux Falls, SD -- Sept. 1, 2010 -- In an effort to raise gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender (GLBT) visibility in South Dakota and awareness about the harassment, violence and discrimination that GLBT people often face on a day-to-day basis, a coalition of organizations is bringing the controversial and Emmy-nominated film, OUT IN THE SILENCE to five cities in Eastern South Dakota, from Sept. 11 - 15.
08/24/2010
ACLU and NYCLU Statement On Controversy Over New York City Islamic Center
Religious freedom is one of America's most fundamental liberties, and a central principle upon which our nation was founded. For hundreds of years, even in the face of opposition, religious pluralism and tolerance have sustained and helped to define our nation. Still today, we must continue to boldly oppose religious discrimination rooted in cultural stereotyping, and resist those who seek to trade away our most precious values for political advantage.
07/27/2010
The ACLU of SD Announces a Career Opportunity
New York--The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) is a nationwide, nonprofit, nonpartisan organization, founded in 1920 and dedicated to the principles of liberty and equality embodied in the U.S. Constitution. The ACLU of South Dakota of the National Chapter office in Sioux Falls, SD is seeking applications for the full-time position of Staff Attorney.
07/27/2010
ACLU Of South Dakota Seeks Records About FBI Collection Of Racial And Ethnic Data
SIOUX FALLS -- The American Civil Liberties Union of South Dakota Chapter today asked the FBI to turn over records related to the agency's collection and use of race and ethnicity data in local communities. According to a 2008 FBI operations guide, FBI agents have the authority to collect information about and map so-called "ethnic-oriented" businesses, behaviors, lifestyle characteristics and cultural traditions in communities with concentrated ethnic populations. ACLU affiliate offices across the nation today filed coordinated Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests to uncover records about this activity from their local FBI field offices.
07/19/2010
Lawmakers Push for SD Immigration Law

 SIOUX FALLS- Several South Dakota lawmakers are considering a proposal - similar to Arizona's law - that gives police authority to seek out illegal immigrants. Backers of the idea here say it would help preserve law and order and pressure the federal government to fix what they see as a broken immigration system. But skeptics argue it will encourage racial profiling, add inmates to already crowded jails and overwhelm local police to the point that the law would be unenforceable.

07/15/2010
ACLU of South Dakota Issues Alert To State Residents Traveling To Arizona
SIOUX FALLS-SD In the wake of the announcement by South Dakota’s Attorney General Marty Jackley and Gov. Mike Rounds pledging support to Arizona in upholding its racial profiling law SB 1070, the ACLU of South Dakota has issued a travel warning for all South Dakotans who are planning on traveling to Arizona.
02/05/2010
ACLU of South Dakota Concerned By Two Bills in South Dakota House That Chill Free Speech
SIOUX FALLS , SD- The American Civil Liberties Union of South Dakota is deeply concerned by two bills that have been introduced into the South Dakota Legislature this week. Both bills seek to add serious constraints to websites that allow users to post anonymous opinions.
 
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