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New version of bill to aid Ellsworth Air Force Base specifies $15 million loan for school
New version of bill to aid Ellsworth Air Force Base specifies $15 million loan for school

Yahoo

time06-03-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

New version of bill to aid Ellsworth Air Force Base specifies $15 million loan for school

Rep. Taylor Rehfeldt, R-Sioux Falls, speaks on the South Dakota House floor on March 5, 2025. (Makenzie Huber/South Dakota Searchlight) The effort to win state financial support for a new elementary school necessitated by growth at Ellsworth Air Force Base won a legislative endorsement Thursday at the South Dakota Capitol in Pierre. The state House of Representatives' 41-28 vote was the latest twist in a multi-year struggle. Legislation to provide $15 million of state funding for the project failed last year. Earlier this week, Sen. Helene Duhamel, R-Rapid City, tried a new approach. She convinced the Senate to pass a bill that would transfer $15 million from a state housing infrastructure fund to a new support and development fund for projects 'promoting the development, expansion, and support of the mission' at Ellsworth. Duhamel's legislation did not mention the need for a new elementary school in the Douglas School District near the base, which neighbors Rapid City and Box Elder. US senators stress importance of Douglas School expansion ahead of B-21 arrival When the bill came up Thursday for debate in the House, Rep. Taylor Rehfeldt, R-Sioux Falls, convinced representatives to adopt an amendment. The amended bill, which the House ultimately passed, authorizes the South Dakota Housing Development Authority to make an interest-free, 20-year loan up to $15 million from the housing infrastructure fund 'to a school district adjoining a federal military installation for the purpose of constructing or expanding a school building.' Speaking on behalf of her amendment, Rehfeldt said it 'provides both transparency and very forthright intention about what this money is going to be used for.' Growth at the base is driven by an estimated $2 billion worth of construction to accommodate the future arrival of B-21 stealth bomber planes, which are under development. That activity is expected to expand the population of the base and the surrounding area significantly, putting stress on local governments to respond with new roads, housing, schools, and other infrastructure and services. The formal name of the housing infrastructure fund is the Housing Infrastructure Financing Program. The Legislature created it two years ago with state dollars and federal pandemic relief money. Half of the $200 million fund was made available as grants to support infrastructure for housing projects, and all of that money has been awarded. The other half was made available as loans, but demand has been low, leaving more than $80 million still available as of December. Debate on the amended bill was long and lively, with some legislators seeming to suggest that the unused housing funds are proof they were duped into putting too much money into the program. 'I guess we can officially declare the workforce housing 'crisis' over now, right?' said Republican House Majority Leader Scott Odenbach with intended sarcasm. Some said the money is still needed for housing infrastructure — including around the growing base — and should be retained for that purpose. Others said it would set a bad precedent to single out one school for state help, while other schools finance their own construction projects. Arguments on behalf of Ellsworth's role in national defense and the economy of South Dakota — it's the state's second-largest employer, one lawmaker said — ultimately won out. Several legislators described an ever-escalating competition among communities around the country to keep their military bases from closing. Ellsworth was temporarily on a closure list 20 years ago, which sparked a successful state and local campaign to protect it. That campaign has included clearing land in accident potential zones, adding a drone mission, creating a new training airspace and other initiatives. Rep. Jack Kolbeck, R-Sioux Falls, said providing money for a school to educate the children of people stationed at Ellsworth is another way to protect the base. 'I think that is something that we can show, that we want that B-21 here, and we want that air base to stay here,' Kolbeck said. According to past information presented to legislators, the school is expected to cost more than $60 million, with federal and local funding sources providing the rest of the money. The bill now goes back to the Senate for its consideration of the amended language.

WATCH: House to reconsider prison funding bill
WATCH: House to reconsider prison funding bill

Yahoo

time24-02-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

WATCH: House to reconsider prison funding bill

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (KELO) — The House will reconsider the amended bill that would transfer millions into the state's incarceration fund to build a new men's prison. RJ's parents mourn loss after Jameson Annex suicide Republican Rep. Taylor Rehfeldt requested reconsideration after an amended version of House Bill 1025 failed Friday on a 34-35 vote. Monday is the final day lawmakers will take initial action on the bill. KELOLAND News will livestream the vote at 2 p.m. Tuesday from the House chamber. Bob Mercer and Dan Santella will bring you coverage both on-air and online. On Sunday, KELOLAND News reported Republican Rep. Tim Reisch plans to vote yes, bringing the vote to a 35-35 tie and a second defeat, assuming that no one else switches sides. Reisch was an excused absence on Friday. Asked whether the bill's defeat surprised him, Reisch said, 'Disappointed would be a better word. I am very concerned that those millions of dollars will be used elsewhere, and we won't have enough money to pay for the prison construction when the time comes.' The guaranteed maximum price of $825 million for the new 1,500-bed men's prison proposed in Lincoln County expires on March 31. Reisch said it appears that the Legislature now will take another year to study the issue of a new men's prison. 'I don't see a pathway that would authorize prison construction to be approved this year,' Reisch said. 'It is possible to retire the 144-year-old penitentiary building (in Sioux Falls) without following the construction plan put forth by the DOC. That will require that more money be spent on design and engineering.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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