• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Digital News Updates
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business

Noem says budget surplus will be used for prison construction

July 23, 2024

(The Center Square) – South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem said  she plans to us an $80.7 million budget surplus to offset prison construction costs.

The $80 million surplus includes $24.3 million, which was above the forecast for fiscal year 2024 and $56.4 million saved by reductions in state government spending, according to Noem.

“South Dakota makes common sense decisions based on small government, low taxes, and spending within our means. We don’t just talk about fiscal responsibility – we follow through!” Noem said in a statement. “We will continue to budget responsibly for the people, and we will avoid unnecessary debt by using this surplus for prison construction costs.”

The surplus was transferred to the state’s budget reserves, which now has $322.8 million or 13.3% of the fiscal year 2025 general fund budget,” according to Noem.

Noem proposed a $132.4 million one-time allocation in December for a new men’s prison in Sioux Falls. The prison would replace the state penitentiary built before South Dakota became a state.

The building is no longer suitable, the Department of Corrections said in a budget document.

“The prison houses almost 275 more high/medium custody offenders than is recommended by the American Correctional Association for a prison that size,” the document said. “The facility does not meet modern correctional standards and is not laid out in a way that is conducive for efficient staff supervision. Millions of dollars are spent annually to maintain and repair this facility, and it cannot be updated in a cost-efficient manner to serve the state’s current needs.”

A disturbance at the penitentiary in March led to charges against 11 inmates, according to Attorney General Marty Jackley’s office. The inmates pleaded not guilty and are scheduled for trial next month.

A women’s prison under construction had a shortfall of $4 million, the governor said in December. Federal funds were recommended for water, $4 million from the land design funding and $21 million in one-time funding to keep the state from going into debt.

 

By Kim Jarrett | The Center Square

Filed Under: Featured, News

Related Articles:

  • Texas Stock Exchange launches trading in test of upstart’s challenge to Wall Street
  • Work Requirements Now in Effect for Montana Medicaid
  • Cromwell’s Office Under Fire Over No-Jail Plea Deal
  • Montana State listed in Forbes as one of ‘America’s Top Colleges’
  • Watchdog asks Interior to investigate National Wildlife Federation political spending
  • Montana State Awards 2026 Presidential Scholarships to 22 Students

Primary Sidebar

— Advertisement —

Digital News Updates Logo

Recent News Posts

  • Illegal Alien Tren de Aragua Members Charged With Murder, Kidnapping
  • Knudsen Announces New Forensic Science Division Administrator
  • Feds buy two immigration detention centers for $1.5 billion
  • Illegal Aliens Convicted in Multistate SNAP Fraud Scheme

Recent Politics Posts

  • Ted Cruz warns Talarico has “real chance” to flip Texas’ U.S. Senate seat
  • Concerns raised that KIDS Act threatens Americans’ online privacy, free speech
  • Watchdog asks Interior to investigate National Wildlife Federation political spending
  • Jackley: Schools Must Follow Bid Laws

Recent Business Posts

  • Microsoft cuts over 600 Washington jobs, 4,800 globally amid corporate restructuring
  • Texas Stock Exchange launches trading in test of upstart’s challenge to Wall Street
  • Montana’s Unemployment Rate Falls to 3.4%
  • New Members Named to Minneapolis Fed Advisory Council

Copyright © 2026 Digital News Updates, All Rights Reserved.