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    fox-news/us/us-regions/midwest/south-dakota

    Trump to kick off Independence Day weekend at Mt. Rushmore amid anti-monument push from activists

    President Trump on Friday will travel to Mount Rushmore to mark the start of Independence Day weekend with a firework display — coming at a time of vigorous national debate over America’s history, and when the South Dakota landmark is under renewed scrutiny by activists.

    Trump is expected to speak at the event, and more than 7,000 tickets have been distributed for people to watch it. It is likely to be filled with supporters of the president, but will also attract protesters.

    SD AG JASON RAVNSBORG ON SIGNIFICANCE OF INDEPENDENCE SAY AT MT RUSHMORE: ‘LOOKING LIKE A GREAT DAY’ 

    The ceremony faces a double controversy of being the latest Trump event that critics say puts people at risk, unnecessarily, of spreading the coronavirus. Trump held a rally last month in Tulsa, Okla., and local officials and residents raised fears it could act as a super-spreader for the virus.

    Gov. Kristi Noem has said social distancing and masks will both be optional — although masks will be provided and there will be body temperature screening of attendees.

    “Masks will be available, first off. They are not required but people will be able to have them if they don’t have one with them when they come,” he said. “And, I think that we have done a number of things to mitigate the spread of the COVID,”  South Dakota Attorney General Jason Ravnsborg said on “Fox & Friends” Friday. “As you probably know, our state has not mandated these various policies that other states have. And, I think we are very proud of that and our numbers have remained low.”

    But Rapid City Mayor Steve Allender expressed skepticism about the precautions, and argued that attendees “are probably not likely to disqualify themself because they developed a cough the day of or the day before.”

    NEWT GINGRICH: REPORTS OF ‘DEEP STATE REPUBLICANS’ BACKING BIDEN RAISING QUESTIONS

    Meanwhile, leaders of Native American tribes have expressed concern both about the coronavirus risk and renewed their grievances that the memorial itself is on land taken from the Lakota people. A number are expected to be part of protests near the landmark.

    “Mount Rushmore is a symbol of white supremacy, of structural racism that’s still alive and well in society today,” Nick Tilsen, a member of the Oglala Lakota tribe and the president of a local activist organization called NDN Collective, told The Associated Press. “It’s an injustice to actively steal Indigenous people’s land, then carve the white faces of the colonizers who committed genocide.”

    It is not a new cause. The site was occupied by a group of Native American protesters in the 1970s. In 1980, the Supreme Court upheld a ruling that that more than $100 million should be given in compensation to eight tribes

    But those protests have been given renewed energy this year amid a backlash against national monuments by left-wing activists in the wake of the death of George Floyd in police custody.

    Initially, the protests were aimed at Confederate generals and figures who had supported slavery, but they quickly morphed into a movement that has sought to remove or tear down monuments to past presidents, even Lincoln and Jefferson — both of whom are carved into Mount Rushmore.

    It’s a move that has started to shift into the mainstream as well. The Democratic National Committee this week deleted a tweet that accused Trump of “glorifying white supremacy” by going to Mount Rushmore.

    “Trump has disrespected Native communities time and again,” The Democrats wrote. “He’s attempted to limit their voting rights and blocked critical pandemic relief. Now he’s holding a rally glorifying white supremacy at Mount Rushmore- a region once sacred to tribal communities.”

    A wave of anti-monument fervor is expected this weekend, and the Trump administration has taken a number of dramatic steps in order to protect monuments from violence and vandalism — including dispatching Rapid Deployment Teams (RDTs) of a special federal unit across the country.

    CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

    Trump, meanwhile, has expressed his excitement about both the event and the holiday weekend.

    “They used to do it many years ago, and for some reason they were unable or unallowed to do it,” he said. “They just weren’t allowed to do it, and I opened it up and we’re going to have a tremendous July 3 and then we’re coming back here, celebrating the Fourth of July in Washington, D.C.”

    Fox News’ Julia Musto and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    South Dakota state lawmaker, 74, dies of coronavirus

    A state lawmaker on Friday became the third person to die from the novel coronavirus in South Dakota, which is among a handful of states that have not issued stay-at-home orders.

    Rep. Bob Glanzer, 74, R-Huron, tested positive for the virus, also known as COVID-19, on March 22. He had been in critical condition at a hospital in Sioux Falls, KELO-TV reported.

    “Tonight at 7:57 p.m. our dad, grandpa, uncle, husband and friend went to heaven,” Glanzer’s son, Tom Glanzer, wrote on Facebook. “No words can describe the sorrow, but no words can describe the joy of knowing he is with God for eternity.”

    INDIANA’S CORONAVIRUS STAY-AT-HOME ORDER LEADS TO CRIMINAL CHARGE IN DRUNKEN-DRIVING CASE

    The son said his mother, Penny, also has coronavirus but is “doing amazing,” KELO reported.

    Several other members of Glanzer’s family have contracted the virus, including Glanzer’s niece Mari Hofer, 51, who died last Saturday.

    “The simple fact that our family loves each other is probably what caused this to spread,” Tom Glanzer said.

    Majority Leader Lee Qualm called Glanzer “a true statesman, an amazing man of God and a great asset to the SD House of Representatives.”

    Glanzer’s son added, “It is not lost on me that while the sun was falling, but still crested above the horizon of the prairie my father was rising to the glory of heaven.”

    He told KELO the family wasn’t able to be with his father when he died because of the highly contagious nature of the disease.

    While Republican Gov. Kristi Noem has predicted 30-70 percent of the state could contract the virus, this week she remained steadfast over not issuing a stay-at-home order and instead urged personal responsibility, Sioux City, Iowa’s KTIV-TV reported.

    “This has been a constant balance and analysis that we have been looking at and analyzing is how long can people change their way of life, how long can they stay at home, how long can children stay out of school, how long before we don’t have any businesses left to employ people and put food on their table, how long can we keep people out of South Dakota or not let any South Dakotans leave the state,” Noem said in a news conference Friday, according to KTIV.

    In March, Noem issued an executive order that stresses social distancing, working from home and hand washing but left the decision to close businesses up to local officials.

    She said this week the state’s sparse population would help slow the spread of the virus.

    CLICK HERE FOR COMPLETE CORONVIRUS COVERAGE 

    Meanwhile, the governors of Alabama and Missouri issued stay-at-home orders Friday, leaving just Arkansas, Iowa, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Carolina as well as South Dakota, to take that action.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

    Coronavirus deaths top 5,000 in US as more states issue stay-at-home orders

    Get all the latest news on coronavirus and more delivered daily to your inbox.  Sign up here.

    Grim news of coronavirus infections and fatalities continued in the U.S. on Wednesday, with the number of confirmed cases rising above 200,000 and the number of deaths surpassing 5,000.

    Amid the climbing numbers, five more states – Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, Nevada and Pennsylvania – added or expanded stay-at-home orders, while Michigan proposed a 70-day extension of an emergency declaration that had been set to expire April 7.

    “Now is the crunch time for us to lessen the peak, to make the bullseye smaller so we don’t overrun our health care system,” Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp said, according to FOX 5 of Atlanta. He added that the next three weeks were critical for Georgia and that residents needed to “hunker down.”

    CORONAVIRUS LEAVES 3 OF 4 AMERICANS UNDER ORDERS TO STAY AT HOME AS MORE STATES IMPOSE RESTRICTIONS

    In Missouri, Republican Gov. Mike Parson remained among the dwindling number of governors to resist issuing a stay-at-home order in the absence of a federally mandated policy, the Kansas City Star reported.

    “Right now there’s still 95 counties in this state that has less than five cases of coronavirus in it,” Parson said Tuesday, according to the Star. “The majority, 75 of them, has one or two. I have to take all that into consideration as I make decisions on how it affects the economy and how it will affect those areas.”

    “Right now there’s still 95 counties in this state that has less than five cases of coronavirus in it. … I have to take all that into consideration as I make decisions.”

    — Missouri Gov. Mike Parson

    Missouri Gov. Gov. Mike Parson. (Associated Press)

    President Trump has insisted that states should be free to determine for themselves which safety measures to implement, citing disparities in how the states have been affected by the outbreak.

    “There are some states that are different,” Trump told reporters Wednesday, according to The Associated Press. “There are some states that don’t have much of a problem.”

    Not even second-place New Jersey, with more than 22,000 confirmed cases of the virus, came close to approaching first-place New York, which continued to lead the nation with nearly 84,000 cases. New Jersey also trailed far behind New York in deaths, with 355 compared to more than 2,200.

    Nevertheless, all 50 states were grappling with a situation that members of the president’s Coronavirus Task Force confirmed this week would get far worse before it gets better, with the deaths of 100,000 to 240,000 Americans expected in the weeks ahead despite the varying intervention measures.

    Still, other governors in states without officially declared stay-at-home orders said they remained convinced such moves were not necessary in their states.

    In Nebraska, Republican Gov. Pete Ricketts has said he’s been relying on advice public health experts at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, which has dealt extensively with outbreaks and served as a quarantine space for Ebola patients.

    Nebraska Gov. Pete Ricketts is seen May 26, 2015. (Associated Press)

    But Ricketts has ordered restaurants either to close their dining areas or allow no more than 10 people inside at once, depending on their location in the state, according to the AP.

    He also said Wednesday that Nebraska’s schools would remain closed through May 31, the Lincoln Journal Star reported.

    In Iowa, Republican Gov. Kim Reynolds also has held off from mandating that residents shelter in place order, claiming the data she sees doesn’t justify it.

    But Reynolds hinted Wednesday she may extend the closures of businesses and schools in the state on Thursday, the Des Moines Register reported.

    South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, another Republican, said the infection rate has slowed in her state with only voluntary safety measures in place, the AP reported.

    “South Dakota is not New York City,” Noem told reporters Wednesday, according to the Argus Leader of Sioux Falls. “The calls to apply a one-size-fits-all approach is herd mentality, it’s not leadership.”

    “South Dakota is not New York City.”

    — South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem

    South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem is seen in Washington, when she was a member of Congress, Dec. 5, 2017. (Associated Press)

    Even in a time of crisis, Americans’ personal freedoms were paramount, she added.

    “The people themselves are primarily responsible for their safety,” Noem said. “They are the ones that are entrusted with expansive freedoms. They’re free to exercise their rights to work, to worship, and to play. Or to even stay at home, or to conduct social distancing.”

    “The people themselves are primarily responsible for their safety. … They’re free to exercise their rights to work, to worship, and to play. Or to even stay at home, or to conduct social distancing.”

    — South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem

    In Texas, Republican Gov. Greg Abbott has imposed restrictions that doctors and even his critics say are equivalent to stay-at-home orders but he refuses to use that description.

    “This is not a stay-at-home strategy. A stay-at-home strategy would mean that you have to stay home,” Abbott said. “This is a standard based upon essential services and essential activities.”

    CLICK HERE FOR COMPLETE CORONAVIRUS COVERAGE

    While the policy debates continued, the rising numbers were undeniable in some of the nation’s emerging hotspots beyond New York and New Jersey.

    Louisiana reported more than 6,400 cases of the virus as of Wednesday afternoon, with 273 deaths, according to FOX 8 in New Orleans.

    Michigan reported more than 9,300 cases and 337 deaths, according to The Detroit News.

    In Illinois, the number of cases reached more than 6,900 with 141 deaths, Chicago’s FOX 32 reported.

    The Associated Press contributed to this story.

    Coronavirus deaths top 5,000 in US as more states issue stay-at-home orders

    Get all the latest news on coronavirus and more delivered daily to your inbox.  Sign up here.

    Grim news of coronavirus infections and fatalities continued in the U.S. on Wednesday, with the number of confirmed cases rising above 200,000 and the number of deaths surpassing 5,000.

    Amid the climbing numbers, five more states – Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, Nevada and Pennsylvania – added or expanded stay-at-home orders, while Michigan proposed a 70-day extension of an emergency declaration that had been set to expire April 7.

    “Now is the crunch time for us to lessen the peak, to make the bullseye smaller so we don’t overrun our health care system,” Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp said, according to FOX 5 of Atlanta. He added that the next three weeks were critical for Georgia and that residents needed to “hunker down.”

    CORONAVIRUS LEAVES 3 OF 4 AMERICANS UNDER ORDERS TO STAY AT HOME AS MORE STATES IMPOSE RESTRICTIONS

    In Missouri, Republican Gov. Mike Parson remained among the dwindling number of governors to resist issuing a stay-at-home order in the absence of a federally mandated policy, the Kansas City Star reported.

    “Right now there’s still 95 counties in this state that has less than five cases of coronavirus in it,” Parson said Tuesday, according to the Star. “The majority, 75 of them, has one or two. I have to take all that into consideration as I make decisions on how it affects the economy and how it will affect those areas.”

    “Right now there’s still 95 counties in this state that has less than five cases of coronavirus in it. … I have to take all that into consideration as I make decisions.”

    — Missouri Gov. Mike Parson

    Missouri Gov. Gov. Mike Parson. (Associated Press)

    President Trump has insisted that states should be free to determine for themselves which safety measures to implement, citing disparities in how the states have been affected by the outbreak.

    “There are some states that are different,” Trump told reporters Wednesday, according to The Associated Press. “There are some states that don’t have much of a problem.”

    Not even second-place New Jersey, with more than 22,000 confirmed cases of the virus, came close to approaching first-place New York, which continued to lead the nation with nearly 84,000 cases. New Jersey also trailed far behind New York in deaths, with 355 compared to more than 2,200.

    Nevertheless, all 50 states were grappling with a situation that members of the president’s Coronavirus Task Force confirmed this week would get far worse before it gets better, with the deaths of 100,000 to 240,000 Americans expected in the weeks ahead despite the varying intervention measures.

    Still, other governors in states without officially declared stay-at-home orders said they remained convinced such moves were not necessary in their states.

    In Nebraska, Republican Gov. Pete Ricketts has said he’s been relying on advice public health experts at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, which has dealt extensively with outbreaks and served as a quarantine space for Ebola patients.

    Nebraska Gov. Pete Ricketts is seen May 26, 2015. (Associated Press)

    But Ricketts has ordered restaurants either to close their dining areas or allow no more than 10 people inside at once, depending on their location in the state, according to the AP.

    He also said Wednesday that Nebraska’s schools would remain closed through May 31, the Lincoln Journal Star reported.

    In Iowa, Republican Gov. Kim Reynolds also has held off from mandating that residents shelter in place order, claiming the data she sees doesn’t justify it.

    But Reynolds hinted Wednesday she may extend the closures of businesses and schools in the state on Thursday, the Des Moines Register reported.

    South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, another Republican, said the infection rate has slowed in her state with only voluntary safety measures in place, the AP reported.

    “South Dakota is not New York City,” Noem told reporters Wednesday, according to the Argus Leader of Sioux Falls. “The calls to apply a one-size-fits-all approach is herd mentality, it’s not leadership.”

    “South Dakota is not New York City.”

    — South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem

    South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem is seen in Washington, when she was a member of Congress, Dec. 5, 2017. (Associated Press)

    Even in a time of crisis, Americans’ personal freedoms were paramount, she added.

    “The people themselves are primarily responsible for their safety,” Noem said. “They are the ones that are entrusted with expansive freedoms. They’re free to exercise their rights to work, to worship, and to play. Or to even stay at home, or to conduct social distancing.”

    “The people themselves are primarily responsible for their safety. … They’re free to exercise their rights to work, to worship, and to play. Or to even stay at home, or to conduct social distancing.”

    — South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem

    In Texas, Republican Gov. Greg Abbott has imposed restrictions that doctors and even his critics say are equivalent to stay-at-home orders but he refuses to use that description.

    “This is not a stay-at-home strategy. A stay-at-home strategy would mean that you have to stay home,” Abbott said. “This is a standard based upon essential services and essential activities.”

    CLICK HERE FOR COMPLETE CORONAVIRUS COVERAGE

    While the policy debates continued, the rising numbers were undeniable in some of the nation’s emerging hotspots beyond New York and New Jersey.

    Louisiana reported more than 6,400 cases of the virus as of Wednesday afternoon, with 273 deaths, according to FOX 8 in New Orleans.

    Michigan reported more than 9,300 cases and 337 deaths, according to The Detroit News.

    In Illinois, the number of cases reached more than 6,900 with 141 deaths, Chicago’s FOX 32 reported.

    The Associated Press contributed to this story.

    Marc Thiessen on coronavirus response: ‘You can’t ask South Dakota to shut down because New York is in crisis’

    Get all the latest news on coronavirus and more delivered daily to your inbox. Sign up here.

    Former George W. Bush speechwriter and Fox News contributor Marc Thiessen joined “The Story” Friday to discuss the possibility of lifting social restrictions in places where the coronavirus outbreak has not had great effect.

    “As we learn more about the virus, as we get a better handle on the problem over time, we have to have to start factoring in, also, the economic impacts to people who spend their entire lives building a business; gone in a week,” Thiessen told host Martha MacCallum.

    TRUMP SIGNS $2T STIMULUS BILL

    President Trump has floated the idea of relaxing restrictions in certain parts of the country as part of his desire to have parts of the economy get back to normal by Easter Sunday.

    “These are real human costs,” Thiessen said, “[but] nobody is talking about lifting restrictions to the whole country.”

    Thiessen added NIH infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci has mentioned the prospect of a staggered lifting of restrictions as well.

    CLICK HERE FOR COMPLETE CORONAVIRUS COVERAGE

    “[W]e may be able to shift to a South Korean model, where they basically … take the people who are infected and isolate them, but allow uninfected people to go about their lives,” he said.

    “In New York, on the other hand, it’s probably going to be months and months, and who knows how long it will be in the hardest-hit areas — but you can’t ask South Dakota to be completely shut down because New York is in a crisis. So we have to find a balance.”

    9 inmates escape South Dakota women’s jail after coronavirus case; at least 1 caught

    Get all the latest news on coronavirus and more delivered daily to your inbox. Sign up here.

    Nine female inmates from a minimum-security unit of a South Dakota jail escaped on Monday night after a separate prisoner tested positive for coronavirus.

    The inmates walked out of the Pierre Community Work Center at 8:43 p.m. on Monday, officials said.

    POLICE IN CALIFORNIA CITY CONSIDER NEW WAYS TO USE DRONES DURING CORONAVIRUS OUTBREAK

    Three of them were captured while the others remain missing as of Tuesday night, the South Dakota Department of Corrections said.

    Officials originally said there were eight escapees, but Gov. Kristi Noem confirmed during a news conference that there are nine when she was asked about the escapees’ exposure to coronavirus at the jail, according to reports by KOTA TV.

    Secretary of Health Kim Malsam-Rysdon said that at least one of the captured inmates has been tested for COVID-19 but the results are not known at this time.

    On March 12, the Department of Corrections suspended all in-person visitations to prison facilities throughout the state in an effort to stop the spread of coronavirus.

    The identities of eight of the inmates were revealed by the department. They include Philomene Boneshirt, 25; Jordan Wakeman, 27; Sylvia Red Leaf, 25; Alice Richards, 32; Kayla Lamont, 28; Carly Schoneman, 23; Pamela Miller, 28, and Kelsey Flute, 30.

    CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

    The women now face felony escape charges that could result in a five-year prison sentence.

    South Dakota woman, dog caught in animal trap while hiking: report

    A South Dakota woman and her dog were injured on Friday after reportedly getting snared in an animal trap while hiking in the Black Hills National Forest.

    Dede Farrar and her dog Tiger were nearing the end of their hike when she heard her pup yelping in pain. Farrar ran over and realized Tiger’s paw was stuck in the trap, so she attempted to pry it open.

    “I’m not experienced with traps so I immediately did what I could to pry the jaws loose from Tiger’s front paw,” Farrar wrote on Facebook. “Then my fingers were caught and I screamed, ‘God help me! God help me!’ At the top of my lungs. I was trapped. My fingers hurt so bad. Then clarity came and I saw how to push the lever down to release myself.”

    BITTER COLD SETTLES ACROSS MIDWEST IN WAKE OF SPRAWLING STORM; NORTHEAST HIT WITH SNOW, SLUSH

    An avid hiker, Farrar said Tiger didn’t wander from the trail when they were caught in the vice grip — in what she called a “traumatic experience.”

    “We weren’t tromping off the trail. There shouldn’t be a trap that is a footstep off of a trail,” Farrar told KOTA TV. “It was a terrible, traumatic experience. One that I wasn’t expecting. Especially being on this trail that is popular.”

    After they were freed, the South Dakota Game Fish and Parks said she needed to return the trap to the spot where they were injured because it was someone else’s property, according to the outlet. They said because it was on public land, people can place traps wherever they want.

    CALIFORNIA HIKER, 17, SURVIVES BEING STRANDED FOR 30 HOURS IN SNOWY UTAH MOUNTAINS: ‘I SHOULDN’T EVEN BE ALIVE’

    “Imagine something snapping you shut. I mean it’s designed to hold you and not let you go. At first, I didn’t want to bring back the trap because it hurt me and it hurt my dog…but I returned the property,” Farrar told the station.

    Both Farrar and Tiger’s injuries were not deemed serious. Wildlife Conservation Officer, Chris Decker told the outlet the device was likely placed by an amateur trapper. He said to contact Game Fish and Parks if you have concerns about a trap on a trail.

    CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

    Farrar had reportedly hiked in the forest nearly every day for the past 35 years but had never experienced anything like that.

    “If you trap, don’t put it on a popular trail. It will be a long time before I forgive you,” she said.

    Bitter cold settles across Midwest in wake of sprawling storm; Northeast hit with snow, slush

    A sprawling storm that pounded the Plains and Midwest this weekend has left dangerous wind chills in its wake and dumped snow on the Northeast.

    Blizzard conditions were expected to continue making travel treacherous across Sunday much of the northern U.S.

    ‘SPRAWLING’ WINTER STORM SLAMS UPPER MIDWEST AND PLAINS, CANCELING HUNDREDS OF FLIGHTS AS IT HEADS EAST

    Officials in North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota and Iowa urged residents to stay indoors and off the slick roads as blowing snow made it nearly impossible to see on some major roadways.

    The National Weather Service in Sioux Falls, S.D., where snow depths of nearly a foot have been reported, issued an extreme cold alert early Sunday due to dangerous wind chills.

    Wind chills up to 40 degrees below zero were expected to hit parts of South Dakota and North Dakota, while nearly 20-below temperatures were forecast in parts of Iowa over the next few days, the NWS said.

    A wind chill advisory was also in effect for southern and central Minnesota early Sunday as gusts of nearly 50 mph caused temperatures to plunge as low as minus 30 degrees, the NWS said.

    Gusty winds in the Great Lakes region also created treacherous driving conditions.

    In western Michigan, reports of wind gusts up to 25 mph caused snowdrifts and reduced visibility on already slick roads. A narrow band of “more intense” snow showers were expected to hit in the morning and midafternoon, with 3 inches of additional accumulation expected, according to the NWS.

    The storm spread to the Northeast on Saturday evening, dropping light snow in much of the region by Sunday morning.

    In New York and northern New Jersey, snowfall totals of between 2 to 5 inches were reported in most areas.

    POLAR VORTEX, BOMB CYCLONE, SLEET: HERE’S WHAT THOSE WINTER WEATHER TERMS MEAN

    Massachusetts saw similar conditions, with most of the region getting between 2 and 4 inches of snow. Higher totals of 5 to 6 inches were reported across much of the northern state.

    As the storm continued to track north on Sunday, the NWS said snow accumulations of 3 to 8 inches were expected in parts of Vermont, with totals of less than an inch forecast in Maine.

    The weather woes were even more severe across the border.  A “bomb cyclone” slammed Newfoundland, Canada, on Saturday, setting a record one-day snowfall of 30 inches.

    Homes in Newfoundland were buried up to their second stories and cars disappeared entirely.

    CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

    Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Dwight Ball has asked for federal government assistance, including the Canadian Armed Forces, as residents begin digging out.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    South Dakota legislators facing backlash over bill criminalizing underage gender treatments

    The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and others piled onto the South Dakota legislature as it considered a bill that would make it a felony to provide things like puberty blockers to underage residents.

    The bill targets doctors providing surgeries and other treatments in an effort to let children “mature” before making those decisions. “The changes are overwhelming and life-changing. Children need to wait until they’re mature to do it,” Rep. Fred Deutsch, the bill’s sponsor, said. So far, the legislation has 40 co-sponsors and was scheduled for a committee hearing on Friday.

    The prohibited interventions for the “purposes of attempting to change or affirm the minor’s perception of the minor’s sex, if that perception is inconsistent with the minor’s sex.” It would charge doctors with a Class 4 felony if they provided a long list of surgeries like “castration, vasectomy, hysterectomy, phalloplasty,” and others. Mastectomies are also banned, in addition to “removing any otherwise healthy or nondiseased body part or tissue.” The proposed law would not apply to children born with ambiguous or conflicting genitalia.

    Progressive advocates sounded the alarm in response to Deutsch’s legislation. “The time to act is now,” the ACLU of South Dakota tweeted. It followed with a long list of legislator’s home and office numbers.

    ACLU SUING OVER IOWA’S DECISION TO ALLOW RESTRICTIONS ON TAXPAYER FUNDING OF GENDER SURGERIES

    “(Transgender) kids and families should be given the opportunity to thrive in South Dakota,” Libby Skarin, policy director for the ACLU of South, said in a statement. “This legislation only stands to harm them and make their lives harder.”

    The issue even caught actress Debra Messing’s attention as she retweeted a message about the law. “URGENT,” she said.

    ACLU CLAIMS ‘MEN WHO GET PREGNANT AND GIVE BIRTH ARE MEN’

    Democratic legislative leaders said they would oppose the bill. Rep. Kelly Sullivan, a Sioux Falls Democrat, said the measure would interfere in the doctor-patient relationship, and that doctors, patients and families should make decisions for treatment. GOP Gov. Kristi Noem’s office declined to comment. “The governor does not comment on draft legislation,” press secretary Kristin Wileman told Fox News.

    Conservative lawmakers in several states including Texas, Georgia and Kentucky have introduced similar bills. Deutsch said he decided to introduce the bill after reading about the issue online. He also consulted with a group called Kelsey Coalition that opposes those types of operations for minors.

    The legislation seemed to fan flames surrounding the role of government in a broader, cultural movement on gender. Conservatives like Ryan T. Anderson of the Heritage Foundation have warned against medical interventions that could alter a minor’s development.

    CLICK HERE TO GE THE FOX NEWS APP

    “Prudent legislation is needed to prevent adults from interfering with a child’s normal, natural bodily development,” Anderson and Princeton professor Robert P. George wrote in December. “‘Gender affirmation’ procedures violate sound medical ethics. It is profoundly unethical to intervene in the normal physical development of a child as part of ‘affirming’ a ‘gender identity’ at odds with bodily sex,” they added.

    The Endocrine Society, which is the leading professional organization for doctors who specialize in hormones, does not recommend these types of treatments before puberty for children who do not identify with their biological gender. For youths experiencing puberty and older adolescents, the Endocrine Society recommends that a team composed of expert medical professionals and mental health professionals manages treatment.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    South Dakota legislators facing backlash over bill criminalizing underage gender treatments

    The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and others piled onto the South Dakota legislature as it considered a bill that would make it a felony to provide things like puberty blockers to underage residents.

    The bill targets doctors providing surgeries and other treatments in an effort to let children “mature” before making those decisions. “The changes are overwhelming and life-changing. Children need to wait until they’re mature to do it,” Rep. Fred Deutsch, the bill’s sponsor, said. So far, the legislation has 40 co-sponsors and was scheduled for a committee hearing on Friday.

    The prohibited interventions for the “purposes of attempting to change or affirm the minor’s perception of the minor’s sex, if that perception is inconsistent with the minor’s sex.” It would charge doctors with a Class 4 felony if they provided a long list of surgeries like “castration, vasectomy, hysterectomy, phalloplasty,” and others. Mastectomies are also banned, in addition to “removing any otherwise healthy or nondiseased body part or tissue.” The proposed law would not apply to children born with ambiguous or conflicting genitalia.

    Progressive advocates sounded the alarm in response to Deutsch’s legislation. “The time to act is now,” the ACLU of South Dakota tweeted. It followed with a long list of legislator’s home and office numbers.

    ACLU SUING OVER IOWA’S DECISION TO ALLOW RESTRICTIONS ON TAXPAYER FUNDING OF GENDER SURGERIES

    “(Transgender) kids and families should be given the opportunity to thrive in South Dakota,” Libby Skarin, policy director for the ACLU of South, said in a statement. “This legislation only stands to harm them and make their lives harder.”

    The issue even caught actress Debra Messing’s attention as she retweeted a message about the law. “URGENT,” she said.

    ACLU CLAIMS ‘MEN WHO GET PREGNANT AND GIVE BIRTH ARE MEN’

    Democratic legislative leaders said they would oppose the bill. Rep. Kelly Sullivan, a Sioux Falls Democrat, said the measure would interfere in the doctor-patient relationship, and that doctors, patients and families should make decisions for treatment. GOP Gov. Kristi Noem’s office declined to comment. “The governor does not comment on draft legislation,” press secretary Kristin Wileman told Fox News.

    Conservative lawmakers in several states including Texas, Georgia and Kentucky have introduced similar bills. Deutsch said he decided to introduce the bill after reading about the issue online. He also consulted with a group called Kelsey Coalition that opposes those types of operations for minors.

    The legislation seemed to fan flames surrounding the role of government in a broader, cultural movement on gender. Conservatives like Ryan T. Anderson of the Heritage Foundation have warned against medical interventions that could alter a minor’s development.

    CLICK HERE TO GE THE FOX NEWS APP

    “Prudent legislation is needed to prevent adults from interfering with a child’s normal, natural bodily development,” Anderson and Princeton professor Robert P. George wrote in December. “‘Gender affirmation’ procedures violate sound medical ethics. It is profoundly unethical to intervene in the normal physical development of a child as part of ‘affirming’ a ‘gender identity’ at odds with bodily sex,” they added.

    The Endocrine Society, which is the leading professional organization for doctors who specialize in hormones, does not recommend these types of treatments before puberty for children who do not identify with their biological gender. For youths experiencing puberty and older adolescents, the Endocrine Society recommends that a team composed of expert medical professionals and mental health professionals manages treatment.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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