He’s certainly a new lawmaker whom conservatives need to be paying attention to! https://www.carleyforfreedom.com/
https://sdlegislature.gov/Legislators/Profile/4692/Detail
https://sdlegislature.gov/Legislators/Profile/4692/Bills
SB49 –An Act to prohibit the exercise of the right of eminent domain for the construction of certain facilities.
https://www.siouxlandproud.com/news/south-dakota-news/co2-lines-could-be-barred-from-eminent-domain-use/?nxsparam=2
PIERRE, S.D. (KELO) — Two first-time lawmakers want the South Legislature to ban CO2 pipelines as well as wind- and solar-power facilities from using eminent domain to force access through others’ property.
Republican Sen.-elect John Carley and Republican Rep.-elect Dylan Jordan are the prime sponsors of SB49. They are among a group of new legislators who won election last year as 59% of voters rejected a pending state law dubbed the “Landowner’s Bill of Rights” that opponents said would have made CO2 lines easier to place in South Dakota.
“Our South Dakota citizens spoke up in the November election that they want landowner rights protected and no abuse of eminent domain,” Carley said. “This bill enables all of these types of projects to still happen. However, eminent domain is a tool that cannot be used in this process by the companies on our landowners so they can keep their freedoms. That’s not to say they won’t try to initiate eminent domain proceedings through the government, that is a possibility still. This just restricts the companies from unilaterally using this as a threat with no citizen recourse.”
And then SB51 – An Act to require the display and curricular inclusion of the Ten Commandments and other documents.
https://sdlegislature.gov/Session/Bill/25686/274265
Section 1. That a NEW SECTION be added to chapter 13-24:
The board of a school district shall display the Ten Commandments in each classroom in each school located within the district. The display must be a poster or document that is at least eight inches by fourteen inches. The text of the Ten Commandments must be the focus of the poster or document and must be printed in large, easily readable font.
The text of the Ten Commandments must be printed with the following or substantially similar language:
(1) I AM the LORD your God, thou shalt have no other gods before me;
(2) Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image;
(3) Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain;
(4) Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy;
(5) Honor thy father and mother;
(6) Thou shalt not murder;
(7) Thou shalt not commit adultery;
(8) Thou shalt not steal;
(9) Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor; and
(10) Thou shalt not covet.
Section 2. That a NEW SECTION be added to chapter 13-24:
The following statements must be displayed near any poster or document listing the Ten Commandments pursuant to section 1 of this Act:
(1) The Ten Commandments were a prominent part of American public education for almost three centuries. Around the year 1688, The New England Primer became the first published American textbook and was the equivalent of a first-grade reader. The New England Primer was used in public schools throughout the United States for more than two hundred years to teach Americans to read and contained more than forty questions about the Ten Commandments;
(2) The Ten Commandments were also included in public school textbooks published by educator William McGuffey, a noted university president and professor. A version of his famous McGuffey Readers was written in the early 1800s and became one of the most popular textbooks in the history of American education, selling more than one hundred million copies. Copies of the McGuffey Readers are still available today; and
(3) The Ten Commandments also appeared in textbooks published by Noah Webster, which were widely used in American public schools along with America’s first comprehensive dictionary that Webster also published. His work, “Letters to a Young Gentleman Commencing His Education: To Which is Subjoined a Brief History of the United States,” was among works that together sold more than one hundred million copies for use by public school children all across the nation and was still available for use in American public schools in the year 1975.
The size of the statements must be smaller than the text of the Ten Commandments but must be large enough to be easily read.
Section 3. That a NEW SECTION be added to chapter 13-24:
The board of a school district may display the Mayflower Compact, the Magna Carta, the Declaration of Independence, and other documents foundational to the legal and governmental systems of the United States and this state along with the Ten Commandments, as provided for in sections 1 and 2 of this Act.
The South Dakota Board of Education Standards shall publish on the website of the Department of Education, a list of other documents that are foundational to the legal and governmental systems of the United States and this state and which may be displayed along with the Ten Commandments.
Section 4. That a NEW SECTION be added to chapter 13-24:
The board of a school district may accept donated displays that meet the requirements of sections 1, 2, and 3 of this Act, or may accept donations to purchase displays that meet the requirements of sections 1, 2, and 3 of this Act.
Section 5. That § 13-33-4 be AMENDED:
13-33-4. In all public and nonpublic schools located within the state there shall be given regular courses of instruction in the Constitutions of the United States and the State of South Dakota. Such instruction shall begin not later than the opening of the eighth grade and shall continue in the high school to an extent to be determined by the South Dakota Board of Education Standards
Each public school in this state must include, as a part of the school’s history and civics curriculum, instruction on the governments of the United States and this state and the philosophical principles articulated by these governmental systems. The instruction must cover:
(1) The Constitution of the United States;
(2) The constitution of this state;
(3) The Declaration of Independence;
(4) The Bill of Rights;
(5) The Ten Commandments, presented as a historical legal document, including the influence of the Ten Commandments on the legal, ethical, and other cultural traditions of Western civilization; and
(6) Other documents foundational to the legal and governmental systems of the United States and this state, as determined by the South Dakota Board of Education Standards.
Each student enrolled in a school district must receive instruction provided pursuant to this section at least once between first and fourth grade, once between fifth and eighth grade, and once between nineth and twelfth grade.
The Department of Education shall develop and provide materials to support the instruction required by this section and shall make the material available to a school district upon request.
Section 6. That § 13-24-17.1 be REPEALED.
An object or document containing the words of the Ten Commandments may be displayed in any public school classroom, public school building, or at any public school event, along with other objects and documents of cultural, legal, or historical significance that have formed and influenced the legal and governmental systems of the United States and the State of South Dakota. Such display of an object or document containing the words of the Ten Commandments:
(1) Shall be in the same manner and appearance generally as other objects and documents displayed; and
(2) May not be presented or displayed in any fashion that results in calling attention to it apart from the other displayed objects and documents.