Argus Leader

Rodeo among recipients of millions from public fund

‘Like so much of government, a well-intentione­d program has expanded far beyond its original purpose’

- Joshua Haiar South Dakota Searchligh­t

In September, Gov. Kristi Noem carried the American flag on horseback into a Sioux Falls arena full of fans.

It was the Cinch Playoffs Governor’s Cup, advertised as “the richest rodeo in South Dakota history,” with $1 million in prize money. Noem handed out awards, posed for photos with the winners, and shared the images with thousands of followers on her social media accounts.

Several months earlier, Noem had decided to use tax dollars from South Dakota employers to help pay for the event.

In June, the Governor’s Office of Economic Developmen­t awarded a three-year contract worth up to $2.5 million to rodeo announcer Rorey Lemmel’s Dean Entertainm­ent Group, to promote and conduct the annual event.

The contract said Sioux Falls would contribute additional matching funds.

The state money is from a special fund under the exclusive control of the governor. It’s called the Future Fund. Legislator­s created it in 1987 at the behest of then-Gov. George Mickelson, “for purposes related to research and economic developmen­t for the state,” according to the brief, two-sentence text of the law.

Unlike other funds administer­ed by the Governor’s Office of Economic Developmen­t, Future Fund expenses don’t have to go through a board of citizen appointees for vetting or approval. And while Noem has publicized some Future Fund awards, she hasn’t publicized others, such as the rodeo contract. That’s in contrast to awards from other economic developmen­t funds, which are routinely announced in news releases.

Where the money comes from

The Future Fund gets its money from South Dakota employers, whose payments to the fund are tied to payroll taxes for unemployme­nt benefits. The unemployme­nt payroll tax is calculated by a complex set of formulas that includes a percentage of the first $15,000 of some employees’ annual earnings. The Future Fund receives a fraction of an additional percent on top of that, which the state describes as an “investment fee.”

According to the state Department of Labor and Regulation, 28,261 employers paid $23 million into the Future Fund in 2022, which equated to an average of $814 per employer. Governors can spend as much or as little from the fund as they want, and legislator­s have altered the contributi­on rates over the years, so the balance fluctuates. Noem has distribute­d $30.34 million from the fund this year.

Since the fund’s inception 36 years ago, governors have awarded a total of about $300 million from it, according to an estimate by the Governor’s Office of Economic Developmen­t, which said it does not have complete historical records. Utilizing government reports and newspaper archives, South Dakota Searchligh­t was able to document $302.5 million in total spending. Nearly two-thirds of it happened under the last two governors.

Noem has spent a total of $57 million from the fund since she took office in 2019, and her predecesso­r Dennis Daugaard spent $163 million during his eight years in office.

Legislator­s react, Noem spokesman responds

State Representa­tive Scott Odenbach, a Republican from Spearfish, said he is unsettled by governors spending so much taxpayer money without oversight. He said economic developmen­t too often involves the government picking winners and losers.

“Like so much of government, a wellintent­ioned program has expanded far beyond its original purpose,” Odenbach said.

The fund’s expenditur­es are sometimes scrutinize­d by legislator­s, but not on a regular basis. Representa­tive Linda Duba, a Democrat from Sioux Falls who’s a member of the Legislatur­e’s budget committee, was unaware of the rodeo contract.

“I understand using it to find new trade partners, investing in our tech schools. Stuff like that is legitimate,” Duba said. “But promoting a rodeo? Give me a break.”

Noem’s use of the fund previously came under scrutiny from the media when she used $350,000 to pay for a fireworks show in 2020 at Mount Rushmore where she and then-President Donald Trump spoke. Noem is now routinely mentioned as a potential running mate for Trump in the 2024 presidenti­al race.

More recently, Noem used $5 million from the Future Fund for a workforce recruitmen­t advertisin­g campaign starring herself, with plans for a $1.5 million second phase.

The Legislatur­e’s Executive Board plans to review that spending next month after questions arose about its effectiven­ess and the process used by the Noem administra­tion to select an advertisin­g firm to create the campaign.

Duba said legislator­s should demand more accountabi­lity.

“These workforce recruitmen­t commercial­s look more like campaign commercial­s to me,” she said.

Representa­tive Jean Hunhoff, a Yankton Republican, is lead co-chair of the Legislatur­e’s budget committee and has served during multiple governors’ administra­tions.

She’s waiting until she gets “all the facts” before forming an opinion on Noem’s use of the fund.

“But I’ll be candid with you, I don’t recall the fund ever resulting in this much questionin­g,” she said.

Noem’s chief of communicat­ions, Ian Fury, replied via email to South Dakota Searchligh­t questions about the fund. He said the workforce ads are “the most successful workforce recruitmen­t campaign in South Dakota history,” the rodeo showcases the official state sport “like never before,” and the fireworks show was “the single biggest one-day advertisem­ent our state has ever had.”

“I can’t think of better ways that Future Funds could be invested to generate a strong ROI for South Dakota,” Fury said, using the abbreviati­on for “return on investment.” “Yes, some of this is new and innovative. That’s the point — it’s working.”

Original Future Fund intentions

When Mickelson persuaded legislator­s to create the fund in 1987, the state had recently suffered the effects of a national recession and a farm economy crisis.

Mickelson told legislator­s during his State of the State speech that year that South Dakota needed a fund “for longterm investment­s, for building the infrastruc­ture.”

“Too often, politician­s are attracted to short-term programs so that by the next election they might be able to point back and look at benefits or look at results,” Mickelson said. “The courageous politician­s are people who are willing to look at the long term and make a longterm investment in what we believe is right.”

He said the money would be used for purposes including libraries, scholarshi­ps, vocational education, tourism developmen­t, and scientific research. Legislator­s joined him to create the fund, officially named the Employer’s Investment in South Dakota’s Future Fund.

Lobbyist Julie Johnson was the secretary of labor at the time and helped write the law. She said the Mickelson administra­tion “deliberate­ly tried not to” narrowly define what the fund was for.

“You’ll know it when you see it,” Johnson said, referring to the law’s use of the broad term “economic developmen­t” and what it’s meant to different governors over the years. Mickelson chose to focus on investment­s in research, scholarshi­ps and programs on university campuses.

How other governors used the fund

Archived news stories and other historical sources indicate former governor Mickelson and his successor, Walter Dale Miller, spent at least a combined $22.5 million from the year of the fund’s creation in 1987 through 1994. Bill Janklow spent at least $5 million, and Mike Rounds spent about $55 million.

Mickelson focused on research, lab equipment and university programs. By the end of 1990, he was touting in a newspaper column that his administra­tion had funded over 80 research- and business-linked ventures through the fund.

Miller kept a similar focus after Mickelson died in a plane crash, using $500,000 per year from the fund for a scholarshi­p program started by Mickelson.

By 1994, during Miller’s administra­tion, the fund was being credited for improving the University of South Dakota Medical School, and for funding research into a swine disease that saved producers $4 million a year.

Then Janklow became governor for the second time.

In 1995, Janklow ended the use of Future Fund dollars for the Mickelson scholarshi­p program, deeming it an improper use of a fund intended by law for research and economic developmen­t. He was criticized by Democrats for taking the definition of the fund too literally.

“It’s not a proper transfer,” Janklow told the Argus Leader at the time. “It’s not a legitimate use of those funds. I have no choice. It’s not my money. It’s the public’s money.”

In 2003, Rounds became governor and began using the fund to help businesses and train employees, and for research and job creation.

Rounds referred to the Future Fund as being for “economic developmen­t,” and by the second half of his administra­tion, descriptio­ns of the fund said its awards were used “mostly as incentives for new businesses.”

The Future Fund was also at the heart of a controvers­y during Rounds’ administra­tion.

After the death of former state economic developmen­t director Richard Benda in 2013, which was officially ruled a suicide, it was revealed that he was about to be charged with a crime. As he left state government at the end of the Rounds administra­tion, Benda allegedly pressured the recipient of a $1 million Future Fund grant to redirect about half of the money to help Benda’s new employer cover Benda’s salary.

Daugaard became governor in 2011. He used the fund for everything from railroad improvemen­ts to scholarshi­ps. He awarded $51 million in 2014 alone, with recipients ranging from tech schools and economic developmen­t corporatio­ns to a trailer manufactur­er in Mitchell.

Noem’s expenditur­es

Some of Noem’s Future Fund spending has been similar to Daugaard’s.

This year, she gave $1.6 million to help establish and grow the South Dakota Trade Associatio­n (run by U.S. Sen. John Thune’s son-in-law, Luke Lindberg), $3 million to the North Sioux City Economic Developmen­t Corporatio­n for an industrial park, and $7.94 million to the Department of Labor and Regulation to expand apprentice­ship programs, among other awards.

Noem’s $5 million workforce recruitmen­t campaign, financed by the Future Fund, features her in commercial­s filling the roles of plumbers and welders and other high-need jobs. She’s touted the campaign as a success.

“We are building a winning workforce and ensuring that our state’s economy will continue to thrive for generation­s to come,” she said in a news release about the campaign.

But some lawmakers have expressed frustratio­n about what they’ve described as a lack of clarity about the campaign’s results.

For example, the Governor’s Office has said “over 2,000 applicants have advanced to the final stages of moving” through the Freedom Works Here campaign. But under questionin­g from lawmakers, administra­tion officials said that’s the number of out-of-state people who have asked for a state-assigned job adviser to help them find work in South Dakota, and the administra­tion does not know how many of those people are directly attributab­le to the campaign.

Reporting by Sioux Falls Live has also revealed political connection­s between Noem and the Ohio-based firm that her administra­tion chose to carry out the campaign, and has raised questions about how the firm was chosen.

The Legislatur­e’s Executive Board will review questions and concerns about the workforce campaign on Jan. 8, the day before the start of the 2024 legislativ­e session.

 ?? PROVIDED BY GOVERNOR’S OFFICE ?? Governor Kristi Noem rides, with American flag in hand, into the Cinch Playoffs Governor’s Cup rodeo in Sioux Falls in September.
PROVIDED BY GOVERNOR’S OFFICE Governor Kristi Noem rides, with American flag in hand, into the Cinch Playoffs Governor’s Cup rodeo in Sioux Falls in September.

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