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Two hand gripping jail or prison cell bars.

Advocacy group forms for people in prison amid controversies in South Dakota prisons

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Kathleen Shannon

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(Greater Dakota News Service) Recent problems in South Dakota prisons have concerned lawmakers, corrections commission members and family members of those incarcerated, who formed a new support group.

South Dakotans Impacted by Incarceration was formed this year, after the state's Department of Corrections in March suspended calls and messaging on tablets used by people in prison due to what it called an "investigation." The services were eventually reinstated.

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Nieema Thasing, co-founder of the advocacy group, said the department's lack of communication on the issue was one of many reasons she started the group, which hosted its first public meeting last month, attended by some lawmakers, sheriffs and other officials.

"They were all taken aback because they had no idea that these things were happening because they had been getting it from other people trying to soothe everything away."

The South Dakota Corrections Commission also met last month for its first meeting since October 2023 and members expressed concerns about the Commission's role. Member David McGirr said the commission "is not serving its intended purpose," according to meeting minutes, and requested a legislative review of the commission.

Erin Vicars, another of the group's co-founders, said she could "go on and on" about major problems at the state's prisons. Her list includes health care access, lack of in-prison jobs, lockdowns, changes in commissary items, food quality and a lack of transparency from prison leadership.

"People often forget that prison itself is a punishment, not the conditions," Vicars pointed out.

The group is planning another meeting this month. Meanwhile, the state has allocated more than $650 millioncombined toward a planned men's prison in Lincoln County and a women's correctional facility in Rapid City.