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South Dakota governor gives Native American tribes 48 hours to remove checkpoints on highways - Daily Mail

South Dakota governor gives Native American tribes 48 hours to remove checkpoints which aim to bar non-essential visitors entering

  • Two local tribes set up checkpoints last month to lock down reservations 
  • Oglala Sioux and Cheyenne River Sioux wanted to keep out unnecessary visitors 
  • Tribes are worried coronavirus outbreak could overwhelm health care systems 
  • Kristi Noem, a Republican governor, has resisted statewide stay-at-home orders
  • Noem said tribes need agreement of the state to set up checkpoints on roads
  • But the tribes said they have sovereign right to shut down highways
  • Impasse sets up a legal showdown over state-tribal relationship
  • South Dakota is home to nine tribes recognized by the federal government 
  • Meanwhile, more Smithfield pork plant workers test positive for COVID-19
  • Plant in Sioux falls reopened this week after it was shuttered for three weeks  
  • Here’s how to help people impacted by Covid-19

South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem on Friday told Native American tribes they have 48 hours to take down road checkpoints they had set up to keep out unnecessary visitors because of concerns over the coronavirus.

The Republican governor said she would take legal action if the tribes didn't remove the checkpoints in 48 hours. 

Two tribes - the Oglala Sioux Tribe and the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe - set up the checkpoints last month in an attempt to lock down their reservations amid fears infections could decimate members. 

The move sets up a potential legal showdown between a governor who has avoided sweeping stay-at-home orders and tribes that assert their sovereign rights allow them to control who comes on reservations.

The governor of South Dakota is demanding that Native American tribes remove checkpoints on US and state highways leading to their reservations. The image above shows a checkpoint manned by members of the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe Law Enforcement

The governor of South Dakota is demanding that Native American tribes remove checkpoints on US and state highways leading to their reservations. The image above shows a checkpoint manned by members of the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe Law Enforcement

The tribes said they are worried that a coronavirus outbreak on their reservations would overwhelm their fragile health care systems

The tribes said they are worried that a coronavirus outbreak on their reservations would overwhelm their fragile health care systems

South Dakota is home to nine federally recognized tribal nations with sovereign rights over their land

South Dakota is home to nine federally recognized tribal nations with sovereign rights over their land

The tribes have taken stronger action than the state because they are concerned the virus could overwhelm fragile health care systems that serve many people with underlying health problems. 

They are still allowing essential businesses on to the reservations and said the checkpoints were set up to keep out tourists or other visitors who could be carrying coronavirus infections.

'I request that the tribes immediately cease interfering with or regulating traffic on US and State Highways and remove all travel checkpoints,' Noem said in a statement.

Her spokeswoman Maggie Seidel said the checkpoints are illegal and the tribes should have taken them down last month after the Bureau of Indian Affairs said that tribes can close or restrict traffic on roads, but only if they get the permission of the owner of the road. 

A statement from the governor's office said the tribes have not consulted or gotten an agreement from the state.

But the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe said that it had met with local, state and federal officials to discuss the checkpoints and will not take them down.

Tribal chairman Harold Frazier issued a statement addressing Noem, saying, 'You continuing to interfere in our efforts to do what science and facts dictate seriously undermine our ability to protect everyone on the reservation.'

Governor Kristi Noem, a Republican, has so far resisted imposing lockdown orders statewide as the number of COVID-19 cases continue to climb in South Dakota

Governor Kristi Noem, a Republican, has so far resisted imposing lockdown orders statewide as the number of COVID-19 cases continue to climb in South Dakota

The Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe released a statement accusing Noem of 'interfering in our efforts to do what science and facts dictate' and making 'ignorant statements'

The Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe released a statement accusing Noem of 'interfering in our efforts to do what science and facts dictate' and making 'ignorant statements'

Chase Iron Eyes, a spokesman for Oglala Sioux president Julian Bear Runner, said he expected the tribe to defend its rights as a sovereign nation to keep out threats to their health.

'We'd be interested in talking face to face with Governor Noem and the attorney general and whoever else is involved,' he said.

The governor also held calls with Smithfield employees on Thursday and Friday as the pork plant where hundreds of employees were infected reopens after being shuttered for more than three weeks.

Noem's spokesman Ian Fury said she spent about two hours speaking with employees in total and that the governor's office had reached out to every employee at the plant.

But an organization advocating for Smithfield employees disagreed. 

The above image shows a Smithfield Foods pork plant in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, on April 16. The plant, which was shuttered for three weeks after hundreds of employees became infected with COVID-19, reopened this week, though more COVID-19 cases have been reported

The above image shows a Smithfield Foods pork plant in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, on April 16. The plant, which was shuttered for three weeks after hundreds of employees became infected with COVID-19, reopened this week, though more COVID-19 cases have been reported

South Dakota Voices for Justice said in a statement that employees who were invited to the call were 'handpicked by corporate HR.'

The organization said it was still asking Noem to meet with advocates, along with employees, 'so we can work together to ensure worker safety and Smithfield’s return to producing products essential to our nation’s food supply.'

After the Department of Health held a mass testing for Smithfield employees and their family members this week in Sioux Falls, officials reported a spike in confirmed cases of coronavirus on Friday with 239 new infections.

Nearly 250 new cases were reported on Saturday after a mass testing event in the Sioux Falls area. 

State Epidemiologist Josh Clayton said health officials have not been able to sort out which test results came from the mass event, but said it was likely the spike in confirmed cases came from those results. 

A total of 203 of the confirmed cases from Friday were reported in Minnehaha County, which contains most of Sioux Falls.

State health officials said that 232 of the 249 new cases reported on Saturday were in Minnehaha County. 

A total of 435 people have tested positive in Minnehaha County in the last two days, for a total of 2,767 cases in the county. 

The total number of cases statewide now stands at 3,393. 

Three new deaths were confirmed on Saturday, all of them Minnehaha County residents over the age of 70. 

The state’s death toll is up to 34.

Officials said 79 people are hospitalized with the virus.

While 3,393 have tested positive, the actual number of infections is thought to be far higher because many people have not been tested and people can be infected without feeling sick.

For most people, the coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks. 

For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia.  

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