Gov. Larry Rhoden addresses a joint session of the South Dakota Legislature on Sept. 23, 2025, at the Capitol in Pierre. Rhoden was speaking in support of a proposed new men’s prison in northeast Sioux Falls. (John Hult/South Dakota Searchlight)
PIERRE — After 144 years, South Dakota lawmakers decided Tuesday it’s time for “the Hill” to retire.
The required two-thirds of each legislative chamber voted to endorse a 1,500-bed, $650 million replacement for the state penitentiary building that opened its doors when South Dakota was still Dakota Territory. The new prison will be the most expensive capital project ever funded by the state’s taxpayers.
The prison will be built in northeast Sioux Falls, on an undeveloped patch of industrial land near the Sioux Falls Area Humane Society. The location is about 3 miles northeast of the penitentiary, which is nicknamed “the Hill” for its perch overlooking the Big Sioux River.
“Benson Road Site” is the proposed location of a new men’s prison in Sioux Falls. (Courtesy of Governor’s Office)
The votes came during a one-day special session at the Capitol called by Republican Gov. Larry Rhoden after a prison construction task force he created via executive order had recommended a new prison with that size, price tag and location. The Senate approved the prison plan legislation 24-11, and the House approved it 51-18, with one House member, Rep. Jeff Bathke, R-Mitchell, excused while on a military deployment.
A previous men’s prison proposal, with a higher price and a controversial location in rural Lincoln County, was presented in February during the regular legislative session and failed to earn the two-thirds support mandated for spending bills by the state constitution.
Tuesday’s vote answers the most pressing and expensive question posed during a four-year saga on the future of South Dakota’s prison facilities. In 2021, then-Gov. Kristi Noem commissioned a study of the Department of Corrections properties that concluded the state needed a new women’s prison — which is now under construction in Rapid City at a cost of $87 million — and that the oldest parts of the penitentiary had too many inmates and was unsafe for them and the staff.
The state plans to pay for the new prison with cash. In 2022, lawmakers voted to begin putting millions in excess revenues, which ballooned thanks in part to federal cash infusions during the COVID-19 pandemic, into an incarceration construction fund that has since grown with further deposits and interest earnings. The next year, they approved the construction of the women’s prison.
The bill passed Tuesday transfers $78.7 million from the state’s budget reserves to the prison construction fund and authorizes the Department of Corrections to spend up to $650 million to build it. Most of the money is already in the fund, but about $42 million of the required funding is expected to come from future interest earnings.
Between 2024 and Tuesday’s vote, the state put $52 million into a plan to build a 1,500-bed men’s prison — at a price of $825 million, in that case — in southern Lincoln County. Lawmakers rejected that prison pitch in February, an act that spurred the creation of Rhoden’s Project Prison Reset task force. Last week, Rhoden’s office said much of that investment was recaptured by reusing designs on the $650 million version that did earn approval, but $21 million of the money spent on the Lincoln County site is unrecoverable.
The state shaved $175 million off the cost of the Sioux Falls prison plan by shrinking common areas within the facility and designing 300 of the beds as a barracks. Rhoden said the new plan does not reduce rehabilitation and vocational programming space.
Questions on how to pay for the ongoing operations of the new prison will greet lawmakers when they return in January for their regular session.
Corrections Secretary Kellie Wasko, who tendered an Oct. 20 resignation in a letter to Rhoden earlier this month in the face of criticism, told lawmakers earlier this year that it could cost the state up to $20 million more a year to run the new prison.
Two newer units on the grounds of the penitentiary in Sioux Falls will remain in service when the new building opens. That’s expected to happen in 2029.
This is a developing story that will be updated.