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A Generational Land Opportunity: What Smithfield’s Move Really Means for Sioux Falls
Smithfield’s move out of downtown Sioux Falls opens more than industrial land. It creates a rare opportunity to rethink the city’s riverfront, convention center plans, and long-term growth strategy. Here’s what this decision could mean for Falls Park, downtown momentum, and the interstate corridor.
4 days ago4 min read


Early Data from the South Dakota Affordability Project Shows Emerging Strain Across Communities
Preliminary results from the South Dakota Affordability Project show more than half of respondents have taken on additional work due to rising costs, while a strong majority feel local leaders do not fully understand housing pressures.
5 days ago2 min read


Why Parenting Became a Public Debate Instead of a Private Duty
Over the past several decades, parenting in America has shifted from a private family responsibility to a public debate shaped by schools, medical systems, and government institutions. Research shows how and why that change occurred.
Jan 253 min read


Poverty, Health, and Hope: The Lakota Experience in the Dakotas and Midwest
Data from the Dakotas and the Midwest shows persistent economic, health, and education challenges facing many Lakota communities, alongside ongoing efforts to preserve culture and rebuild long-term stability.
Jan 253 min read


Two North Carolina Teens Killed in DUI Crash Involving Undocumented Driver
Two North Carolina teenagers were killed in a head-on DUI crash after authorities say an undocumented driver crossed the center line. The case has raised renewed questions about enforcement, licensing, and public safety.
Jan 252 min read


Why Crime Data Alone Can’t Measure Public Safety
Official crime statistics don’t always reflect what families experience on the ground. This article examines why reported crime data alone fails to measure public safety—and how victimization, trust, and community order tell a fuller story.
Jan 254 min read


Mental Health, Schools, and the Quiet Expansion of Institutional Power
Over the last decade, Americans have been told a simple story: children are struggling, mental health is deteriorating, and schools must step in to fill the gap. The argument is often framed as compassionate and unavoidable — if families cannot meet the moment, institutions must.
Jan 255 min read


The Connection Gap: What Research Says About Family Stability and Community Life
American family life is often discussed as if it rises or falls based on private choices alone. But a growing body of research points to something bigger and less comfortable: families don’t operate in a vacuum. When social connection breaks down at the community level, the impact shows up in mental health, youth outcomes, trust, and long-run stability.
Three major research streams help clarify what’s happening: public health research on loneliness and isolation, national yo
Jan 253 min read


When Communities Lose Shared Norms, Families Feel It First
Historically, local communities acted as a stabilizing layer between families and large institutions. Churches, civic groups, neighborhood associations, schools, and local traditions helped translate shared values into daily life.
Jan 252 min read


Why Schools Are Often the Front Line of Civic Conflict
When families perceive that decisions are being made without transparency, consent, or local input, tension rises quickly. Schools are not abstract policy arenas. They affect children, routines, beliefs, and household dynamics in immediate ways.
This proximity makes schools uniquely sensitive to civic disagreement.
Jan 253 min read
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