Senate State Affairs advances rulemaking and deference bills; property‑tax constitutional amendment deferred

South Dakota Legislature — House and Senate State Affairs Committees · February 20, 2026

Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts

Subscribe
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Senate committees gave unanimous do‑pass recommendations to SB 133 (cost analyses for major rules) and SB 134 (limit agency deference), advanced SB 145 to 40‑first day, and deferred SJR505 (property‑tax constitutional amendment) after extended debate and divided committee votes.

The Senate State Affairs Committee moved several measures forward and deferred others after extended hearings.

SB 133, sponsored by Sen. Sue Peterson, would require economic‑impact analyses for major permanent agency rules; it drew bipartisan proponent testimony from policy groups and the governor's office and passed out of committee unanimously with a do‑pass recommendation and was placed on consent for the floor.

SB 134, also sponsored by Sen. Peterson, would limit judicial deference to state agency statutory interpretations following recent U.S. Supreme Court precedent. Supporters — including the Pacific Legal Foundation, Americans for Prosperity and the Goldwater Institute — said the bill brings consistency to South Dakota's doctrine. The committee approved SB 134 by majority vote and sent it to the floor with a do‑pass recommendation.

SJR505, a proposed constitutional amendment from Sen. Taffy Howard to cap annual assessed‑value growth for owner‑occupied homes at 2% and cap property taxes at 1% of assessed value, prompted lengthy testimony and a split committee. Proponents argued it would protect long‑term homeowners from rapid assessment jumps; opponents (Department of Revenue and local government representatives) warned of inequity, tax shifts, and administrative complexity. A due‑pass motion failed on an even tie and the committee later voted to defer the item for further consideration.

SB 145, concerning municipal authority to act for public health and limits on municipal emergency powers, produced strong opposition from municipal and public‑health groups; the committee adopted a 40‑first‑day motion to remove the bill from immediate consideration.

Committee action leaves SB 133 and SB 134 headed to the Senate floor with do‑pass recommendations, SJR505 deferred for additional work, and SB 145 set aside.