Identity area
Type of entity
Authorized form of name
Parallel form(s) of name
Standardized form(s) of name according to other rules
Other form(s) of name
Identifiers for corporate bodies
Description area
Dates of existence
History
The South Dakota Resources Coalition was established in the early 1970s, during the formative years of the national environmental movement. Although conservation efforts had long existed, significant federal action began after 1967 with the creation of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the passage of major environmental legislation.
In 1972, Governor Richard Kneip sought to unify various grassroots environmental groups in the state, offering political support and visibility. Esther R. Edie, then secretary of South Dakotans for a Quality Environment, facilitated communication among citizens' groups. With support from the governor’s office, a South Dakota Environmental Symposium was held on September 28, 1972, attracting around 80 participants. The event featured state officials and experts addressing topics such as water management, forest practices, air quality, recycling, and the establishment of a formal environmental organization.
Following the symposium, the South Dakota Environmental Coalition was formed and became active in state and national environmental issues, including the Oahe irrigation project, the Clean Air Act, the Water Pollution Control Amendments, and the Trans-Alaska pipeline. The group held its first annual meeting in May 1973 at Augustana College. By the end of that year, numerous South Dakota organizations had joined, representing a broad coalition of environmental, civic, and academic interests.
In 1978, the group adopted the name South Dakota Resources Coalition to reflect its wider scope and was incorporated as a non-profit. In 1982, it established the South Dakota Resources Protection Fund to support lobbying efforts. Over the years, the coalition has sponsored public education initiatives and partnered with South Dakota Public Television and the U.S. EPA on projects addressing water quality and land use. Notable projects include the 1973 television series Who Shall Control the Land?, a water quality institute funded in 1974, and the film The Invisible Thief in 1978–79.
The coalition has participated in numerous state advisory committees and regional environmental initiatives, including the South Dakota Futures Program and the Great Plains Environmental Conference. Throughout its history, the South Dakota Resources Coalition has played a significant role in advancing environmental advocacy in the state, particularly in areas such as water quality, waste management, and mining regulation.
Places
Legal status
Functions, occupations and activities
Mandates/sources of authority
Internal structures/genealogy
General context
Relationships area
Access points area
Subject access points
- Pressure groups
- Acid rain
- Air--Pollution
- Animal waste
- Animals
- Artesian wells
- Billboards
- Biodiversity
- Canals
- Climatic changes
- Coal
- Compost
- Conflict of interests
- Dams
- Drinking water
- Ecology
- Electric lines
- Electric power-plants
- Electric utilities
- Electricity
- Energy conservation
- Energy development
- Energy facilities
- Farms
- Forests and forestry
- Gasohol
- Gasoline
- Groundwater
- Hazardous wastes
- Herbicides
- Industrial safety
- Irrigation
- Lakes
- Land use
- Litter (Trash)
- Low-level radiation
- Mercury wastes
- Mines and mineral resources
- Natural gas pipelines
- Natural resources
- Noise pollution
- Nuclear arms control
- Nuclear power plants
- Pesticides
- Petroleum refineries
- Pipelines
- Planning
- Plants
- Pollution
- Polychlorinated biphenyls
- Potholes
- Power resources
- Public utilities
- Radioactive waste disposal
- Railroads
- Refuse and refuse disposal
- Renewable energy sources
- Sewage
- Soil conservation
- Soils
- Storage tanks
- Sustainable development
- Synthetic fuels
- Transgenic organisms
- Transportation
- T-shirts
- Uranium
- Vaccines
- Water
- Water conservation
- Water districts
- Water quality management
- Water treatment plants
- Water--Law and legislation
- Water--Pollution
- Water-power
- Water-supply
- Weapons industry
- Weather control
- Wells
- Wetlands
- Whales
- Whooping crane
- Wilderness areas
- Wildlife conservation
- Wildlife management
- Wind power
- Zoning
- Population
- Rivers
- Water resources development