With funding from Congress, the Lewis and Clark Regional Water System is new a wholesale provider of cleaner water to 20 member cities and rural water systems in three states, including South Dakota. Local leaders said it is a good example of effective federal investments. (Photo courtesy of MN DOH)

CORRECTION: This web-version of the story initially listed Rep. Dusty Johnson as “Rep. Dusty Johnson, R-N.D.” It has since been corrected to reflect that he represents South Dakota. (10:35 a.m. CT, April 23, 2025)

bus tour will zip through eastern South Dakota Thursday, where local leaders, health care providers and farm voices want to connect the dots between stable federal aid and their ability to plan, after recent actions have put them in a tough spot.

Thursday’s events are part of the rural community tours organized by United Today, Stronger Tomorrow, a coalition that contends heavy budget cuts and grant freezes carried out by the Trump administration are the opposite of creating efficiencies.

Thursday’s tour will stop in Madison, which is part of a new, largely federally funded tristate pipeline to improve water quality and economic development.

Roy Lindsay, mayor of Madison, said his city of about 7,000 cannot build a stronger future without the help of federal programs.

“It seems like whoever’s pushing the buttons are looking at numbers more than (the) reality of what those departments actually mean,” Lindsay observed.

Local officials echoed demands from voters who have shown up at town halls asking their members of Congress to push back against cuts. In an emailed statement, Rep. Dusty Johnson, R-S.D., said he understands the concerns but cited the federal debt as a need to, in his words, “right-size our government.”

Farming communities said they are stuck in a holding pattern due to downsizing within the U.S. Department of Agriculture, including conservation grants.

Travis Entenman, executive director of the Northern Prairies Land Trust, which works with private landowners on projects, said in a “red” state, it is already hard to convince people to try out federal programs and he fears the funding dilemma will hinder progress.

“The uncertainty of it all, and the back and forth, and no one really knows what’s going on, makes it extra frustrating,” Entenman explained.

Entenman acknowledged not every farmer who applies for the grants gets one but added those who do have come to expect reliability in receiving funds as they work to make their farmland healthier and economically viable.

A federal judge ordered the Trump administration to “unfreeze” affected conservation grants, but Entenman and other South Dakota groups said they have yet to see evidence of money flowing again.