-
Charlie Nicole Cuny created Lakota Art Boxes, a free box full of art supplies, during the pandemic. She then mails or personally delivers them to families on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, where she lives.
-
In a new episode, elders remember land lost to "the bombing range," a 341,726 acre portion of the Pine Ridge Reservation that was seized by the Department of the Army during World War II.
-
Mniluzahan Okolakiciyapi Ambassadors worked with leadership of the Red Cloud Indian School to provide Rapid City leadership a tour of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.
-
The Indian Health Service transferred health care services over to the Great Plains Tribal Leaders Health Board.
-
Thunder Valley acquired 48 acres of land in Whiteclay, Nebraska, with the hopes of building an intentional, holistic healing community for Pine Ridge Tribal members.
-
The Oglala Sioux Tribe will soon receive a machine to help residents gain access to clean water. Watergen’s GEN-M device pulls humidity from the air and filters it. Depending on the climate, it can generate up to 233 gallons per day.
-
U.S. Interior Secretary Deb Haaland signaled her commitment to Indian Country with a Friday meeting in Rapid City involving leaders Leadership from 12 different Tribes in the Great Plains tribes.
-
Rosebud Sioux Tribe joins the Oglala Sioux Tribe and the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe to provide improved healthcare for eligible patients in Pennington County.
-
The Oglala Sioux Tribal Council voted to change the language of an educational ordinance that required students to take online classes.
-
The Oglala Lakota Tribal Council voted to close schools on the reservation citing a high level of COVID-19 cases. Students from Red Cloud Indian School protested the council’s decision.