The Argus Leader just won a boatload of awards. You're going to want to read this.

Representatives of the Argus Leader team, from left, Morgan Matzen, Alfonzo Galvan, Erin Woodiel, Annie Todd and Cory Myers at the South Dakota Newspaper Association banquet in Mitchell on Friday.
Representatives of the Argus Leader team, from left, Morgan Matzen, Alfonzo Galvan, Erin Woodiel, Annie Todd and Cory Myers at the South Dakota Newspaper Association banquet in Mitchell on Friday.

Editor's Note: There is proud celebrating, bordering on bragging, and an ask to subscribe ahead. Continue at your own risk.

The Argus Leader won 29 awards at the South Dakota Newspaper Association's annual "Better Newspapers" contest. The winners were announced Friday at the group's convention in Mitchell.

Among the highlights were wins in Public Service reporting, Freedom of Information project, Best Use of Social Media and Digital Advertising. The Argus competed against all daily newspapers in South Dakota and was judged by journalists from the Washington (State) Newspaper Publishers Association.

We also placed first in the daily Sweepstakes award, based on total points accumulated from individual awards earned. It's the equivalent of a team winning an overall track meet: After medals in each individual discipline are awarded, the team (or in this case, news operation) with the most points wins.

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Below is exactly the breadth of journalism, community coverage and storytelling that only the Argus Leader provides in our city and region. Take a scroll and some clicks through the awards below, and then swing on back here to THIS LINK to start subscribing. Only $1 for six months right now (or if you wait for the pop-up ad, you'll get $49 for an entire year!).

I'm so proud of the work we do, and the team that does it. On to the awards.

Here is the full list of SDNA awards the Argus Leader won:

Sweepstakes:

First place - Staff

Freedom of Information project:

First place - Staff

Series: Child pornography, secret court proceedings and the ‘implicated individual’

The Argus Leader spent the majority of 2021 (and more than a year, total) under a gag order, attending secret, unpublicized court proceedings and eventually at the South Dakota Supreme Court fighting for access to public records in the federal child pornography investigation of our state’s most prominent businessman and philanthropist, Forbes’ global billionaire list’s T. Denny Sanford.

A four-state investigation yielded multiple search warrants, which the Argus Leader tried to obtain, but were sealed.

After winning access to this public information at the state Supreme Court, we are still fighting. We are in court for the underlying police affidavits that sparked the investigations, as well as to find out if this investigation is even still ongoing, and what this case means for a region and city who sees this man's namesake everywhere, from our dominant health care system, Sanford Health to Sioux Falls’ main concert and athletics venue, the T. Denny Sanford Events Center.

The Argus Leader regularly, annually, fights these kinds of battles, though this was unprecedented.

Public Service award:

First place - Staff

Story: Secret votes on Attorney General Impeachment

When lawmakers hold a special legislative session in the state of South Dakota, the votes that trigger it are allowed to be kept secret.

Or at least they were until the Argus Leader got involved.

More than two-thirds of members of both the House and Senate last fall submitted petitions to chamber leadership calling for a special session to conduct hearings related to the impeachment of Attorney General Jason Ravnsborg, who killed a pedestrian with his car in September 2020. But when asked to make copies of the signed petitions public, both House Speaker Spencer Gosch and the Legislative Research Council denied the request.

Speaker of the House Spencer Gosch is sworn in on Tuesday, January 12, in the House of Representatives at the South Dakota State Capitol in Pierre.
Speaker of the House Spencer Gosch is sworn in on Tuesday, January 12, in the House of Representatives at the South Dakota State Capitol in Pierre.

Gosch said individual lawmakers are free to share with their constituents, the press and general public if they signed a petition in support of a special session, but nothing in law, he argued, requires a comprehensive list of petition signers or the petitions themselves be made publicly available.

That explanation ignored the reality that the petitions are an act of the state legislature prompting Legislative action. And it would require any interested party in the future to contact 105 lawmakers individually to find out who supported a special session and who didn’t.

That prompted litigation to force the petitions to be turned over. But before the matter was resolved in court, the Legislature’s executive board put in policy that special session petitions – whether related to the impeachment of Ravnsborg or any other subject - are part of public record.

So whether today, tomorrow or 20 years from now, and regardless of lawmakers' ability (if deceased) or willingness to share publicly how they voted on holding special sessions, there will be a public record thanks to the Argus Leader and the good sense of legislative leaders who bucked their own House Speaker. We are also still pursuing getting actual statute changed in addition.

Outstanding Young Journalist:

Erin Woodiel portrait
Erin Woodiel portrait

Erin Woodiel.

From the nomination letter:

"As with any 'of the year' discussion, Erin’s nomination comes with far more than skill at her craft. She is thoughtful, eager and kind. The sort of colleague and friend that energizes a team and makes the difficult work of being a journalist just a little bit easier knowing she’s on your side.

At this point in my tenure at the Argus Leader, I’ve worked with dozens of young journalists (and plenty of them photographers), and it’s a rare few that could hold a candle to Erin Woodiel." - Cory Myers, news director.

Spot News Photo:

First place - Erin Woodiel

Jaylee Fallis and L. In The Woods march with a sign that reads "Let us learn our history" during a demonstration through the rainy streets of Pierre on Monday, September 13. More than 200 marchers walked, drummed and rode horses to demand Indigenous history education for all after the Dept. of Education removed more than a dozen references to the Oceti Sakowin before releasing proposed social studies standards a month ago.

Government Reporting:

First place - Morgan Matzen

Story: 'Left to rumors and nothing': South Dakota's privacy laws keep families in the lurch about teacher discipline

Third place - Makenzie Molnar

Story: South Dakota lacks consumer protection laws for used car sales. Here's what to know before you buy.

News Series:

First place - Makenzie Molnar and Alfonzo Galvan

Story: Smithfield spent millions on COVID-19 precautions. A year later, workers say it's not enough.

Second place - Morgan Matzen

Story: South Dakota DOE removed Indigenous topics from social studies standards before final draft

Sports Columns:

First place - Michael McCleary for a collection of columns, including: De Smet's Kalen Garry scores 87 points, hits game-winner and creates national headlines in whirlwind week

Second place - Matt Zimmer for columns including this ode to John Madden after his passing.

Sports Photo:

First place - Erin Woodiel for O'Gorman track exhaustion

O'Gorman's Mahli Abdouch collapses onto a fence while her team celebrates behind her after the 4x400 meter relay at the class AA State track and field meet on Saturday, May 29, at Woodle Field in Sturgis, South Dakota. A .01 second difference in that final race left O'Gorman and Brandon Valley tied for the team title with 124 points apiece.
O'Gorman's Mahli Abdouch collapses onto a fence while her team celebrates behind her after the 4x400 meter relay at the class AA State track and field meet on Saturday, May 29, at Woodle Field in Sturgis, South Dakota. A .01 second difference in that final race left O'Gorman and Brandon Valley tied for the team title with 124 points apiece.

Sports Reporting:

First place - Michael McCleary for how Tea Area became a football powerhouse

Sports Series:

First place - Brian Haenchen for ‘Season of Sacrifices’: The unseen toll of COVID-19 for high school athletes on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation

Second place - Matt Zimmer for amateur baseball project.

Third place - Alfonzo Galvan for his Little League World Series coverage.

Best Use of Social Media:

First place - Staff

Best Website:

First place - Staff

Best Special Issue:

First place - Staff

Best Typography/Design:

First place - Staff

Digital Advertising:

First place - Staff

General Excellence:

Second place - Staff

Feature Profile Story:

Second place - Erin Woodiel - ‘We are your neighbors’: How does it feel to be transgender or nonbinary in South Dakota?

Local Column:

Second place - Perspectives writing group, an ongoing series of columns from South Dakota's African American, Latinx, Indigenous, South Asian, immigrant and refugee communities.

Third place - Jonathan Ellis for a series of columns, including: Kristi Noem's aggression at ousting Ravnsborg may have backfired

Spot News Story:

Third place - Annie Todd and Alfonzo Galvan for Police shoot and kill man after domestic violence incident.

Feature Series:

Third place - Staff for Food Taste Tests

Burritos: Best express burrito in Sioux Falls? It's not Chipotle. And it's not Giliberto's.

Pizza: What's the best pizza in Sioux Falls? You'll have to go off the main roads for this neighborhood slice

Chislic: The best chislic in Sioux Falls? It's from a bar that apparently not enough of you know about

Feature (Non-profile):

Third place - Makenzie Molnar for 'It kind of breaks my heart': As Sioux Falls swallows up urban farmsteads, these are the last holdouts

Photo Series:

Third place - Erin Woodiel for Tribes welcome remains of Rosebud children back to South Dakota.

This article originally appeared on Sioux Falls Argus Leader: Argus Leader Wins South Dakota Newspaper Association Awards 2021