South DakotaVoteScope
Mark Lapka
Mark Lapka

Sen. Mark Lapka on

Business & Regulation

27 bills voted on

Votes

SB 221Voted Yes

Sets rules for selling nicotine products with penalties for violations.

This bill creates new regulations for vapor products (e-cigarettes) in South Dakota by: (1) restricting ingredients to only vegetable glycerin, propylene glycol, food-grade flavoring, and nicotine, with limits on toxic substances like vitamin E acetate, arsenic, cyanide, and diacetyl; (2) requiring child-resistant packaging and ingredient labeling with nicotine warnings; (3) prohibiting marketing that targets minors through cartoons, celebrities, or gaming themes; (4) restricting advertising on exteriors, billboards, and digital media; (5) banning marketing on platforms without age controls or that appeal to under-21 audiences; and (6) prohibiting free samples. Violations are Class 2 misdemeanors.

Passed2/24/2026
SB 119Voted Yes

Creates a fund to pay for capitol building repairs and renovations.

This bill appropriates $101 from the general fund to the state for the vague purpose of 'enhancing the economic health of South Dakota.' The bill includes standard appropriation language for voucher approval, warrant drawing, and fund reversion procedures, with an effective date of June 30, 2026.

Passed2/24/2026
HB 1134Voted No

Provides funding for economic development in South Dakota.

This bill appropriates $101 from the general fund to the state for the purpose of economic development prosperity of South Dakota. The bill includes standard appropriation procedures for voucher approval, warrant drawing, and reversion of unexpended funds, with an effective date of June 30, 2026.

3/9/2026
SB 49Voted Yes

Protects people's genetic data privacy with civil penalties for violations.

This bill creates comprehensive privacy and security regulations for direct-to-consumer genetic testing companies operating in South Dakota. It requires companies to provide clear privacy policies, obtain express consent for data collection and sharing, implement security programs to protect genetic data, provide consumer access and deletion rights, and allow consent revocation. The Attorney General can impose civil penalties up to $5,000 per violation. The law exempts healthcare entities, educational institutions, forensic labs, and research entities operating under federal guidelines.

Passed3/9/2026
HB 1135Voted No

Provides funding to boost South Dakota's economy.

This bill appropriates $101 from the general fund to the state for the purpose of enhancing South Dakota's economic health. The bill includes standard appropriation procedures for voucher approval, warrant drawing, and reversion of unexpended funds, with an effective date of June 30, 2026.

3/9/2026
HB 1215Voted Yes

Allows cities and counties to issue licenses for cigar bars.

This bill authorizes counties and municipalities to issue licenses for cigar bars that allow smoking cigars on premises despite general smoking bans. Counties can approve one cigar bar license outside municipal boundaries, while municipalities can approve one license plus one additional license for every 25,000 residents. Licensed cigar bars must have a humidor, be enclosed with proper ventilation, hold certain alcohol licenses, and generate at least 10% of gross income from cigar sales. The establishments are exempt from general smoking prohibitions but can only allow cigars (ring gauge 40+) purchased on-premises.

Passed3/9/2026
HB 1220Voted Yes

Regulates the sale of nicotine and vaping products.

This bill creates a comprehensive licensing and regulatory framework for retailers selling nicotine products in South Dakota. It requires retailers to obtain annual licenses ($1,000 fee), prohibits sales within 1,000 feet of schools, bans online sales and vending machines, establishes detailed record-keeping requirements, mandates regular inspections, and creates an escalating penalty structure ranging from $500 fines to license revocation for violations.

Passed3/5/2026
HB 1299Voted Yes

Allows hotels to use biological filters in their pools and hot tubs.

This bill creates a new permit system allowing small lodging establishments (15 or fewer sleeping rooms) to use biological filtration systems in their water recreational facilities. These systems filter water using natural processes like plants, bacteria, and microbes without continuous chemical disinfectants. The Department of Health must issue annual permits, conduct yearly inspections, and establish rules for applications, maintenance requirements, water quality testing, and fees (capped at $50). Establishments that fail inspections lose their permits and cannot reapply for one year.

Passed3/5/2026
HB 1180Voted Yes

Makes non-compete agreements enforceable for jointly owned businesses.

This bill creates a new law allowing business entities to include non-compete agreements in their governing documents or ownership transfer contracts. The non-compete provisions can prevent former owners from engaging in the same or similar business within the entity's geographic area for up to three years after transferring their ownership interest.

Passed3/4/2026
HB 1048Voted No

Funds expansion of high-speed internet infrastructure.

This bill appropriates $87,000,000 in federal fund expenditure authority to the Governor's Office of Economic Development for providing grants to expand broadband infrastructure in South Dakota under the federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment program. The bill includes standard provisions for voucher approval by the commissioner, warrant drawing by the state auditor, reversion of unexpended funds, and declares an emergency for immediate implementation.

Passed3/4/2026
HB 1286Voted Yes

Changes how money is distributed from the state's employer investment fund.

This bill restructures the 'Employer's Investment in South Dakota's Future Fund' by: (1) transferring administration to the Governor's Office of Economic Development, (2) defining eligible projects as research, scholarships, workforce development, infrastructure, business retention/expansion, and worker recruitment, (3) requiring business plans for business applicants, (4) limiting awards to reimbursement of actual costs with itemized invoices required for awards over $1 million, (5) requiring detailed recommendations and public posting of agreements, (6) changing reporting from biannual to annual with expanded reporting requirements to multiple legislative committees, and (7) requiring rulemaking for application processes, criteria, and performance standards.

Passed3/3/2026
SB 111Voted Yes

Requires social media companies to hand over your personal data when you ask for it.

This bill requires large social media companies (over 500,000 monthly users) to provide users with copies of their personal data in portable formats and to implement interoperability interfaces that allow users to share data between platforms and enable third-party access with user consent. It establishes data security requirements and mandates use of open protocols for data sharing between social media services.

Passed2/17/2026
HB 1194Voted Yes

Lets work experience count toward education requirements for out-of-state cosmetology licenses.

This bill requires the South Dakota Cosmetology Commission to credit work experience toward educational hour requirements for out-of-state licensure applicants whose licenses are not equivalent to South Dakota licenses. The commission must credit two hours of work experience as one hour of education, with work experience limited to no more than half of required education hours. The bill also removes the commission's rulemaking authority over work experience credit amounts and establishes specific procedures for documentation and safety course requirements.

Passed3/2/2026
SB 239Nay · Amended

Changes rules for businesses getting tax breaks through the state's economic development program.

This bill modifies South Dakota's reinvestment payment program by: (1) changing filing deadlines for reinvestment payment affidavits from 6 months after project completion to annually by June 30th, (2) adding tax exemptions for data centers and other approved projects from sales and use taxes, (3) removing the reinvestment payment program from the reinvestment payment fund while keeping the new frontiers payment program, and (4) repealing the section requiring GOED to make payments within 90 days of receiving completed affidavits.

Passed2/23/2026
SB 120Voted Yes

Provides funding for economic development projects in South Dakota.

This bill appropriates $101 from the general fund to the state for economic development purposes in South Dakota. The bill includes standard appropriation language for voucher approval, warrant drawing, reversion procedures for unspent funds, and sets an effective date of June 30, 2026.

Passed2/24/2026
SB 121Voted Yes

Provides emergency funding to replace the Richmond Lake dam and spillway.

This bill appropriates $101 from the general fund to the state for developing South Dakota's economic viability. The appropriation includes standard provisions for voucher approval, warrant drawing by the state auditor, reversion of unexpended funds, and becomes effective June 30, 2026.

Passed2/24/2026
SB 110Voted Yes

Restricts how internet providers can use and share your personal data.

This bill creates comprehensive data privacy regulations for broadband internet service providers in South Dakota. It defines customer personal information broadly (including communications content, personal identifiers, financial info, health info, location data, etc.), requires opt-in consent before providers can use/sell/disclose this data, establishes exceptions for service provision and emergencies, mandates security measures to protect customer data, requires customer notifications about data practices, and gives customers rights to access their data. Providers cannot charge different prices based on consent decisions.

Passed2/20/2026
HB 1201Voted Yes

Allows school booster clubs to run bingo games and raffles for fundraising.

This bill expands the list of organizations authorized to conduct bingo games, lotteries, and use pull-tab devices by adding 'booster clubs' to the existing categories. It reformats the existing law from a paragraph structure to a numbered list format, and clarifies that mechanical pull-tab dispensing devices can be used at establishments not owned by the authorized organization as long as the proceeds go to the authorized organization.

Passed2/18/2026
SB 98Voted Yes

Prevents fraud at cryptocurrency ATMs.

This bill creates comprehensive regulation of virtual currency kiosks (cryptocurrency ATMs) by requiring operators to be licensed under existing money transmission laws. It establishes transaction limits ($1,000 daily, $10,000 monthly), caps fees at 3% per transaction, mandates fraud protection disclosures, requires full refunds to fraud victims within specific timeframes, and imposes detailed reporting requirements on operators including suspicious activity reports and complaint tracking.

Passed2/17/2026
SB 227Voted Yes

Sets minimum damage amounts before insurance can declare a car totaled.

This bill establishes a minimum 75% damage threshold for motor vehicle total loss declarations. It prohibits insurers from declaring a vehicle a total loss unless repair costs meet or exceed 75% of the vehicle's actual cash value before damage. The bill allows exceptions when the vehicle owner provides express written authorization for total loss declaration below the 75% threshold. It also defines 'actual cash value' as current market value within 200 miles of the owner's address, considering year/make/model, accessories, deterioration, odometer reading, and accident history.

Passed2/17/2026
HB 1058Voted Yes

Requires licenses for online betting on horse and dog races.

This bill regulates online pari-mutuel wagering (betting) on horse and dog races by requiring only licensed multi-jurisdictional totalizator hubs to operate online betting platforms in South Dakota. It establishes tax obligations for both in-state and out-of-state operators, with out-of-state operators taxed based on contributions from South Dakota residents. The bill also updates federal law references and makes minor grammatical changes to existing racing statutes.

Passed2/6/2026
HB 1029Voted Yes

Updates rules for addiction counselors and prevention services.

This bill revises South Dakota's addiction counseling and prevention services regulation by expanding practitioner definitions to include new categories (addiction counselor supervisees, prevention specialist supervisees, peer support specialists and their trainees/supervisees), reorganizing board duties to focus on competency and public safety, establishing new rulemaking authority for education/examination/practice standards, setting specific fees for various certifications and renewals, expanding title protection to cover all new practitioner categories, allowing reciprocity for out-of-state licensed practitioners, and strengthening regulatory oversight of addiction treatment professionals.

Passed2/5/2026
SB 100Voted Yes

Updates the rules for managing trusts.

This bill creates new trust provisions allowing trustees to reimburse trustors for personal income tax liability when the trustor is treated as the trust owner under federal tax law. It prohibits using life insurance cash value or loan proceeds for such reimbursements, includes liability protection for trustees making reimbursement decisions, and modifies existing trust decanting provisions with updated federal tax code references.

Passed2/4/2026
HB 1028Voted Yes

Requires background checks for social workers who want to practice in multiple states.

This bill establishes criminal background check requirements for social workers seeking multistate licenses under the social work licensure compact. It requires applicants to submit fingerprints for state and federal background checks, pay associated fees, and allows the board to consider criminal history information when determining whether to issue a multistate license. The board cannot issue a multistate license before receiving the background check results.

Passed2/4/2026
HCR HCR6004Voted Yes

Encourages businesses to accept cash payments.

This concurrent resolution encourages South Dakota citizens to use physical cash in transactions whenever possible and to support businesses that offer cash discounts. It also encourages businesses to offer discounts for cash payments. The resolution cites benefits including privacy protection, reduced transaction fees for businesses, keeping money in-state, inclusion of unbanked populations, and disaster resilience.

Failed1/28/2026
SB 14Voted Yes

Updates pharmacy practice regulations.

This bill modifies South Dakota pharmacy practice laws by: (1) adding a definition for 'pharmacist-in-charge' as a pharmacist designated to assume full legal responsibility for all professional and facility operations; (2) changing Board of Pharmacy rulemaking from discretionary ('may') to mandatory ('shall') for various pharmacy regulations; (3) expanding pharmacy licensing to allow non-pharmacist owners if they delegate pharmaceutical services responsibility to a pharmacist-in-charge through an affidavit; (4) allowing part-time pharmacy licenses for hospitals and nursing facilities with similar ownership and delegation requirements; and (5) authorizing the Board to create rules for remote drop sites.

Passed1/27/2026
SB 9Voted No

Updates rules for notifying utilities before digging.

This bill revises the timing calculations for one-call notification requirements for excavation projects. It clarifies that the 48-hour notice period begins at 12:01 a.m. the day after notice is submitted (excluding weekends and holidays), and establishes that operators must mark underground facilities within either 48 hours of receiving notice or by the excavation start time, whichever is later. The bill also makes minor formatting changes to existing language about clearance requirements and hand digging near marked facilities.

Passed1/22/2026