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Mike Rounds on Education

Republican SD Governor

 


Ban cell-cultivated meat from school breakfast & lunch

Senator Jon Tester introduced the School Lunch Integrity Act, a bipartisan bill with Senator Mike Rounds (R-S.D.) to ban cell-cultivated meat from being provided through the National School Lunch Program (NSLP) and the School Breakfast Program (SBP).

Currently, the USDA sets nutritional requirements for the meals that are able to be served to students through the NSLP and SBP, but has not issued any guidance on the use of cell-cultivated protein in those programs. Tester's bipartisan bill would fix the lack of standards by banning cell-cultivated meat from the programs.

"Our students should not be test subjects for cell-cultivated 'meat' experiments," said Senator Rounds. "With high quality, local beef readily available for our students, there's no reason to be serving fake, lab-grown meat products in the cafeteria. I'm pleased to introduce this bipartisan legislation that benefits South Dakota producers and protects students from the unknown effects of cell-cultivated 'meat' products."

Source: Senate press release on 2022 South Dakota Senate race , Jan 26, 2024

Voted for to confirm Betsy DeVos as Secretary of Education

Senator Mike Rounds will not be swayed by Senate Democrats and constituents looking to derail the nomination of Betsy DeVos as Secretary of Education. Rounds' office released the following statement: "He intends to support the nomination of Betsy DeVos because she understands the need to keep education decisions at the local level: with parents, teachers, school boards and students."
Source: Argus Leader on 2020 Soutah Dakota Senate race , Feb 6, 2017

Provide a quality education for our children

Source: 2006 Gubernatorial website, roundsforgov.com, "Issues" , Nov 7, 2006

Internet sales tax to raise education funding

Out-of-state companies make millions of dollars in sales in South Dakota over the Internet, but they avoid collecting sales tax. Fortunately, the South Dakota legislature has already approved a "fix" for this problem, enabling a smooth transition to Internet sales tax collection. The moratorium expires in 2003. Thus, we can conservatively expect to eliminate the on-going deficit, reduce property taxes by an additional 5%, and increase state aid to education by about $250 per child.
Source: 2002 Gubernatorial site, RoundsForGov.com, "Property Tax" , Oct 17, 2002

Participate in federal program Race to the Top.

Rounds signed Letter from 9 Governors to Secretary of Education Duncan

Our states need more time to properly evaluate the changes needed to resubmit our applications, as well as to engage in meaningful and collaborative discussions with our legislatures, our schools, our unions, and our communities. We need to make informed changes to our applications, whether in the area of evaluations, turnarounds, standards, or data collection. These changes will be stronger if they are informed by the comments of those who reviewed our initial application.

Therefore, we request that you considerably accelerate the timeline for release of peer reviewers` comments and scores from Phase One or extend the deadline to submit our Phase 2 application until July 1, 2010; so our states can continue the necessary hard work, without losing momentum, to reform education and apply for Race to the Top Phase Two. As Governors -- Republicans and Democrats alike -- we were proud to stand with President Obama, and with you, to bring about real systemic change in education through the Race to the Top competition. Under the first phase of competition, you saw forty states and the District of Columbia respond to your call. While only fifteen states and the District of Columbia were selected as finalists for Phase One, we all remain committed to pursuing necessary reforms to help ensure that our states` applications are competitive for the second phase of funding.

The finalists were announced on March 4, with applications for next round due less than 90 days later on June 1. You also announced that our comments and feedback on our applications would not be available until sometime in April, which would further reduce that already short timeline for meaningful course correction to fewer than 60 days.

Source: Letter from 9 Governors to Secretary of Education Duncan 100316-Gov on Mar 16, 2010

Other candidates on Education: Mike Rounds on other issues:
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Billie Sutton
Dusty Johnson
Jamie R. Smith
Jon Hansen
Kristi Noem
Larry Rhoden
Marty Jackley
Steven Haugaard
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John Thune

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