Tuesday,  February 26, 2013 • Vol. 14--No. 222 • 14 of 28 •  Other Editions

News from the

SD House panel endorses fight regulation bill
CHET BROKAW,Associated Press

• PIERRE, S.D. (AP) -- Despite Gov. Dennis Daugaard's opposition mixed martial arts events, a South Dakota House committee on Monday endorsed a bill that would create a state athletic commission to regulate boxing, kickboxing and mixed martial arts.
• Daugaard has said he opposes the bill because it would legitimize mixed martial arts fights, which he says are so violent they don't deserve to be called sport. But the Commerce and Energy Committee unanimously voted to send the bill to the full House.
• The Legislature passed a similar law in 2009, but that expired last year because former Gov. Mike Rounds and Daugaard never appointed any commissioners. Daugaard has said the previous measure was flawed because appointed commissioners could have been personally liable if the commission was sued.
• However, the governor's legal counsel, Jim Seward, told the committee that Daugaard has pledged to appoint the commission if the Legislature passes this year's bill over his objections, as long as the bill includes a change made Monday at the governor's suggestion. That change would require the governor to appoint the commission's five members. A version passed earlier by the Senate would have allowed legislative leaders to appoint four of five.
• Seward said he does not know whether the governor would veto the measure, which would require a two-thirds vote in both legislative chambers to pass it over Daugaard's objections. If the Legislature passes the bill, the governor also could sign it or let it take effect without his signature.
• "He still opposes it," Seward said.
• Daugaard a month ago blasted the bill, saying it's "absurd and ridiculous" to call mixed martial arts a sport.
• "The way one wins in those contests is by beating up your opponent, bloodying them, kicking, scratching, punching," the Republican governor said in January. "I don't support in any fashion anything the state would do to legitimize this kind of behavior. I think it's a sad commentary on what our culture allows in some areas."
• But supporters of the bill said Monday that a commission is needed to oversee boxing, kickboxing and mixed martial arts because unregulated professional

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