It was last November that South Dakota launched the "Meth, We're On It" campaign.
Gov. Kristi Noem said, "What it's talking about is that each one of us, no matter who we are, that we're on the case of meth. That we're protecting our family, we're protecting our friends, we're protecting our communities from this epidemic that we see."
Thirteen people in the state died from meth overdoses in 2018. There were 73 overdose deaths overall in South Dakota in 2017, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Drug deaths were not in the state's top 10 leading causes of death that year.
In 2018, the state with the lowest age-adjusted drug overdose death rates was South Dakota (6.9).
In 2016, the most recent year for which the Department of Social Services has data, there were 2,687 arrests for meth possession in the state.
When new COVID numbers were released on Aug. 29, it was another terrible day for South Dakota; 167 COVID deaths, 2,428 active cases and 12,942 total cases. All-time highs.
Drug-overdose deaths in South Dakota:
2017: 73