Steve Kolbeck

Steve Kolbeck
Member of the South Dakota Senate
from the 2nd district
Incumbent
Assumed office
January 10, 2023
Preceded byBrock Greenfield
Member of the South Dakota Public Utilities Commission
In office
2006–2011
Succeeded byKristie Fiegen
Personal details
Political partyRepublican
Children4
EducationMitchell Technical College (AAS)
South Dakota State University (BS)

Steve Kolbeck is an American politician serving as a member of the South Dakota Senate for the 2nd district.[1] Elected in November 2022, he assumed office on January 10, 2023.[1]

Education

Kolbeck earned an associate of applied science degree in telecommunications from Mitchell Technical College and a Bachelor of Science degree from South Dakota State University.[2]

Career

Kolbeck was elected to the South Dakota Public Utilities Commission in November 2006 and served until 2011. He was also a member of the Brandon City Council.[3] Outside of politics, he is a principal manager at Xcel Energy.[4] Kolbeck was elected to the South Dakota Senate in November 2022 and assumed office on January 10, 2023.[5]

References

  1. ^ a b Staff (2023-11-17). "Soukup honored with Spirit of Sioux Falls Award". SiouxFalls.Business. Retrieved 2023-12-08.
  2. ^ "Steve Kolbeck's Bio". puc.sd.gov. Retrieved 2023-01-28.
  3. ^ "SD State Legislative Candidate Survey: Steve Kolbeck". Dakota New Now. 2 June 2022. Retrieved 2023-01-28.
  4. ^ "National Guard joins response to 'unprecedented' storms; governor declares emergency". SDPB. 2022-05-13. Retrieved 2023-01-28.
  5. ^ "Steve Kolbeck". Ballotpedia. Retrieved 2023-01-28.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Members of the South Dakota Senate
South Dakota Legislature (2023–present)
President of the Senate
Larry Rhoden (R)
President pro tempore
Lee Schoenbeck (R)
Majority Leader
Casey Crabtree (R)
Minority Leader
Reynold Nesiba (D)
  1. Michael Rohl (R)
  2. Steve Kolbeck (R)
  3. Al Novstrup (R)
  4. John Wiik (R)
  5. Lee Schoenbeck (R)
  6. Herman Otten (R)
  7. Tim Reed (R)
  8. Casey Crabtree (R)
  9. Brent "B.R." Hoffman (R)
  10. Liz Larson (D)
  11. Jim Stalzer (R)
  12. Arch Beal (R)
  13. Jack Kolbeck (R)
  14. Larry Zikmund (R)
  15. Reynold Nesiba (D)
  16. Jim Bolin (R)
  17. Sydney Davis (R)
  18. Jean Hunhoff (R)
  19. Kyle Schoenfish (R)
  20. Joshua Klumb (R)
  21. Erin Tobin (R)
  22. David Wheeler (R)
  23. Bryan Breitling (R)
  24. Jim Mehlhaff (R)
  25. Tom Pischke (R)
  26. Shawn Bordeaux (D)
  27. Red Dawn Foster (D)
  28. Ryan Maher (R)
  29. Dean Wink (R)
  30. Julie Frye-Mueller (R)
  31. Randy Deibert (R)
  32. Helene Duhamel (R)
  33. David Johnson (R)
  34. Michael Diedrich (R)
  35. Mike Walsh (R)