What's weird is that Rapid City, in the heart of Lakota country, has the lowest rate of COVID of any metro in the US, AFAICT. City around 75k, metro about 150k, and a total of 7 cases. I looked at comparable places like Missoula, Bismarck, Sioux Falls, Fort Collins, Grand Island, et al. Much higher numbers all of them. In Arizona, remote Apache County has 52 cases, with half the population of Rapid city metro. Martin County, MN, has 35 cases with a population of only 20k, and is more off the beaten path than RCSD.
If anyone finds a lower rate than RCSD for a comparable sized metro, please let me know. It's mystifying, considering we're on a major interstate, regional hub, and get some winter tourism. We are near reservations with many families living in close quarters and having short water supplies (though not as short on water as the Navajo).
Pine Ridge rez, and Standing Rock rez have each had one case. Same for Rosebud.
So I'm wondering if this is just a matter of radically lower rates of testing. Or one of those statistical blips that just happen.