CLINICAL TRIALS MEAN $394 MILLION BOOST TO NEBRASKA'S ECONOMY, TREATMENTS FOR NEBRASKANS

OMAHA - Clinical research sponsored by the pharmaceutical industry produced an estimated economic impact in the state of $394 million in 2017, according to a new report by the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, known as PhRMA.

Since 2004, nearly 3,000 clinical trials have been conducted in Nebraska, said Zachary Poss, senior manager for state advocacy with the industry group. Today, there are 326 industry-sponsored trials open at hospitals, clinics and other sites across the state serving more than 8,000 Nebraskans. They focus on drug treatments for conditions including cancer, arthritis and infectious diseases.

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NEW SPACE LEASES IN LINCOLN FOR TREATMENT OF PREVIOUS GENEVA, KEARNEY YOUTH

LINCOLN - The Lancaster County Board on Tuesday approved an agreement with the state to house some youths in a secure portion of the county's youth services center.

Both boys and girls sent by judges to Youth Rehabilitation and Treatment Centers who have more serious behavior and mental health issues could be sent to the Lincoln youth center beginning in January. The agreement includes a lease of the property for five years, with an option for another five years. Rent on 18,137 square feet will start at $352,946 annually, and will go up 2% in each subsequent lease year. If the lease is renewed another five years, rent beginning in the fifth year will be $389,583 and up to $421,697 by the 10th year. 

The space's pod is rimmed with single bedrooms on three sides, with a common area and outdoor recreation area. Staff at the YRTC facility will be state workers. There will be no mingling of the county and state youths. 

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EDITORIAL: STATE SHOULD STRIVE FOR A PRUDENT APPROACH TO CHILDREN'S MEDICAID ELIGIBILITY

LINCOLN - State governments have a basic obligation to set qualification requirements for public benefits. The task can be tricky. Nebraska officials have struggled to find the right threshold for Medicaid eligibility for children with disabilities, and this year concern arose when some children in that category lost coverage.

The policy debate continues, but a decision by the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services provides a measure of relief. Some children who lost coverage after requirements for their Medicaid waiver can be helped through a different waiver, one designed for people with developmental disabilities.

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FOURTEEN WORKERS DETAINED AFTER FEDERAL IMMIGRATION RAID IN MADISON, NEBRASKA

LINCOLN — Fourteen workers were detained for suspected immigration violations after a federal raid Wednesday morning at a Madison, Nebraska, facility that produces wood landscape mulch. A person who answered the phone at D&D Industries of Madison declined to comment when contacted by a reporter Wednesday.

But Nicole Alberico, a Chicago-based spokeswoman for the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, said 14 men — three from Guatemala and 11 from Mexico — were arrested during the operation at the business.

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LARGEST BOND SALE, REFINANCING IN NU HISTORY FREES UP $50M IN FACILITY FUNDING

LINCOLN - Investors gobbled up more than a half-billion dollars in bonds issued by the University of Nebraska earlier this month to fund new construction projects and refinance hundreds of millions of dollars in existing debt.

The $563 million issued — the largest bond sale in university history — will pay for $130 million in new projects and allow NU to refinance $433 million in existing bonds, capitalizing on historically low interest rates to slash debt payments by nearly $14 million.

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NEW PLAN FOR STATE'S YOUTH CENTERS WOULD INCLUDE PLACING HIGH-NEEDS GIRLS AND BOYS IN LINCOLN

LINCOLN - A new plan for girls and boys who need placement in state Youth Rehabilitation and Treatment Centers will include the Lancaster County Youth Services Center.

State Department of Health and Human Services CEO Dannette Smith announced Monday that she has developed a new plan that would house girls and boys at Kearney, girls and boys with more trauma and behavioral health issues at the Lancaster County center and a small number of girls at Geneva who are getting ready to leave treatment and go back to their communities and schools.

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NEBRASKA'S UNEMPLOYMENT RATE STAYS AT 3.1 PERCENT

LINCOLN — Nebraska’s unemployment rate held steady at 3.1 percent again in September, matching the August and July figures, the state said Friday. The preliminary September rate was four-tenths of a point higher than the adjusted September 2018 rate of 2.7 percent, the Nebraska Labor Department said in a news release.

The new Nebraska rate is well below September’s national preliminary rate of 3.5 percent, which is down two-tenths of a point from the August 2019 rate of 3.7 percent, which also was the September 2018 rate.

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REGENTS COULD NAME NEXT NU PRESIDENT ON FRIDAY

LINCOLN - The last search by the University of Nebraska Board of Regents to hire a system leader involved nine months of headhunting, private meetings and public interviews before Hank Bounds was nominated as president.

In the effort to find Bounds' successor — NU's seventh president announced in March he would step down, and the search began in April — regents appear ready to complete the task in about six months. Tuesday, the eight-person board charged with governing the university added an agenda item to its Friday meeting, allowing for regents to potentially nominate a priority candidate.

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SAN JOSE TO PROPOSE TURNING PG&E INTO GIANT CUSTOMER-OWNED UTILITY

SAN JOSE - Frustrated by PG&E Corp.’s California blackouts and its existing options for exiting bankruptcy, the mayor of the state’s third-biggest city is proposing something radically different: turn the company into the nation’s largest customer-owned utility.

San Jose hopes to persuade other California cities and counties in coming weeks to line up behind the plan, which would strip PG&E of its status as an investor-owned company and turn it into a nonprofit electric-and-gas cooperative, Mayor Sam Liccardo said in an interview.

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MEDICAID PAYMENT METHODOLOGY FOR NURSING HOMES GETS REDESIGNED

KEARNEY- Medicaid and long–term care payment methodology for nursing homes is being redesigned and has a goal of implementation in July of 2020. The new payment methodology for nursing home facilities will create payment equity and incentivize quality and efficiency.

By modernizing the payment method, Nebraska Medicaid believes Medicaid beneficiaries should have a better quality of care and a more stable provider network. Today's current Medicaid appropriation system is based on each individual nursing home facility and their costs per day.

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LAST MINUTE OPIOID DEAL COULD OPEN DOOR TO BIGGER SETTLEMENT

CLEVELAND—A $260 million late-night settlement between four drug companies and two Ohio counties averted a trial here over who is to blame for the opioid crisis, clearing the way for broader talks aimed at resolving thousands of opioid-addiction cases nationwide.

Lawyers for the plaintiffs and companies said the settlement could be an important step toward a multibillion-dollar deal that brings closure to 2,500 lawsuits and sends needed money to communities hard-hit by opioid addiction.

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FORMER NEBRASKA SEN. BEN NELSON TALKS ABOUT TRUMP, PARTISANSHIP AND WHY HE LEFT POLITICS

OMAHA- Former Governor and U.S. Senator Ben Nelson is back home in Omaha, busy, engaged and visibly contented. He recently was named the CEO of Florida-based Insurance Care Direct, one of the nation's largest health and life insurance agencies, and he's an attorney in the Lamson Dugan & Murray law firm headquartered on Regency Parkway Drive not far from his home. And he's writing a book about the Senate and his time there. 

His publisher wants it on the market in 2020 in the midst of an electric presidential election year.

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MORE POWER NEEDED: OPPD PLANS TO BUILD NEBRASKA'S LARGEST SOLAR FARM, PLUS NATURAL GAS PLANTS

OMAHA - Omaha’s electric utility plans to build Nebraska’s largest solar power farm as part of a broader green power initiative.

The Omaha Public Power District board will vote as early as Nov. 14 to seek bids to produce 400 to 600 megawatts of solar power, officials said Tuesday.

That would be roughly double the size of the state’s largest solar installation announced to date, a 230-megawatt, $230 million project proposed east of Lincoln by Ranger Power.

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STRONG STATE TAX REVENUE REPORT RENEWS CALLS FOR PROPERTY TAX RELIEF IN NEBRASKA

LINCOLN — Gov. Pete Ricketts renewed his call for property tax relief Tuesday after state tax revenues topped projections for a seventh month in a row.

“Our budget is set for the next two years, and higher-than-expected revenues have flowed into our cash reserve,” he said. “This trend of healthy revenues is setting the state up to do significant property tax relief in the upcoming legislative session.”

The Department of Revenue released a report Tuesday showing that the state collected $76.5 million more in taxes than had been forecast for July 1 through Sept. 30.

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PETITION DRIVE LAUNCHES TO CAP PAYDAY LOAN LENDING RATES AT 36% IN NEBRASKA

LINCOLN — A petition drive to cap payday loan rates at 36% annual interest in Nebraska kicked off Tuesday in Lincoln.

Leaders with Nebraskans for Responsible Lending said they are trying to put a measure before voters in the November 2020 general election. They plan to begin gathering signatures soon.

“It’s time that something was done,” said former State Sen. Al Davis of Hyannis. “The Legislature has had ample opportunity to fix this problem and they haven’t done so, so now we’re going to go out and secure signatures and get this in place.”

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NEW FEDERAL FAMILY FIRST LAW COULD HELP NEBRASKA PREVENT CHILDREN FROM GOING INTO FOSTER CARE

LINCOLN — Nebraska hopes to be among the first states taking advantage of a new federal law aimed at keeping children out of foster care, officials said Thursday.

Dannette Smith, CEO of the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services, said the Family First Prevention Services Act breaks from 30 years of federal child welfare policy by putting the focus squarely on prevention services.

“Previously, federal funding for child welfare was largely available to states only after a child enters the foster care system,” she said. “Under Family First, states can utilize federal funds for programs that strengthen families and reduce the trauma that occurs when a child is removed from his or her home.”

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NU-LED OBESITY RESEARCH CENTER RECEIVES $11M MORE OF NIH FUNDING

LINCOLN - After launching five years ago, the Nebraska Center for the Prevention of Obesity Diseases is continuing to hone in on the molecular causes underlying Type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease and nonfatty liver disease.

The University of Nebraska-led center will continue its mission through the renewal of an $11 million grant from the National Institutes of Health's Center of Biomedical Research Excellence.

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NEBRASKANS PRIORITIZE HEALTH CARE, EDUCATION FUNDING IN ANNUAL PUBLIC OPINION SURVEY

LINCOLN - Nebraskans prioritized access to affordable health care, investments in K-12 and higher education, and property tax cuts in a public opinion poll conducted by the Holland Children's Institute.

Seven in 10 respondents to the survey ranked affordable and accessible health care as a top priority for state policymakers to pursue, according to the phone survey.

The delay until October 2020 to implement voter-approved Medicaid expansion, as well as potential restrictions on who would qualify for coverage, concerned 56% of the respondents, the results show.

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SARPY COUNTY DATA CENTERS HAVE $522 MILLION IMPACT STATEWIDE, UNL REPORT SHOWS

OMAHA - Business leaders in Nebraska take every available opportunity to refer to the state as the “Silicon Prairie,” a play on the term for Northern California’s cluster of big technology companies.

The idea behind the term — to bring those companies, and by extension, high-paying jobs and more money, into the state — is playing out in Sarpy County, which recently landed its eighth data center with Google’s $600 million announcement.

University of Nebraska-Lincoln researchers recently set out to determine how big an impact the data center industry has on the local economy, and their findings revealed some whopping figures.

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OMAHA MAYOR SAYS SHE SUPPORTS TAX ON VAPING PRODUCTS

OMAHA — Omaha's mayor says she supports a proposal to expand a tobacco tax to include vaping.

Mayor Jean Stothert said last week she would support the expansion for public health and tax fairness reasons.

Council President Chris Jerram has called for ending an exemption for nicotine delivery devices. The proposal would add a 3% tax on tobacco products to e-cigarettes and other vaping products.


The change would spur an estimated $1 million increase in the tobacco tax, which now raises about $3.5 million annually.

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