COVID-19 CASES REPORTED IN MILLARD, GRETNA, RALSTON SCHOOL DISTRICTS

OMAHA- Two Millard elementary schools became the first to announce positive Coronavirus cases this school year. The children tested positive after going to school for a few days. In Gretna, a staff member tested positive. The teachers who came in contact with the staff member are in quarantine and have been replaced by substitutes. So far, no children at the Gretna school have tested positive for the virus. At Ralston, one child has been diagnosed. 

School officials from these districts have maintained that all people who were in contact with those who tested positive have been notified and the schools have been sanitized. 

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FIRST DAY AT OPS: SMOOTH SAILING FOR SOME, TECHNICAL ISSUES FOR OTHERS

OMAHA- OPS stands alone in the metro with their plan to teach and learn, they started the year completely remote. The teachers give their lessons in their classrooms on camera, but are missing the students as the children watch from computer screens at home. This remote learning comes after OPS spent $40 million on iPads for children that do not have access to Wi-Fi at home. 

Some students say they were surprised at how smooth the first day of class went. There were very few technological issues for some, which is a promising start to the semester. However, they wish they could be there in person.

Other students were not prepared to spend all day behind a screen. Elementary school children were very hard to keep engaged and some parents were not able to help because of language barriers or not being fluent in today's technology. Most of the days wrapped up with a virtual tour of the classroom, giving students hope that they will be back at school soon. 

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YOUNG PEOPLE ARE INCREASINGLY SPREADING CORONAVIRUS, WHO SAYS

WASHINGTON- Young people are now the reason behind the growing number of Covid-19 cases in the United States. The majority of the spread comes from those who show no symptoms and are not aware that they have the virus. According to a study, there are close to 30 million confirmed cases across the world, which is only growing. WHO's regional director states that now people between 20 and 40 years old are contracting the virus most. 

Scientists believe that there is a new phase of the pandemic. WHO's regional director states that now people between 20 and 40 years old are contracting the virus most. With the second-wave of the pandemic beginning after the opening of bars, clubs and schools, young people will continue to spread the virus to each other and more vulnerable groups of people. Some European countries have began to shut the bars and restaurants down again in order to stop young people from convening in public places. This came just days before American schools went back to on-campus instruction and living at a majority of institutions. 

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POOLED TESTING, ONCE PROMISING, IS FAILING IN THE U.S.

NEW YORK- Pooled testing is a decades-old way of testing that allows for surveillance of communities. Professionals believed the United States could have this set up before the country sent their students back to school in August, however that is not the case. Pooled testing in school communities was thought to be the best way to slow the spread in those condensed spaces. But this approach simply will not work in the U.S.. Why? Because there are too many cases that are spreading too quickly. 

How it works. The testing is only accurate when the majority of tests are negative. If the percentage of positive tests are too high, each person would need to get tested again, which wastes materials that the country is in need of already. 

Nebraska's public health laboratory was a trailblazer in pooled testing, however this practice was deemed inaccurate once the positivity rate got too high in late April. A doctor with the lab said that if the state, and country would have mandated masks and taken social distancing more seriously earlier, this form of testing would be incredibly useful for Nebraskans. 

However, in New York City where cases have been decreasing, pooled testing has come back to hospitals and other testing sites across the city. 

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MILLARD BOARD MEMBERS PRAISE TEACHERS FOR ANTI-VIRUS EFFORTS, TELL RESIDENTS TO 'DO YOUR PART'

MILLARD- Board Members for Millard Public Schools praised their teachers for allowing the kids to return to school and adapting to the changes that were enacted to keep everyone safe quickly. The school personnel is doing everything in their power to ensure no student gets the virus in their classroom. However, outside of the classroom is where it gets tricky. 

Over the weekend many Millard students took part in athletic competitions at multiple different locations. At these games, no one was social distancing or wearing masks. The President of the Board, Linda Poole, was shocked. These are the same people who pushed for their kids to be back at school in-person. Poole says that in order to keep kids at school, everyone needs to be doing their part in their everyday life to protect each other. 

Superintendent Jim Sutfin said throughout all of the uncertainty, he is proud of MPS for trying. 

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PARENTS SEEK SOLUTIONS FOR CHILD CARE ISSUES, AND THAT'S CRUCIAL FOR THE STATE'S ECONOMY

OMAHA- 70% of Nebraskan households have both parents working full-time. With the transition to mostly remote learning for the majority of school-aged children, it has left many parents stuck. Since the pandemic began, about a fourth of households have seen their income drop by over 50%. DHHS announced that childcare providers will now receive subsidies for the low-income children as long as remote-learning is happening. 

The collaborative effort of many government departments created a child care referral network in which providers are able to put all information in one place and have parents come to the site to find care providers. The service even allows for parents to require a certain language, higher care for a child with disabilities and more. 

The network is a huge relief for families rushing to find solutions for their families in this chaotic time. 

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COLLEGE RESIDENCE HALLS ARE MAKING CHANGES TO ADDRESS CORONAVIRUS, MANAGE STUDENTS WHO GET SICK

OMAHA- Colleges across Nebraska all have similar practices in place to protect their students from Covid-19. However, there are still different approaches being taken to fit each university's specific plans. 

At Creighton University, students living on campus should expect their temperature to be taken daily. UNL students are being limited to 1 to 2 people living in a dorm at a time. Creighton, UNL and Doane all have designated buildings for students to self-isolate in if they have tested positive for the virus. This includes meals and bathrooms as well. The way students are served meals will also look much different this fall. Dining halls will become ghost towns as students will really only have grab-and-go options available. These isolated rooms are also equipped with nurses that are prepared to help the students with more severe symptoms. 

Administrators from all of the state's schools are nervous but hopeful that their communities will be able to continue on-campus learning and living. 

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MASKLESS TESTIFIERS OPPOSE HEALTH DIRECTOR'S APPOINTMENT, BUT COUNCIL APPROVES HER ANYWAY

LINCOLN- Anti-mask protesters fled in to the Lincoln City Council meeting on Monday. The protesters were there to voice their disapproval of the rushed appointment of Pat Lopez to be the permanent Director of the County Health Department. Much of the disapproval of Lopez comes from disapproval of her action to mandate masks in Lincoln. The protesters believe the mandate was 'tyrannical'. 

The Lancaster County Attorney prompted the vote when he told the county commissioners that Lopez should be removed from the position as she was placed there illegally. Lopez has been holding this position as Interim Director since the summer of 2019. Council member's believe the mayor had the authority to hastily appoint Lopez especially because she was the only one being put up for the position. 

A notable testimony came from Benjamin Madsen, co-owner of Madsen's Bowling & Billiards. Madsen's had been shut down by Lopez over violations of the mask mandate earlier in the month. He believes the decision to appoint Lopez was rushed. 

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NAVY CHIEF PETTY OFFICER WHO WORKED AT STRATCOM CHARGED WITH LEAKING SECRETS TO RUSSIAN CONTACT

BELLEVUE- A Navy chief petty officer who formerly worked at U.S. Strategic Command faces court-martial in Virginia on charges that he leaked classified information to a Russian national, Navy officials disclosed Thursday.

Chief Petty Officer Charles T. Briggs served as an information systems technician at Offutt Air Force Base from April 2018 to July 2019, according to Navy documents. He has been held since August 2019 at a Navy brig in Virginia near his last duty station at Naval Medical Center Portsmouth.

Briggs is accused of sending an email containing classified information to a Russian national “with reason to believe the information could be used to injure the United States or benefit a foreign nation” while working at Offutt in January 2019, according to a charge sheet.

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NEBRASKA LEGISALTURE CLOSES UNPRECEDENTED SESSION WITH EMOTIONAL DEBATE AND BIG VOTES

LINCOLN — State legislators closed out a unique, coronavirus-interrupted session Thursday by passing a modest property tax relief bill and barely mustering the votes to adopt a ban on an abortion method.

Unlike most past sessions, there wasn’t a “soft landing” on the final day. Senators, including one fighting back tears, launched into an emotional debate that pitted personal liberties against the science of wearing face masks to fend off COVID-19.

It was somehow fitting — the final 17 days of the session were marked by angry exchanges and lectures to behave, at a tenor and volume not usually seen at the State Capitol. The session shut down in mid-March because of the coronavirus outbreak and resumed in late July with new safety practices and precautions.

But Gov. Pete Ricketts still made the traditional end-of-session appearance to thank senators for their work. This year, he highlighted the property tax bill, money for flood relief, a veterans tax cut, creation of a new career scholarship program and passage of the abortion method ban.

Thursday marked the final day on the legislative floor for State Sen. Ernie Chambers of Omaha, whose fiery speeches about racism and legendary procedural blockades of bills he hated often fomented frustration, discomfort and grumbling. Chambers, who is term-limited for a second time, has spent 46 years in the legislature.

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NEBRASKA LEGISLATURE TAKES ANTI-ABORTION BILL OVER FINISH LINE

LINCOLN- A bill that would stop D&E abortion procedures on a living fetus passed the last legislative hurtle Thursday. It will go to Gov. Pete Ricketts, who is expected to sign it into law. 

The bill (LB814) was stuck in committee after its hearing in February, and Lincoln Sen. Suzanne Geist, who introduced it, successfully moved to pull it from committee so it could be debated. Because of that, it came to the floor with no committee work or amendments, and so was passed as it was originally introduced. 

Omaha Sen. Megan Hunt, who led filibusters against the bill on all three levels of debate, continued to say the bill was given special treatment by Speaker Jim Scheer in scheduling. And she said Lt. Gov. Mike Foley, who presides over the Legislature and is an outspoken supporter of the bill, was allowed to run legislative strategy on it from the president's chair. 

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PEOPLE CELEBRATE TENURE OF SENATOR ERNIE CHAMBERS ON CAPITOL STEPS

LINCOLN- It was a surprise party that had to wait a few hours because the man to be celebrated was busy taking the last of his term-limited time to draw out voting on bills Thursday afternoon.

"Because I wasn't informed of this happening," Omaha Sen. Ernie Chambers told the group gathered on the north steps of the Capitol, "I was on the floor of the Legislature doing what it was my job to do."

Educating, slowing things down, offering up words of wisdom or criticism. On this his last day, his goal was to determine how things were going to go and say the things he wanted to say. Or to be like the death angel at Passover, and let a bill proceed without a visit from the spirit of extended debate. But when he finally showed up, they cheered, and shouted their love for the 46-year veteran of the Legislature. And held up thank-you signs and Fight for Justice signs. One man even had what appeared to be an old reelection sign that read: "Friends of North Omaha Support Ernie Chambers State Legislature."

Thank you, Senator Chambers,Senator Pansing Brooks said, for being true to you.

"You have been irascible, aggravating, impossible and mind-boggling. You have followed the mission of Finley Peter Dunne, a 1898 writer who suggested the need to 'comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable.' You have also been powerful, gentle, inspiring, compassionate, kind and, yes, loving. "In short, you have been exactly what Nebraska has needed for 46 years."

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MORE THAN 2,600 NEBRASKANS HAVE SIGNED UP FOR EXPANDED MEDICAID SO FAR

LINCOLN- More than 2,600 Nebraskans applied for health coverage during the first six days of enrollment for the state’s new Medicaid expansion program, officials with the Department of Health and Human Services said Friday.

As of Thursday, the department had received 2,692 applications, and more than 5,000 phone calls had been answered by Medicaid call centers from Saturday to Thursday, HHS officials said.Benefits under the new program, also known as Heritage Health Adult, will begin Oct. 1. The program covers working-age adults whose incomes fall below 138% of the federal poverty level — $17,609 for a single person or $36,156 for a family of four.

Most will be enrolled in the basic tier of services, which include physical and behavioral health care and prescription drugs.

Nebraska voters approved Medicaid expansion in the 2018 general election. State officials have taken more time implementing the new coverage than any other state. 

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SENATORS OFFER ADVICE AS THEY DEPART THE LEGISLATURE

LINCOLN- Senators gave eight years' worth of advice to their peers, and lots of thanks to family, staff and constituents. Sen. Ernie Chambers of Omaha, who is leaving after 46 years and two terms in this stretch, did not choose to do a speech. 

"So much of public service is choosing your words and choosing your battles," Senator Kate Bolz said, "but today, colleagues, I speak to you from my heart." "I want to leave you with this sincere request," she said. "Don't worship the false god of politics. Don't sacrifice at the altar of leverage. … And don't tell yourself that the ends justify the means and then ask yourself for forgiveness. We've seen too much of this. We've gone too far." 

Sen. Sue Crawford of Bellevue said a critical lesson she learned was to build as many personal relationships with as many senators as possible. Sen. Rick Kolowski of Omaha, who spent 41 years in an education career before coming to the Legislature, found joy this session in that former work by spending time with middle school students from Prairie Hill School on their climate change resolution.  Senator Howard asked for her fellow senators to be resilient, keep good humor, and to take care of themselves and each other.

Speaker Jim Scheer of Norfolk was the most emotional as he spoke to senators and thanked his wife and family. "It's been a wonderful eight years," he said.

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PROPOSAL WOULD SHIFT $2 MILLION FROM OMAHA POLICE BUDGET TO WORKFORCE, MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES

OMAHA- Omaha City Council President Chris Jerram has drafted an amendment to the proposed 2021 budget to take funds from the Police Department and allocate them to employment and health services. Jerram is suggesting that $2 million, or 1.2%, be taken from the Omaha Police Department’s proposed $161.3 million budget and given to other programming.

Under Jerram’s amendment, $500,000 would be given to Heartland Workforce Solutions and $1.5 million to community health and human services for “behavioral health counseling, mental health crisis diagnosis, treatment and response, mental/behavioral health rehabilitation services and other related treatment, housing, safety and support services.”

As proposed, the police budget would account for 36.7% of all day-to-day city spending in 2021. This year, the police budget was 37.9% of the entire city budget, Stothert said. Mayor Stothert and Police Chief Todd Schmaderer swiftly opposed Jerram’s proposal.

“President Jerram’s amendment compromises public safety and contradicts his longtime support for the Omaha Police Department and his belief that we need more police officers, not fewer,” she said.

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NEBRASKA LAWMAKERS APPROVE 'MICRO-TIF' OR HOMEOWNERS, EARLIER PAROLE ELIGIBILITY

LINCOLN- Nebraska lawmakers passed a final round of bills Thursday before adjourning for the year, including one that would allow homeowners to postpone an increase in property valuation for doing major remodeling projects. The bill passed 49-0.

Legislative Bill 1021 was introduced by State Sen. Mike Groene of North Platte, who dubbed it a “micro-TIF” measure. TIF, or tax-increment financing, has been used to encourage commercial redevelopment projects in the past. The mechanism allows developers to pay property taxes on the redevelopment valuation for a fixed number of years.

LB 1004, introduced by Sen. Steve Lathrop of Omaha, aims to help with the overcrowding of Nebraska prisons. Inmates now become eligible for parole when they have served half of their minimum sentence.The new bill would make them eligible to be considered for parole at whichever date is earlier. Inmates still would have to go before the Parole Board and win approval to be released.

Other measures include flood mitigation, and workforce housing

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COURT SAYS DAPL CAN STAY OPEN

A federal appeals court ruled Wednesday the Dakota Access Pipeline can keep shipping oil while the court hears arguments over whether the Trump administration failed to conduct a proper environmental review of the project. However, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit said it did not think the Army Corps of Engineers made a strong case that the district court had erred in an underlying ruling that it should complete an environmental review of the pipeline's crossing over the Missouri River.

Next up: The appeals court fast-tracked the hearings by ordering the sides to wrap up briefing by Sept. 30, with oral arguments to follow in October or early November.

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TC ENERGY, LABOR UNIONS REACH KEYSTONE AGREEMENT

The developer of the Keystone XL project announced Wednesday it had reached a project labor agreement with four U.S. labor unions, despite a recent federal court ruling to keep the project frozen. TC Energy said it reached the agreement to complete the pipeline with the Laborers International Union of North America, the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, the International Union of Operating Engineers, and the United Association of Union Plumbers and Pipefitters. The company said the Keystone XL project would support the creation of 42,000 U.S. jobs, including 10,000 construction jobs. It also announced it would contribute $10 million to create a "Green Jobs Training Program" to train union workers in the developing renewable-energy sector. 

2020 vision: The announcement could up the pressure in the November election. Trump backs the oil pipeline project, while his Democratic opponent, Joe Biden, has said he would rescind the pipeline's border-crossing permit, effectively killing the project should he be elected president. But Biden has also tried not to alienate blue-collar workers throughout his campaign, pitching his clean energy plan as a union-job creator.

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INTELLIGENCE DISPUTES FUEL RARE PUBLIC ACRIMONY AMONG GANG OF EIGHT

WASHINGTON - The group of congressional leaders responsible for reviewing the nation’s most closely held secrets is engaged in an unusual and bitter partisan fight over how much information to share with the public about election interference — all while lawmakers and administration officials seek to prevent 2016-style meddling from foreign countries.

The public spat between the Democratic and Republican sides of the so-called Gang of Eight, less than 100 days before Americans go to the polls, is highly unusual for the group, whose obligations normally rise above the political fray and rarely descend publicly into the partisan squabbles that define Capitol Hill.

The fundamental disagreement between the Democratic and Republican sides of the Gang of Eight centers on how much information about foreign threats should be made public. While Democrats have urged more transparency, Republicans have warned about the potentially dangerous precedent that would set. As a result, the Democratic and Republican sides of the group have issued dueling statements and demands on subjects on which they are normally unified.

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NEBRASKA LAWMAKERS PASS ERNIE CHAMBERS’ FINAL BILL, WHICH REQUIRES BIAS TRAINING FOR POLICE

LINCOLN - Nebraska lawmakers passed what almost certainly will be the last bill of State Sen. Ernie Chambers’ legislative career Friday.

Legislative Bill 924 would require sheriffs and other law enforcement officers to take two hours of anti-bias and implicit bias training every year. The training would be considered part of agencies’ efforts to minimize apparent or actual racial profiling.

After senators voted 49-0 to pass the bill, Speaker of the Legislature Jim Scheer of Norfolk took the opportunity to note the occasion and to congratulate Chambers on his record-setting career in the Nebraska Legislature.

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