FORMER USDA UNDERSECRETARY MOVES INTO NEW ROLE HELPING WITH BIOTECH AT UNL

SUMNER- Greg Ibach, former U.S. Department of Agriculture undersecretary, took time to decide what he really wanted to do next. He has spent time working on federal ag-related programs during his years with the USDA following his service as the longest sitting Nebraska Department of Agriculture director. 

Ibach has decided to join the University of Nebraska-Lincoln's Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources as its inaugural undersecretary-in-residence.  He will help advance IANR in various areas through partnerships with the National Institute of Antimicrobial Resistance Research Education, U.S. Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant Health Inspection Services and others. 

He is excited to have more free time to spend on his family farm during harvest season and volunteer time to different ag agencies. Ibach’s name has appeared on lists of those rumored to be interested in the open governorship in 2022.

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FORMER OMAHA MAYOR, CURRENT COUNTY BOARD MEMBER MIKE BOYLE HAS CANCER

OMAHA- The 77-year-old Douglas County Board member and former mayor of Omaha, Mike Boyle has lung cancer. He plans to continue with his board duties as usual. His daughter, Maureen Boyle, said, “He doesn’t feel sick at all, he’s just plugging away like he always has been.”

He will begin radiation and chemotherapy at the Nebraska Medical Center probably next week. 

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NEBRASKA ECONOMIC FOECASTING BOARD RAISES REVENUE PROJECTIONS

LINCOLN— Nebraska is now expected to collect an additional $204 million in the current fiscal year, according to new projections approved Friday. The Nebraska Economic Forecasting Advisory Board estimated that state revenue will come in roughly 4% higher than previous projections.

The board also raised its revenue forecast by $165 million for the next fiscal year that starts July 1 and $93 million for the following fiscal year. The board's decisions determines how much money is available to state lawmakers. In a statement, Gov. Pete Ricketts said the increased forecast gives the state the opportunity to reduce property taxes.

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DIRECTOR DEFENDS NEBRASKA AGENCY'S EFFORTS TO BRING MEAD ETHANOL PLANT INTO COMPLIANCE

LINCOLN- State lawmakers have many questions regarding the recent findings that the Mead ethanol plant was violating environmental regulations. The Nebraska Department of Environment and Energy defended their work saying they did all inspections and issued violation orders to the plant's oversight. The Nebraska Attorney General could be asked by the department to file charges and seek fines against AltEn. 

Most of the issues stemmed from the company not disclosing certain changes they were making dating back to 2013. The company will continue to comply throughout the process and possible charges.

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BILL WOULD PUT A DENT IN LONG LIST OF NEBRASKANS WAITING FOR DISABILITY SERVICES

LINCOLN- Sen. Machaela Cavanaugh of Omaha's LB493 would appropriate $17 million in each of the next two fiscal years to put a dent in the list of people hoping to be approved for developmental disability services. Cavanaugh acknowledged the bill’s price tag. But she said lawmakers promised more than a decade ago to provide services for everyone on the waiting list. Instead, the list has continued to grow.

“We have an opportunity here to do something really great for this state,” she said. “The $17 million can tangibly change lives.”

In 2009, state lawmakers approved $15 million to help shrink the waiting list, which was at 2,006 people that year. Two weeks ago, the list stood at 2,968 people. About half are under age 21, in many cases put on the list in hopes that a spot would be available when they leave school.

A second bill called for an increase in the rates paid to developmental disability services providers. LB 225 was introduced by Sen. Robert Hilkemann of Omaha.

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NEBRASKA OFFICIALS DEMAND OMAHA-AREA CHILD WELFARE CONTRACTOR FIX KEY PROBLEMS

LINCOLN- Nebraska officials are demanding St. Francis Ministry, the contractor hired to oversee Omaha-area child welfare cases, fix key problems that should no longer be issues. 

A report released Monday shows that St. Francis Ministries of Salina, Kansas, fell short on several contracted performance goals during the last quarter of the year. Many were repeats from previous state reviews including that workers continue to have far too many cases, employee turnover remains high, background checks are not getting done, case plans are not being developed fast enough, placements are not being documented and workers are not meeting with the children in their care. 

In four of the six areas, St. Francis already was on a corrective action plan from the previous quarter, but had not corrected the problem. In a fifth area, workforce, the agency was required to develop a hiring plan in September, but made no progress in meeting state caseload limits between October and December.

DHHS is requiring the company to develop a plan for each one of those issues. Dannette Smith, the HHS CEO, said the state agreed to the new contract “to maintain continuity of services” in the Omaha area. But she also promised increased state oversight, saying that department officials will be “persnickety” in making sure that St. Francis fulfills its obligations under the new contract and maintains financial stability.

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TAXING CANDY AND SOFT DRINKS IN NEBRASKA COULD RAISE $33 MILLION; SEN. WAYNE AIMES TO REPEAL SALES TAX ON RESIDENTIAL WATER

LINCOLN — State Sen. John McCollister of Omaha said Wednesday his proposal to expand the state sales tax base to include candy and soft drinks would raise an estimated $33 million in state revenue in the 2021-22 fiscal year and suggested “we could talk about where the money should go.”

McCollister’s measure, Legislative Bill 115, is written to funnel that new revenue into the state’s health care cash fund, but he told the Legislature’s Revenue Committee that he is open to “repurposing some of that revenue.”

“Nebraska now has a narrow sales tax, a high income tax and, Lord knows, a high property tax,” McCollister said.

Opponents to the bill spoke about the cost retailers will have to take on to revise current measures and softwares. 

In another hearing, Sen. Justin Wayne of Omaha introduced LB26 which would repeal the sales tax on the use and consumption of residential water. Wayne and supporters noted that water is not taxed when bought at the store but are taxed for it at home. Opponents testified that this would cost cities a loss of revenue.

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NEBRASKA LAWMAKERS CONSIDER BILL THAT WOULD STRENGTHEN PENALTIES FOR RIOTERS

LINCOLN- The Judiciary Committee heard testimony on Sen. Joni Albrecht's bill to create stiffer penalties for rioters who injure law enforcement or other public officers. She said she brought this bill because she was troubled by scenes of police being targeted by protesters. 

“If we expect our first responders to protect our person and property, we must give them the tools to keep themselves safe as well,” Albrecht told the committee. “We must provide law enforcement and county attorneys the tools to discourage and deter.”

The committee heard testimony by several supporters and a one opponent. The ACLU, appearing in opposition, said they believe this will infringe on citizens rights to protest and that there are already laws in place to protect law enforcement. Sen. Albrecht does not believe those laws are enough.

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TEACHER VACCINATIONS GAINING STEAM AS SARPY-CASS SETS START DATE OF MARCH 1

OMAHA- Sarpy-Cass Health Department officials notified school personnel that vaccinations will begin the week of March 1. This news came just days after Douglas County announced their teachers will begin receiving vaccinations next week. Other parts of the state are ahead of the metro including Grand Island which has vaccinated over 700 school employees.

Vaccinations will still be prioritized to teachers by age.

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WHY ISN'T BROADBAND MORE AVAILABLE IN RURAL NEBRASKA?

LINCOLN- Nebraska farmers are starting to become more and more worried about technological advances in agriculture taking their jobs or leaving them behind. This worry is not new, but with rural broadband being a hot topic this legislative session, more people are talking about it. Right now, around 80,000 rural residents lack internet that meets the federal definition of broadband. Nebraska ranks lower than all neighboring states except Wyoming in broadband availability. Nebraska also ranks 48th in terms of access, price and speed. 

Governor Ricketts is proposing spending $40 million in the next two years to help this problem and would be the first time taxpayer funds would be devoted to the effort. Many blame this issue on having to cover a lot of land with very few customers. Measures to ensure more accountability have been taken but it is still not enough. 

Chair of the legislative committee working on increasing broadband coverage, Sen. Curt Friesen of Henderson says it is an expensive and complicated process that will take time.

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RESTAURANTS AND STARTUPS TRY TO OUTRUN UBER EATS AND DOORDASH

NEW YORK-  Food delivery apps such as DoorDash and Uber Eats have provided business for restaurants throughout the pandemic. Now, restaurants are looking to find ways around these apps and the commissions they charge. These delivery apps charge restaurants upwards of 30% on every order. Some states have started enforcing caps on delivery-app fees in an effort to help small restaurants. 

The newest app, Spread, only charges restaurants $1 for every order with the goal of being a cheaper more small-restaurant friendly alternative. Sales on third-party food-deliver services have doubled since the pandemic began last March. DoorDash has also started a service for smaller restaurants that allows customers to buy directly from the restaurant. The app does not take a commission for this service but instead charges a flat see to deliver those orders. Uber Eats followed and Grubhub have both begun to look into similar programs within their apps, but have not launched services as of yet. 

Chain restaurants are also looking into avoiding the third-party through different pickup options and delivering to customers themselves.

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TESLA TEMPORARILY HALTED U.S. PRODUCTION OVER PARTS SHORTAGE

PALO ALTO- Tesla recently halted production at its car plant in Fremont, CA due to shortages in a variety of parts for their cars. While the production lines have since resumed, other manufacturers such as Ford Motor Co., Volkswagen, and others have also idled some production throughout the ongoing pandemic. The White House, in an effort to continue economic security during the pandemic is attempting to fix the supply chain shortfalls. 

“We are working extremely hard to manage through the global semiconductor shortage as well as port capacity, which may have a temporary impact," said Tesla's Chief Financial Officer. 

These shortages as well as recent videos of battery fires going viral have become a major headache for Tesla as China has cast a wary gaze on the automaker.

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THE TEXAS FREEZE: WHY THE POWER GRID FAILED

DALLAS-  A fundamental flaw in the freewheeling Texas electricity market left millions powerless and freezing in the dark this week during a historic cold snap. The core problem: Power providers can reap rewards by supplying electricity to Texas customers, but they aren’t required to do it and face no penalties for failing to deliver during a lengthy emergency. That led to the fiasco that left millions of people in the nation’s second-most-populous state without power for days. A severe storm paralyzed almost every energy source, from power plants to wind turbines, because their owners hadn’t made the investments needed to produce electricity in subfreezing temperatures.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, facing a political uproar as the state of 29 million people virtually ground to a halt, tacitly acknowledged in a statewide address Thursday that these market incentives weren’t sufficient. He called upon legislators to mandate that power generators prepare for extreme winter storms. The state, he said, should also supply the funding to make it happen.

The system broke down this week when 185 generating units, including gas and coal-fired power plants, tripped offline during the brunt of the storm. Wind turbines in West Texas froze as well, and a nuclear unit near the Gulf of Mexico went down for more than 48 hours. Another problem emerged: Some power plants lost their pipeline supply of gas and couldn’t generate electricity even if they wanted to capture the high prices. Such mechanical problems might have been avoided if operators had chosen to equip their plants like those that operate in traditional cold-weather states.

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EMAILS SHOW OMAHA POLICE MONITORING OF ACTIVISTS IN 2020

OMAHA- The Omaha Police Department monitored activists' posts on social media last year and subsequently planted undercover officers at the protests. The tracking even went so far as to find birthday party plans for a Black protest organizer. This information was found after hundreds of emails were revealed by the ACLU. 

The ACLU called these actions biased and unnecessary surveillance of police critics that echoes the “disturbing historical pattern of police monitoring lawful activities of Black civil rights leaders.”

The Omaha Police Department’s public information office released a statement saying that police used “open source intelligence” such as Facebook announcements “to learn of events that may bring a large number of persons together over the summer during a specific period of civil unrest in our city.” 

Community organizer Ja Keen Fox said the emails revealed police behavior that was “a failure in the building of community trust and just fiscally irresponsible.”

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OMAHA-BASED BUILDERTREND ACQUIRES COCONSTRUCT; CREATES LEADER IN CONSTRUCTION MANAGEMENT SOFTWARE

Buildertrend, an Omaha-based provider of cloud-based construction management software for homebuilders, remodelers and specialty contractors, announced Wednesday the acquisition of CoConstruct, a complementary provider of construction project management software for the residential construction industry.

CoConstruct was founded in 2004 in Charlottesville, Virginia, with a mission to bring residential construction project management into the 21st century. The company has been recognized as Constructech’s No. 1 software platform for construction collaboration for more than 10 years in a row. The transaction makes Buildertrend the largest construction management software dedicated to empowering independent and custom homebuilders, contractors and remodelers with the tools to better coordinate projects, control finances and communicate with clients and crews, according to a release.

Buildertrend co-founder and co-CEO Dan Houghton will lead the combined company, and CoConstruct founder Donny Wyatt will serve as an advisor to lead integration efforts. The combined business served 23,000 clients, more than 1.1 million users and facilitated more than $200 billion in annual residential construction project value in 2020.

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NEBRASKA'S PLAN FOR TWO-TIER MEDICAID EXPANSION PROGRAM SUFFERS SECOND BLOW

LINCOLN — Nebraska’s top Medicaid official announced Thursday that a second major part of the two-tier Medicaid expansion program has been put on hold. The decision means that low-income, working-age adults — the bulk of those covered under the expansion — will have no way to receive dental, vision and over-the-counter medication benefits for the foreseeable future.

Those benefits are automatically part of traditional Medicaid. But state officials had planned to require that expansion patients meet six wellness and personal responsibility goals to qualify for the benefits. The qualification period was to start April 1.

Now, State Medicaid Director Kevin Bagley said federal officials have indicated that they have concerns about the plan and are unlikely to approve it in time for an April launch. That leaves the future of the two-tier plan, called Heritage Health Adult, up in the air.

Earlier this month, the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services alerted Nebraska officials that the Biden administration was looking to withdraw approval for another key part of the two-tier plan.

That part, which was to start in 2022, would have required most expansion patients to work, volunteer or do other specified activities for 80 hours a month to get full benefits. The “community engagement” requirements were to be in addition to the wellness and personal responsibility requirements.

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GUN RIGHTS ADVOCATES BACK BILL THAT WOULD BAN NEBRASKA FROM ENFORCING ANY NEW FEDERAL GUN LAWS

LINCOLN- Gun rights advocates expressed fears of 'losing their constitutional rights' with President Biden pushing for increased gun safety laws. 

“We’re at a dangerous point of losing our constitutional rights,” said Anthony Arnold of Ashland.

Sen. Steve Halloran, the introducer of the measure, describes his bill as a "Second Amendment Preservation Act" although he is not aware of any federal moves to seize guns from Nebraskans. Similar laws have been passed by a handful of states and are currently being discussed in Texas and Missouri. Opponents of the bill says Nebraska is not above the law and should follow any federal regulations that are handed down.

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FORMER NEBRASKA CONGRESSIONAL, LEGISLATIVE, SENATE, AND GUBERNATORIAL CANDIDATE FILES TO ESTABLISH THE MAGA PATRIOTS PARTY

LINCOLN- Mark Elworth Jr., a former candidate for many offices, filed to establish a new political party in Nebraska for the second time. On Monday, Elworth announced the MAGA Patriots Party — a name for a new party proposed by former President Donald Trump — on his personal Facebook page and said he has chosen North Platte to be the party headquarters. 

“People in the 3rd District have been disenfranchised from state politics, and we are going to change that,” Elworth said in the Facebook post. “... The Nebraska Republicans have failed us. They no longer work or compete for your votes. They have ulterior motives without your best interests in mind.”

Elworth also said the state Elections Division rejected the first filing for the MAGA Patriots Party, a claim Secretary of State Bob Evnen disputed. “If Mr. Elworth Jr. claims that our office made up new rules for him, he is mistaken and that is inaccurate,” Evnen said. “We apply the laws that the Legislature has passed, and that is what we did with respect to Mr. Elworth’s Jr. petition.”

Elworth is working on getting the Legal Marijuana Now Party recognized as well.

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NEBRASKA'S PROCUREMENT PROCESS MISSED UNDERBID BY ST. FRANCIS MINISTRIES

LINCOLN- Most Nebraskans saw a disaster in the making when the state signed a contract for 40% less than what they were paying in the past. The state's procurement process did not question any of the reasonableness of the five-year $197 million proposal. Now, The Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services signed an emergency contract to keep St. Francis Ministry from running out of money. The new contract wiped out the 40% cost different and boosted payments the state would be making. 


LR29, introcuded by Senator Machaela Cavanaugh of Omaha, seeks to create a special legislative committee to investigate how the state signed that contract and all events that transpired from that.

DHHS CEO Dannette Smith defends the decision to sign with St. Francis citing the now-terminated St. Francis officials for the situation. The state does not submit cost proposals to the evaluation teams everyone else does, they merely check the math and rate the proposal accordingly. At the time, many people believed PromiseShip was being overpaid, which has now been disproved. 

St. Francis has yet to meet the caseload requirements laid out in state law.

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STATE SENATORS AT ODDS OVER NEED FOR COVID LIABILITY PROTECTION BILLS

LINCOLN- The sponsor of one bill to protect Nebraska businesses, health care providers and other entities from most coronavirus-related lawsuits called the measure a substantial step toward recovery from the pandemic. 


State Sen. Steve Lathrop of Omaha, chairman of the Judiciary Committee, said he introduced LB52, the immunity proposal, to spark discussion and find out whether legal protections are needed. He concluded a public hearing on the bill by saying he had not heard evidence of a problem. "There's a fear of a threat of a possibility" of lawsuits, he said, but no one at the hearing could point to actual COVID-related cases in Nebraska.

On the other hand, Sen. Tom Briese of Albion argued that his measure (LB139) is needed to give business owners and other entities the confidence to reopen. Even if lawsuits have not been filed yet, he said, he expects to see them in coming months. He also said the perception of legal risk is a concern.

Mark Schorr, testifying for the Nebraska, Omaha and Lincoln Chambers of Commerce, as well as several other groups, said the measure represents a balancing act. It provides protection but doesn't completely block lawsuits, he said.  As evidence of the need, he pointed to similar legislation passed by 20 other states and to a wave of notices from liability insurance companies that either exclude coverage for COVID-related risks or raise premiums for that coverage. He also said there have been attorneys advertising around the country seeking to represent people harmed by COVID-19.

Opponents to LB139 included trial attorneys, labor unions and AARP Nebraska, which represents older Nebraskans.

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