NEBRASKA ETHANOL PLANTS COULD SOON STORE CARBON DIOXIDE UNDERGROUND

NEBRASKA- A new industry is set to take off in Nebraska. If it works out as backers hope, it would create jobs in the state and offer financial advantages for the state’s ethanol producers. In addition, the industry could have significant implications in the effort to combat climate change. The groundwork was laid by State Sen. Mike Flood’s Legislative Bill 650, which all but one legislator voted to pass last month. Since then, multiple companies have announced plans to contract with ethanol producers in Nebraska to filter carbon dioxide and permanently store that element in the ground — either in the state or piped elsewhere.

Here’s how it essentially works: Instead of allowing carbon dioxide to emit from a producer’s stacks, those stacks would be capped and route the carbon dioxide to a series of compressors. The carbon dioxide is then converted into a transportable form such as liquid and stored well below the surface — at least 2,600 feet below. 

Additionally, energy producers that store their carbon dioxide will lower their carbon dioxide intensity score, which affects their ability to sell their ethanol. A lower score could allow a producer to sell to states such as California, which has stringent carbon dioxide regulations.

“If you’re an ethanol plant that has a very low carbon score, you’re going to be a lot more attractive to the California market and their regulators than any other seller of ethanol,” Flood said. “Reducing your carbon score means better prices and better returns for Nebraska farmers.”

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GOV. RICKETTS SAYS HE IS 'OPPOSED TO CRITICAL RACE THEORY'

LINCOLN- Nebraska Gov. Pete Ricketts this week said he is “opposed to critical race theory,” voicing an increasingly common opinion among Republican politicians. The governor was asked about the concept Monday on his monthly call-in radio program, during which he didn’t explicitly call for legislation related to the theory and public schools but encouraged parents to get engaged.

At the foundation of critical race theory is that race is a social construct used to oppress and exploit people of color, according to Encyclopedia Britannica. Academics use the approach to look at how our understanding of race and white supremacy have impacted our past, structures — such as laws, politics, economics and society in general — and present, according to Jeannette Jones, the associate professor.

It started with a caller named James from Raymond, Nebraska, asking Ricketts where Nebraska stands as a state on the theory.

“Well, I’m opposed to critical race theory,” the governor replied. “It’s a Marxist theory ... it’s really un-American, about how it teaches us to think about ourselves as a country,” Ricketts said. 

Regarding legislation, Ricketts said no state senator has picked up the issue, but that could change next year. 

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US JOBLESS CLAIMS TICK UP TO 412,000 FROM A PANDEMIC LOW

WASHINGTON- The number of Americans applying for unemployment benefits rose last week for the first time since April despite widespread evidence that the economy and the job market are rebounding steadily from the pandemic recession. The Labor Department said Thursday that jobless claims rose 37,000 from the week before. As the job market has strengthened, the number of weekly applications for unemployment aid has fallen for most of the year. The number of jobless claims generally reflects the pace of layoffs.

Though jobless claims have tumbled since the start of 2021, when they exceeded 900,000, they remain high by historical standards. Before the pandemic paralyzed the economy in March 2020, unemployment applications were running at about 220,000 a week.

In Thursday’s report, the government said a total of 3.5 million Americans were continuing to collect traditional state unemployment benefits in the week ending June 5, up by just 1,000 from the week before.

Many states, though, are set to begin dropping the supplemental federal jobless aid this month.

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LOU ANN LINEHAN, CHAIR OF NEBRASKA LEGISLATURE'S TAX COMMITTEE, SENATOR SUZANNE GEIST, BACK JIM PILLEN FOR GOVERNOR

LINCOLN- The chairwoman of the Legislature's tax-focused Revenue Committee has endorsed University of Nebraska Regent Jim Pillen for governor. Pillen's campaign released an online video Wednesday with State Sen. Lou Ann Linehan of Omaha. In the video, Linehan says Pillen will “fight to finally find a real solution to our property tax problem in Nebraska.” 

Pillen is running in the Republican gubernatorial primary against Nebraska businessman Charles Herbster, an agribusiness executive with close ties to President Donald Trump. State Sen. Brett Lindstrom, of Omaha, is also considering a run, and former Gov. Dave Heineman has also been mentioned as a possible contender.

Pillen also gained the support of Senator Suzanne Geist earlier in the week. Jim Pillen for Governor released a video last Friday featuring Geist sharing why she supports Jim Pillen. Senator Geist said, "I am so inspired by his (Pillen) love for the state of Nebraska, as well as his vision for where he wants the state to be." Senator Geist went on to describe Pillen as the "full package." 

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STATE SEN. TOM BREWER ANNOUNCES HIS LEUKEMIA HAS RETURNED; WILL TAKE TIME OFF FOR TREATMENT

LINCOLN- State Sen. Tom Brewer of Gordon, a decorated Army veteran who was seriously wounded in battle in Afghanistan, announced Monday that he’s in a new battle with leukemia. Brewer, 62, underwent chemotherapy in 2014 for hairy cell leukemia. He said Monday that the cancer had returned and that he was “going to take some time off and continue my plans where I left off” after additional treatment that will involve chemotherapy.

In a recent email to fellow senators, the lawmaker said he still plans to climb Mount Kilimanjaro later this fall with three other state lawmakers, Anna Wishart of Lincoln, Justin Wayne of Omaha and Ben Hansen of Blair.

Brewer said he expects his events for the next month or two to be canceled or rescheduled.

A Republican and registered member of the Oglala Sioux Tribe, he was elected to the Nebraska Legislature in 2016, then reelected in 2020. Brewer unsuccessfully challenged U.S. Rep. Adrian Smith, R-Neb., for his seat in 2014.

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MEDICAID EXPANSION LAWSUIT PAUSED AFTER NEBRASKA OFFICIALS PROMISE TO EXPAND BENEFITS

LINCOLN- A lawsuit challenging Nebraska’s two-tier system for Medicaid expansion has been put on pause while state officials work to provide a full slate of benefits for all participants. The motion was filed jointly by Nebraska Appleseed, the Lincoln-based advocacy group that filed the case, and the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services, which administers the state Medicaid program. 

Appleseed officials said they will closely monitor the department’s progress in implementing the services. “It’s crucial for the Department to meet this deadline, particularly in light of the nearly three-year delay in accurately implementing Medicaid expansion,” Appleseed tweeted. “We’ll keep fighting to ensure our clients & all Medicaid expansion enrollees can access all the services without burdens.” 

Expanded Medicaid offers coverage for working-age adults whose incomes fall below 138% of the federal poverty level — $17,774 for a single person or $36,570 for a family of four. 


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KEYSTONE PIPELINE CANCELED AFTER BIDEN HAD BLOCKED PERMIT

BILLINGS, Mont. — The sponsor of the Keystone XL crude oil pipeline said Wednesday it is pulling the plug on the contentious project after Canadian officials failed to persuade President Joe Biden to reverse his cancellation of its permit on the day he took office.

During his campaign, Biden pledged to shelve the project, first proposed 12 years ago. He cited the same environmental concerns that led his former boss, then-President Barack Obama, to deny the Keystone XL a permit to cross into the U.S. in 2015.

Environmental groups were hoping Biden would fulfill his promise to dump the $8 billion project, which would have moved up to 830,000 barrels of crude daily. But the Canadian government, labor unions and oil industry groups revved up a last-ditch effort earlier this year to save the Keystone XL.

Nebraska Gov. Pete Ricketts criticized the Biden administration for depriving the state of jobs and tax revenue that the pipeline would have created. “This is yet another example of the Biden-Harris Administration putting the priorities of radical environmental activists above our national interest,” Ricketts said in a statement Wednesday. “Without Keystone XL, the United States will not only be more dependent on overseas sources of oil, but our state will not enjoy the benefit of the jobs and property tax revenue the project would have brought.”

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OMAHA CITY COUNCIL SWORN IN; STOTHERT STARTS THIRD TERM AS MAYOR

OMAHA-  The Legislative Chambers in City Hall were packed Monday as a new Omaha City Council was sworn in and Jean Stothert took the oath for her third term as mayor. Council members then selected returning incumbents for leadership positions. Pete Festersen of District 1, which includes Dundee, Benson and Florence, will serve as council president after receiving four votes. Aimee Melton, who represents northwest Omaha, received three. Vinny Palermo of District 4 in South Omaha will serve as vice president.

New council members Juanita Johnson, Danny Begley and Don Rowe took their seats in the legislative chamber alongside incumbents Festersen, Palermo, Melton and Brinker Harding.  Jean Stothert was sworn in for her third term as Omaha mayor, with Rep. Don Bacon providing his fellow Republican's introduction.


For her third term, Stothert said her priorities include improving city streets, addressing the health and economic consequences of COVID-19, and focusing on public safety. 

"(I will) continue to make Omaha a safer community and make a very good Police Department even better," she said. "Public safety is our most critical obligation, and I am confident in the progress that we will continue to make." 

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FORMER REP. BRAD ASHFORD LANDS JOB WITH UNO

OMAHA- Former U.S. Rep. and State Sen. Brad Ashford has been hired to teach students about collaboration. The University of Nebraska at Omaha announced Monday that it had engaged Ashford to lead a new undergraduate program on "collaborative leadership."

The program will employ teachers from UNO's colleges of business and public affairs. Students will be able to work on specific projects requiring government and private-sector collaboration through “hands on” internships, according to a press release. A minor in "cross-sector collaborative leadership" will be available to all UNO students. 

As a congressman, Ashford successfully developed a public-private partnership that built the Veterans Administration Ambulatory Care Center in Omaha after decades of stalled discussion. In the Legislature, Ashford was known for working out complicated compromises on criminal justice reform and financing sports arenas. 

Partial funding for the new UNO program is coming from the New York-based Volcker Alliance. The Alliance selected UNO, along with Indiana University, the University of Washington, the Andrew Young School at Georgia State University, and the City University of New York, for its "NextGen Service Partnership," which seeks to prepare students to serve their communities.


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NEBRASKA DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE LOCAL SALES AND USE TAX RATES

LINCOLN- On Monday Tax Commissioner Tony Fulton announced that the village of Manley will start a local sales and use tax rate of 0.5%, and the city of Humphrey will increase its existing rate from 1.5% to 2% effective on July 1, 2021. For the calendar quarter starting on October 1, 2021, there are no local sales and use tax rate changes. These changes are on the Nebraska Department of Revenue’s website at revenue.nebraska.gov under the Sales and Use Tax link.

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U.S. RETRIEVES MILLIONS PAID TO COLONIAL PIPELINE HACKERS

WASHINGTON—U.S. law-enforcement officials said Monday they had recovered millions of dollars in digital currency paid to the hackers who hit Colonial Pipeline Co. with a ransomware attack last month, a strike that prompted the shutdown of the main conduit for gasoline and diesel fuel to the U.S. East Coast. Investigators seized nearly 64 bitcoin, valued at roughly $2.3 million, that were allegedly the proceeds from the ransom hack on Colonial Pipeline, the Justice Department said. 

Colonial Pipeline, which transports gasoline, diesel, jet fuel and other refined products from the Gulf Coast to Linden, N.J., was shut down for six days in May as the company responded to the ransomware attack. The stoppage spurred a run on gasoline along parts of the East Coast that pushed prices to the highest levels in more than six years and left thousands of gas stations without fuel. 

Because bitcoin is volatile and has recently swung dramatically in value, the amount recovered is a little more than half the value of what was paid last month. About 75 bitcoin were paid to the hackers by Colonial shortly after the company learned it was the victim of a ransomware attack, a person familiar with the matter said. 

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FDA APPROVES FIRST NEW ALZHEIMER'S DRUG IN NEARLY TWO DECADES

The first drug promising to slow the memory-robbing march of Alzheimer’s disease was approved by U.S. health regulators, a watershed after years of research and billions of dollars in investment. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration said it approved the drug, which has the molecular name aducanumab and will be sold as Aduhelm, based on evidence it reduces a sticky substance in the brain called amyloid that is associated with Alzheimer’s. 

“This historic moment is the culmination of more than a decade of groundbreaking research in the complex field of Alzheimer’s disease,” said Biogen Chief Executive Michel Vounatsos. “Together with the healthcare community, we are ready to bring this new medicine to patients and begin to address this growing global health crisis.”

A preliminary analysis conducted by the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review, a nonprofit research and advisory group, said the drug could be cost-effective at a per-patient price of $2,500 to $8,300 a year. 


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OPTIONS TRADERS BET ON RETURN OF $100 OIL

Traders have alighted on what some believe to be a one-way bet in the world’s most important commodity market: oil prices going to $100 a barrel. They have scooped up call options tied to Brent and West Texas Intermediate crude-oil prices reaching $100 by the end of next year. Oil prices haven’t topped that milestone since 2014, when a gush of U.S. crude depressed energy markets.

Owners of $100 options—now the most widely owned WTI call contracts on the New York Mercantile Exchange—are making a leveraged bet that oil prices will hurtle higher after already surging more than 40% this year. The roaring rally, goosed by thawing coronavirus restrictions, has lifted WTI prices to their highest level since 2018 at almost $70 a barrel and average U.S. gasoline prices above $3 a gallon, according to GasBuddy.

Barring an influx of investors into commodity markets or a slump in the dollar, oil demand would need to rise well above pre-pandemic levels in the fourth quarter for prices to hit $100 this year, according to JPMorgan Chase analyst Natasha Kaneva. She says that is all but impossible. Other grounds for caution include an increase in Iranian crude exports in the event of a nuclear deal with the U.S. 

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COMMODITY PRICE SURGES ADD TO INFLATION FEARS

The run-up in commodity prices is casting a cloud over the global economic recovery, slamming vulnerable businesses and households and adding to fears that inflation could become more persistent. Economists are expecting consumer-price data due later this week to underscore the trend. They say China’s producer-price index, a gauge of factory-gate prices, could climb to its highest level since August 2008 on Wednesday amid rising commodity prices. The U.S. consumer-price index, released a day later, is expected to show a sharp rise in the 12 months through May, also driven by higher labor costs. 

“We are being hit from every possible angle,” said Franz Hofmeister, chief executive of Quaker Bakery Brands Inc. in Appleton, Wis. He says his costs for items including wheat, energy and new aluminum equipment have shot up at least 25% to 35% this year. 

Michael Hanson, senior global economist at JPMorgan Chase Bank, says that while higher prices for raw materials will probably result in temporary inflation pressures, it won’t make much of a dent in the U.S. economy. Much of the recent inflation uptick is due to the frenzied nature of the economy’s reopening, with firms scrambling to find workers and resolve freight bottlenecks, he said, and the economy is strong enough to weather it.

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HEINEMAN PREPARES FOR POSSIBLE GUBERNATORIAL BID


HEINEMAN PREPARES FOR POSSIBLE GUBERNATORIAL BID

FREMONT-  In a move that clears the path for his possible entry into the 2022 Republican gubernatorial race, former Gov. Dave Heineman has submitted his resignation as a member of the board of directors of the Conklin Company. Conklin is the manufacturing and distribution company in Kansas City owned and headed by Charles Herbster, who is seeking the GOP nomination for governor. 

Heineman's resignation is effective on June 30.

"I am in no rush to make a decision" about a gubernatorial bid, Heineman said Friday during a telephone interview. "I will continue to evaluate," he said. "I'm very much in the listening mode. I have a serious decision to make."

Heineman said he probably won't make a decision until sometime this fall, and perhaps not until late into autumn. He noted that growing workforce, high taxes, education funding and rural broadband were key issues facing the state.

The primary will be held on May 10th of 2022, and already includes Regent Jim Pillen, and business owner Herbster. State Senator Brett Lindstrom is also expected to enter the race.

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SPEAKER HILGERS POINTS TO BIG POSSBILIITES FOR THE LEGISALTURE AND STATE IN 2022

LINCOLN- In his closing comments to the members of the 2021 Legislature, Speaker Mike Hilgers had one message: It is now time now to think big. The resources will be there in 2022, Speaker of the Legislature Mike Hilgers says, as $500 million in new federal pandemic recovery assistance comes flowing into the state.


"It might be a once-in-a-legislative-generation opportunity for the state," Hilgers said.


And legislative dynamics shout that the moment is now: Some heavy-hitters, experienced senators who are leaders and doers and who already have racked up some big accomplishments for the state, will be serving their eighth and final year in the Legislature, the Lincoln senator noted. 


"Big thinkers with good working relationships," Hilgers said. The time is right, he said, and the resources will be there. "We're going to come to play next year," the speaker said.


After reviewing the pandemic-challenged 2021 Legislature's accomplishments during an interview in his office at the Capitol immediately after senators adjourned Thursday and headed home, Hilgers cast a look ahead. 

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NEBRASKA AMONG STATES CLAIMING SOCial SECURITY OWED TO FOSTER KIDS

LINCOLN — Advocates for children are raising concerns about a state effort to use Social Security payments owed to foster kids to help defray the costs of foster care — a practice state officials say is completely legal. Since 2009, Nebraska has paid a Virginia company, Maximus Health Services, to research which of the state’s 4,000 foster children might be eligible for Social Security, either due to a physical or mental disability or due to losing a parent, and then go after those benefits.


Over the past three years, the effort has captured about $2.7 million a year in Social Security benefits, which has been used to reimburse state expenses for foster care. The state spent $130 million on all child welfare services in fiscal year 2019-20, which includes both out-of-home care, like foster care, and in-home services.


The state last year signed a $301,500 contract with Maximus to continue finding Social Security benefits through September of 2023. The company has been providing similar services to the State of Iowa since 2004. 

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GROUP BEHIND PROPOSED CASINO AT OMAHA'S HORSEMANS PARK SEEKS $17.5 MILLION IN TIF

OMAHA- Developers behind a plan to transform Omaha’s Horsemen’s Park into one of Nebraska’s first casinos are counting on the city to pony up $17.5 million in tax incentives to bring the project over the finish line. A $220 million plan by WarHorse Gaming Omaha — a subsidiary of Ho-Chunk Inc., the economic development arm of the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska — calls for a significant renovation and expansion of the current Horsemen’s campus near 60th and Q streets.


The development group seeks TIF to help complete the Casino funding. Tax increment financing, known as TIF, is a popular, sometimes controversial redevelopment tool based in state law that allows developers to take out a loan to help cover eligible redevelopment expenses in areas that have been deemed blighted.


The loan is paid back, generally over a 15-year period, by using the increased property taxes that are generated on the new development. During the TIF period, the property owner continues to pay a portion of property taxes based on the valuation that existed before any improvements. After the TIF loan is repaid, property taxes collected on the higher-value, improved property then start flowing to the tax rolls.


The TIF request faces opposition. Pat Loontjer, the executive director of Gambling With The Good Life who for decades has led the charge against legalized gambling in Nebraska, said she thinks the TIF request is an abuse of the program. 

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NEBRASKA OPENS UP MEDICAID EXPANSION, DROPS PLAN FOR RESTRICITONS

LINCOLN — State officials announced Tuesday that all Nebraskans covered by the Medicaid expansion program will get the full range of benefits, starting Oct. 1. State officials have estimated that eventually 90,000 Nebraskans will sign up for the program. The decision represents an about-face for Gov. Pete Ricketts’ administration and comes on the heels of a shift in policy from the Trump to Biden administrations. Ricketts had been pursuing a two-tier system of coverage since voters approved Medicaid expansion in November 2018.

State Sen. Adam Morfeld of Lincoln, who led the petition drive that put Medicaid expansion on the ballot, welcomed the announcement but noted the delay in reaching that point. 

Expanded Medicaid offers coverage for working-age adults whose incomes fall below 138% of the federal poverty level — $17,774 for a single person or $36,570 for a family of four. The state has provided a full range of benefits to some groups covered under Medicaid expansion. Those are pregnant women, people considered medically frail and young adults ages 19 and 20.

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SIZE LIMITS ON NEBRASKA CHILD CARE GROUPS SHELVED AFTER UPROAR FROM PROVIDERS

LINCOLN — A public uproar over proposed limits on child care group sizes led to an about-face by the state on Wednesday.

Department of Health and Human Services officials announced that they will suspend their efforts to change regulations governing child care centers, school-age-only centers and preschools. In a statement, HHS officials said they appreciated the feedback from a recent public hearing at which several child care providers raised concerns about the proposed group size limits.


“The purpose of allowing public comment is at the very core of why these types of forums are so invaluable to serving Nebraskans,” the statement said.


As proposed, the youngest children, those ages 6 weeks through 18 months, would be limited to eight per group or room. The limits increase with the age of the children, until they reach 30 for school-age children. An HHS statement said the agency will work with providers to “chart our path forward” and “ultimately ensure a collective approach towards a best in class model.”


“We appreciate this opportunity to strengthen and enhance our child care system here in Nebraska and look forward to improving our systems and developing innovative solutions, especially because of all we experienced and learned in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic,” said Dannette Smith, the HHS CEO.


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