SECOND IN COMMAND AT DOUGLAS COUNTY SHERIFFS OFFICE TO RUN FOR TOP JOB

OMAHA- Wayne Hudson, the second-in-command at the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office, will run for the top job, becoming the second person to publicly announce his intentions for the 2022 race.

Hudson, the first Black man to serve as chief deputy sheriff in the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office, said Friday that he plans to run for sheriff.

“I truly believe that our entire community is stronger when law enforcement and the community work in a collaborative manner to solve criminal justice issues,” he said in his announcement via a press release. “I’m running for this office because I deeply care for the Douglas County community and for the law enforcement profession — and I want to continue the efforts of bridging the gap between law enforcement and the community.”

Hudson, 53, has been with the Sheriff’s Office since 1994, first as a reserve deputy sheriff and soon after as a full-time deputy. Before that, he served six years in the U.S. Air Force. He was honorably discharged in 1992.

Hudson holds a bachelor’s degree in criminal justice from Wayne State College and a master’s degree in public administration from the University of Nebraska at Omaha.

Hanson has been endorsed by his boss, Omaha Police Chief Todd Schmaderer, plus Nebraska Gov. Pete Ricketts and Douglas County Attorney Don Kleine.

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PARTISANSHIP EXPECTED AS NEBRASKA LAWMAKERS TACKLE MATH GEOGRAPHY PUZZLE OF REDISTRICTING

LINCOLN — Nebraska lawmakers will dig in Monday on a set of big, challenging math and geography problems.

The first one: Even out the populations of the state’s three congressional districts by taking 47,170 residents from the Omaha-centered 2nd District and 5,981 people from the Lincoln-based 1st District and adding that total to the already vast 3rd District.

Next, do the same for 49 state legislative districts, subtracting here, adding there and redrawing boundaries in a statewide puzzle until the districts are “as nearly equal in population as may be.”

Finally, repeat the process for six Supreme Court districts, eight University of Nebraska Board of Regents and State Board of Education districts and five Public Service Commission districts.

And complete the whole task within 30 days, with the two major political parties doing everything they can to jockey for advantage and engaged citizens on alert for political shenanigans.

Normally, that process would have been completed by this time of the year. But the coronavirus pandemic slowed the 2020 national headcount and delayed distribution of population data to the states. Nebraska and other states just received the official census numbers Aug. 12.

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EVICTION MORATORIUM WILL END, BUT HELP AVAILABLE FOR NEBRASKANS STRUGGLING TO PAY RENT

NEBRASKA- The U.S. Supreme Court’s decision Thursday to throw out a federal eviction moratorium “will have a devastating impact on thousands of Nebraskans struggling to pay rent and at risk of eviction,” Legal Aid of Nebraska said Friday.

But legal and financial help for Nebraskans facing eviction is still available.

The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention had reimposed the moratorium on Aug. 3. It was issued to temporarily halt evictions in counties with “substantial and high levels” of COVID-19 transmissions and was to last until Oct. 3.

But the high court said the agency lacked the authority to do so under federal law without explicit congressional authorization. The court’s action ended protections for roughly 3.5 million people in the country who said they faced eviction in the next two months, according to Census Bureau data from early August.

In Nebraska, legal and financial help for those facing eviction is still available.

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GOV. RICKETTS ANNOUNCES NEBRASKA WILL BRING BACK HOSPITAL TRANSFER CENTER

LINCOLN — Gov. Pete Ricketts announced Wednesday that the state is bringing back a transfer center to help overstretched Nebraska hospitals find places to send patients.

The move is aimed at helping hospitals cope with a new wave of COVID-19 patients, driven by the spread of the delta variant.

Angie Ling, incident commander with the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services, said the center will help relieve some of the stress on hospital staff by taking over the job of making call after call for an available bed.

“Our medical staff are hurting something fierce right now,” she said.

At a press briefing, Ling said Nebraska’s larger hospitals are seeing occupancy rates of 85% to 100% on a daily basis, between COVID patients and people with other types of health problems.

Opening of the transfer center marks the return of yet another step taken during the previous peak in COVID-19 cases.

Last week, Ricketts declared a hospital staffing emergency and took two actions aimed at helping address the situation. They included an executive order waiving some state licensing laws and regulations and a directed health measure limiting some types of elective surgeries.

Ling said the transfer center is being set up by Nomi Health, one of the businesses that helped put together the TestNebraska program. The center will be up and running by Saturday and be staffed by nurses in the United States and Philippines, who will be available at all hours.

Nebraska hospitals collaborated on a transfer center last fall and winter, during the height of the pandemic in the state. But the center closed as cases dropped.

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NEBRASKA, IOWA COMPANIES FINED FOR DIESEL EMISSION TAMPERING

LENEXA, Kan. — One company from Nebraska and another from Iowa have been fined for tampering with emission controls for hundreds of customers, the Environmental Protection Agency announced Tuesday.

The companies — Midwest Truck Products of Cantril, Iowa; and South Central Diesel Inc. of Holdrege, Nebraska — installed or sold “defeat devices” that disabled emission controls, the EPA said.

“Aftermarket defeat devices are a significant contributor to harmful air pollution,” said Diane Huffman, acting director of EPA Region 7’s Enforcement and Compliance Assurance Division in Lenexa, Kansas. “These illegal practices also impede federal, state, and local efforts to implement air quality standards that protect public health.”

Midwest Truck Products will pay a $75,000 penalty. South Central Diesel Inc. will pay a $50,954 fine. The EPA said the companies tampered with vehicles or sold the “defeat devices” to hundreds of customers.

The companies also certified that they have stopped disabling vehicle emission controls.

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MAHONEY AQUATIC CENTER TO CLOSE LABOR DAY BECAUSE OF LIFEGUARD SHORTAGE

ASHLAND- Mahoney State Park's aquatic center will be closed on Labor Day due to a lifeguard shortage.

Nebraska Game and Parks Commission officials warned that there may be additional wait times over the holiday weekend in other areas due to overall staff shortages at the park.

Parks administrator Jim Swenson said they are trying to meet the public's expectations for the fall and winter programming given the current staffing situation.

This announcement comes after a plea for help earlier in the summer. The Nebraska State Parks announced that they are severely understaffed and if this does not change they will be cutting down their services and hours.

Since that announcement hours within the parks have been reduced, but the closing of Mahoney aquatic center marks the first facility closed due to lack of staff.

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NEBRASKA TASK FORCE HAS HELPED EVACUATE MORE THAN 100 LOUISIANANS AFTER HURRICANE IDA

LOUISIANA- Members of Nebraska Task Force 1, an urban search and rescue team, have helped rescue more than 100 people as they wade through knee-high water sweeping through the streets of southern Louisiana in the wake of Hurricane Ida.

The task force — made up of 40 private citizens and firefighters from the Lincoln and Omaha areas — were dispatched to Alexandria, Louisiana, on Friday ahead of the storm's arrival. Ida made landfall Sunday as a Category 4 storm with sustained wind speeds as high as 150 mph, according to the National Hurricane Center.

Nebraska's task force has spent the days since assisting local first responders in rescue operations in Louisiana, where the storm left behind flooded roads and stranded residents who either refused or were unable to evacuate ahead of the hurricane, Task Force 1 Chief Brad Thavenet said in a conference call with Lincoln-area reporters Tuesday.

Crews with the Lincoln Electric Service and a 16-man contingent from the Nebraska Public Power District were dispatched this week to help restore power in the state, where more than 1 million customers remained without power Tuesday afternoon. The Omaha Public Power District sent 15 employees to Baton Rouge, Louisiana, on Monday.

The task force, working alongside a similar group from Texas, helped evacuate more than 100 residents Monday, Thavenet said, though those efforts were focused on houses where residents had signaled for help.

On Tuesday, the task force took a door-to-door approach, Thavenet said, inching its way through neighborhoods in an effort to evacuate residents who might otherwise not make it out.

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FORMER CONGRESSIONAL CANDIDATE KARA EASTMAN TAKES JOB AT HELM OF CHICAGO NONPROFIT

LINCOLN — Two-time congressional candidate Kara Eastman announced Monday that she has been named the new CEO of TPAN (Test Positive Aware Network), a Chicago-based nonprofit.

Eastman was the Democratic nominee in Nebraska’s 2nd Congressional District in 2018 and 2020, losing to Rep. Don Bacon both times. A Chicago native, she has a degree in social work and more than 20 years of experience leading nonprofits.

TPAN was founded in 1987 at the height of the HIV/AIDS epidemic. It now supports people living with or vulnerable to HIV and related conditions, including people who are homeless or coping with mental health or substance use problems.

“I’m honored to work with such an important organization and will do everything I can to widen its reach and continue to push the mission of self-empowerment,” Eastman said.

She and her husband, Scott, a professor of history at Creighton University, plan to split time between Omaha and Chicago.

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STATE OF NEBRASKA REJECTS DOUGLAS COUNTY'S REQUEST TO ORDER A MASK MANDATE

NEBRASKA- The State of Nebraska on Tuesday rejected a request from Douglas County’s health director who was seeking authority to implement a countywide mask mandate.

Douglas County Public Health Director Lindsay Huse asked the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services for approval to issue a directed health measure requiring people to wear face masks indoors in the county. The temporary mask mandate would have applied to school districts across Douglas County as well as other indoor settings.

Huse, in explaining her decision to send the letter Tuesday morning, cited the rising number of COVID cases in the county, including among children.

“Our kids deserve protection,” Huse said. “And they deserve an education. Our families deserve protection.”

Gary Anthone, the state’s director of public health and chief medical officer, denied the request.

Anthone wrote that the state was obligated to “balance the benefit of the public with that of individual liberty and consider the applicable state statutes.”

He noted that previous mask mandates were limited to specific circumstances when social distancing was not possible.

“Under the current circumstances, imposing restrictions on every individual at a district level is not appropriate,” Anthone wrote. “The Department has not imposed or approved restrictions on individuals unless the specific individual posed an identifiable risk to others.”

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STATE TOUTS 'NO MANDATED COVID-19 VACCINE' IN JOB ADS FOR VETS HOMES, OTHER INSTITUTIONS

LINCOLN — A Bellevue state senator and several medical officials are raising “grave concerns” about a state pitch to fill jobs working with some of Nebraska’s most vulnerable residents.

In recent advertisements, the state touts its lack of a COVID-19 vaccination mandate to attract applicants for nursing and nursing assistant positions at a variety of state institutions.

Those institutions include Nebraska’s four veterans homes, which care for aging veterans and their spouses. They also include the Beatrice State Developmental Center, which houses people with developmental disabilities, many of whom have additional physical disabilities.

Others include the state’s psychiatric hospitals, the state-run facilities for juvenile offenders and the prisons.

State Sen. Carol Blood of Bellevue, who is considering a potential run for governor as a Democrat, said she heard from countless people in her district about the ads, particularly family members of veterans home residents. She sent a letter Monday to Gov. Pete Ricketts and the State Department of Veterans Affairs questioning the tactic.

“This is especially concerning knowing that recently, nearly 60 medical organizations joined together stating that all health care workers should be vaccinated against COVID-19, yet Nebraska is actively encouraging those who are not vaccinated to come and work with our veterans,” she said.

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MASKS, SEX ED, CRT TURN SLEEPY NEBRASKA SCHOOL BOARD MEETINGS INTO CULTURE WAR BATTLEGROUNDS

OMAHA- Heated debates over masks, sex education standards and critical race theory have transformed once-dull school board meetings in Nebraska into skirmishes in a national culture war — and there could be fallout at the ballot box.

Before the pandemic, parents rarely filled local and state board rooms, and when they did, it meant that a band or gifted program was getting cut.

But now an agitated, mobilized and partisan public is showing up in numbers, packing board meetings, shouting, clapping, cheering and sometimes jeering.

School officials are adding security to meetings, reducing the time that people have to speak, cutting speakers off mid-sentence and sometimes even escorting them out for violating rules or decorum.

An attempt is underway to recall board members in the Norris Public Schools over a mask requirement for younger students. Another recall is underway for the board president in the Wahoo Public Schools in an argument over the state’s proposed health standards.

A North Platte woman has already announced that she will run against incumbent State Board of Education member Robin Stevens in 2022.

Elizabeth Tegtmeier says on her website that she would “represent values of western Nebraskans and listen to their concerns” and “protect children from sexually inappropriate and racially divisive material.”

Nebraska Secretary of State Bob Evnen, whose eight years on the State Education Board were uneventful compared with today’s raucous meetings, doesn’t think that the rising discontent reflects a change in Nebraskans.

“It’s not the opinions of the citizens that have changed,” he said. “It’s the proposals of the board members that have changed.

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STOTHERT DIRECTS $50,000 IN FEDERAL MONEY TO LEGAL HEP FOR TENANTS FACING EVICTION

OMAHA- The City of Omaha is steering $50,000 to the Douglas County Tenant Assistance Project to boost its volunteer legal help for people facing eviction.

Mayor Jean Stothert said Friday that she had authorized $50,000 in federal rental assistance funds to pay for a coordinator for the project. It has been sending volunteer lawyers to represent people facing eviction for nonpayment during the current moratorium on evictions. Omaha City Council member Aimee Melton had proposed a city budget amendment to use city money for the position, but the council voted it down on Tuesday.

Stothert arranged for the $50,000 to come out of the city’s $22 million in federal Emergency Rental Assistance Program money. The federal money is being distributed by the Metro Area Continuum of Care for the Homeless. Stothert sent a letter Thursday to MAACH authorizing them to distribute $50,000 to the Nebraska State Bar Association.

“The federal guidance for distribution of these funds allows for an allocation to the bar association for this purpose,” Stothert wrote in the letter to Randy McCoy, executive director of MACCH. “I am committed to supporting this program with the Emergency Rental Assistance funds MACCH is managing on the city’s behalf.”

Stothert had been working since Tuesday with city finance and law departments to be certain that federal guidance allows the money to be used that way, a spokeswoman for the mayor said.

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EX-NEBRASKA STATE FAIR FINANCE CHIEF PLEADS NO CONTEST TO FELONY THEFTS, IS SET FOR SENTENCING

HASTINGS- A Hastings man charged with three counts of felony theft in connection to his time as the Nebraska State Fair’s finance chief pleaded no contest Tuesday.

Hall County District Judge Andrew Butler could give Patrick Kopke, 30, up to 20 years in prison on each charge at his sentencing and restitution hearing in October.

Last year, the Nebraska Attorney General’s Office charged Kopke with thefts dating back to 2019, on Feb. 7 or 8, July 12 and Sept. 3.

By then, Kopke already had resigned from his job as the fair’s chief of finance and administration after a state audit showed a company he created had been paid nearly $150,000 in state fair funds with no invoices proving the company had done any work for the fair.

Auditors said Kopke had used bank accounts connected to the company to pay for more than $100,000 in personal expenses.

In 2020, the fair board announced that an internal review of its finances turned up “suspicious” activity. Beth Smith, the board’s chairwoman, announced at the time that the board had alerted the Nebraska State Patrol and the Attorney General’s Office.

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NORTH PLATTE SCHOOLS, HEALTH OFFICIALS STRUGGLE WITH COVID SURGE: "WE'RE DROWNING"

NORTH PLATTE-On Aug. 24, 2020, the North Platte Public Schools had seven positive COVID-19 cases and 54 exposures.

Now, a year later, they’re seeing a fivefold increase, with 36 positive cases and 392 exposures, Superintendent Ron Hanson said at a Wednesday press conference at McKinley Education Center.

Currently, three NPPS schools require face coverings: Lincoln Elementary will require them until Sept. 9, Jefferson Elementary until Sept. 10 and Washington Elementary until Sept. 13.

Hanson added that there were no plans now to close any schools, “but we will do what’s safest for our students and staff.”

Area medical professionals are also feeling the strain of the delta variant of the virus, which is significantly more transmissible.

“We’re drowning,” said Dr. Renee Engler, assistant medical director of Great Plains Health’s emergency department.

At Great Plains Health, 15 patients were hospitalized with COVID-19, two of them intubated, as of Wednesday morning, GPH infection preventionist Jenny Lantis said, and the hospital is at capacity.

“As of this morning, we are full with in-patient beds. We cannot accept any more patients today,” Lantis said. “We’re expecting 14 people to discharge today, but if we had a COVID patient come in right now, we would have to try to find them a bed somewhere else.”

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UNL TO TEMPORARILY CLOSE FRATERNITY WHILE INVESTIGATING ALLEGED SEXUAL ASSAULT

LINCOLN- The University of Nebraska-Lincoln said Wednesday that it was closing a fraternity house while an investigation into an alleged sexual assault takes place.

In an email, Chancellor Ronnie Green said UNL was suspending operations of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity — better known as Fiji — a day after protesters descended on the Greek house Tuesday night.

Fiji was currently under probation for previous violations of university policy, Green said in an email.

“We are closing the fraternity house and suspending operations of the Fiji chapter while this investigation is ongoing, due to potential violations of that probation,” the chancellor wrote.

Chief Hassan Ramzah, now in his second year leading the University Police Department, said the alleged assault, reported at 3:47 a.m. on Tuesday, is under investigation and the department is “looking at a variety of different factors based on what was reported.”

The alleged assault was the 103rd rape or attempted rape reported to UNL Police since 2005 — and the 78th such incident reported since 2015, according to police data. Another rape was reported around eight hours after the alleged assault at the Fiji house, according to records.

UNL police on Wednesday directed all questions relating to the incident to the school’s communications office.

Green said that an investigation remains open and is ongoing, but added that UNL was “committed to creating a safe environment for our students, faculty and staff.”

The announcement came hours before a second night of protests was anticipated at the Fiji house, 1425 R St. in Lincoln.

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LANCASTER COUNTY BRINGS BACK MASK MANDATE

LANCASTER COUNTY- Lincoln, it’s time to dig out your masks.

The Lincoln-Lancaster County Health Department on Tuesday announced plans to reinstitute the local mask mandate due to rising COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations and deaths.

Beginning at 12:01 a.m. Thursday, people 2 and older — regardless of vaccination status — will be required to wear masks in indoor spaces when 6 feet of separation can’t be maintained. The mandate will be in effect until Sept. 30, at which time officials will reevaluate whether it is needed.

Lincoln Public Schools said in a message to parents that it would institute a full mask mandate starting Wednesday. Previously, only students and staff in grades K-6 were required to wear masks.

The Health Department also raised its COVID-19 risk dial for the fifth straight week, from low-orange to mid-orange.

Lancaster County was the first city or county in Nebraska to have a mask mandate during the pandemic, instituting one in late July of last year, and it was in place longer than any other city or county, extending through May 20.

As of Tuesday, Lancaster County had recorded 18 COVID-19 deaths this month, more than in May, June and July combined.

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UNO, UNL ISSUE CAMPUS-WIDE INDOOR MASK MANDATES

UNO & UNL- Masks will be required at all indoor spaces on the University of Nebraska’s Omaha and Lincoln campuses beginning Wednesday.

UNO’s mask requirement, announced in an email from Chancellor Joanne Li and Interim Director of UNO’s Office of Health Security Jane Meza on Tuesday, was intended “to preserve our in-person learning opportunities and out of abundance of care for the community.” It applies to all students, faculty and staff regardless of vaccination status.

Masks are not required outside, when eating, when alone in a room with a closed door or in campus housing units. It takes effect at 6 a.m. Wednesday.

UNO’s announcement came the same day Douglas County Public Health Director Lindsay Huse asked the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services for approval to issue a directed health measure requiring people to wear face masks indoors in the county.

In its announcement, UNO also encouraged students, faculty and staff to get vaccinated.

Masks also will be required at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, the university said Tuesday, the same day the Lincoln-Lancaster County Health Department announced that it will require masks in public indoor spaces beginning Thursday. The health measure applies when 6 feet of separation can’t be maintained.

UNL will require students, faculty, staff and visitors to wear masks or face coverings in all indoor places beginning Wednesday, Chancellor Ronnie Green said in an email to the campus.

“This public health decision was necessary due to increased cases of COVID-19 in Lancaster County and the incredible strain it is putting on local hospitals, which are seeing younger and younger patients seriously ill with COVID-19 infections due to the Delta variant,” Green wrote.

As universities and schools across the state begin the academic year, Nebraska is experiencing a steady increase in COVID-19 cases. The state tallied 3,755 new cases during the week ending Friday, up from 2,668 the previous week, according to a World-Herald analysis of data from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

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NU REGENT JACK STARK CHARGED WITH FELONY COUNT OF WITNESS TAMPERING

LINCOLN- A University of Nebraska regent was arrested and charged Wednesday with a felony count of witness tampering on allegations that he encouraged a former Nebraska football player to not testify on behalf of a weightlifting coach accused of rape.

Jack Stark, a sports psychologist who was elected to the NU Board of Regents in 2020, made his first appearance before a judge Wednesday and was released on his own recognizance.

Stark, 74, is accused of trying to dissuade Willie Miller, a former fullback at Nebraska, from testifying at the trial of Douglas Anders, who owned a workout facility for bodybuilders. If convicted, Stark would face up to five years probation or two years in prison.

Stark was the team psychologist from 1989 to 2004. Miller was a fullback from 1996 to 2000.

But in the Anders case, the two were on opposite sides. Stark was endorsed as a witness for prosecutors, and was ready to testify on behalf of the victim. Miller was a friend and supporter of Anders and was poised to testify for him as a character witness.

According to an Omaha police report, Miller, 42, told detectives in August 2020 that he received a text message “from a person he knows and this person asked him not to testify in the case.” That text came six months before the case went to trial.

Melissa Lee, a spokeswoman for the University of Nebraska system, issued a statement Wednesday night: “The university is aware of Regent Stark’s case and we are following the developments.”

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SEN. BEN SASSE AMPS UP HIS 'DAMN THE DEADLINE' MESSAGE

WASHINGTON D.C.- Damn the deadline. Do not give the Taliban the power nor the time of day.

Sen. Ben Sasse has hit those themes hard, heaping criticism on President Joe Biden in a series of press releases and high-profile interviews during the past week, during Afghanistan’s speedy fall to the fundamentalist Islamist group that ruled the country before 9/11.

“The Taliban doesn’t get to run a countdown clock on American lives,” he told NPR’s Steve Inskeep on Wednesday.

“They need to go faster. We have a national security crisis, it’s ongoing,” he told Chris Wallace on Fox News Sunday. “We have a lot of Americans in harm’s way.”

“President Biden needs to eliminate all red tape and let our troops load families onto planes. Move! Run an airlift around the clock,” Sasse told CNN’s Jake Tapper last week.

Sasse spared no criticism, though, in an interview Wednesday with The World-Herald. He said the Trump administration should never have negotiated with the Taliban, much less agreed to withdraw U.S. forces by May 1 of this year.

But he said it was Biden’s fault for sticking to the agreement, and then failing to get out U.S. citizens and Afghan allies before the sudden collapse of the Afghan government and Army.

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150 NEBRASKA NATIONAL GUARD MEMBERS TO DEPLOY TO SOUTHWEST BORDER IN OCTOBER

NEBRASKA- Two Nebraska National Guard units are slated to deploy to support U.S. Customs and Border Protection at the southwest border in early October.

The deployment could last up to a year, according to Maj. Scott Ingalsbe, spokesperson for the Nebraska National Guard.

A total of about 150 guardsmen from the Nebraska Army National Guard’s 1-376th Aviation Battalion, based in Grand Island, and the 128th Engineer Battalion, based in Columbus, will deploy at the direction of the federal government, according to Ingalsbe. They’re replacing units from other states that have been deployed there, he said.

“Under the direction of U.S. Northern Command and its forward operational command, U.S. Army North, the Nebraska National Guard units’ mission is to assist CBP by providing aviation and engineer support,” Ingalsbe wrote in an email.

He did not offer a more specific location where the soldiers will be based.

Deployments are always in support of a lead agency’s request for assistance for some specific capability, he said. Sometimes that could be for law enforcement, though that is not the case with this deployment. In this case, Ingalsbe said, the soldiers will “provide mission enhancing support” to Customs and Border Protection’s “border security operations” so its agents can “conduct their law enforcement mission more efficiently.”

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