CORRECTIONS OFFICIALS TOUT NEW PRISON ADDITION AS SAFER, MORE EFFICIENT

LINCOLN- State corrections officials showed off the newest addition to the state prison system, pitching it as safer for both inmates and staff and better able to rehabilitate prisoners and retain security staff. 

The $125 million addition to the Lincoln Correctional Center and Diagnostic and Evaluation Center includes two 32-bed units for inmates with acute mental illnesses and those needing medical care, as well as a 384-bed are to house the state’s most dangerous prisoners. 

“The bottom line is you’re going to see a great prison,” said State Corrections Director Scott Frakes.

The Nebraska Legislature declined this spring to give the final go-ahead for a $270 million prison, opting to wait for a new master plan for the state prison system expected before the end of the year. But state lawmakers did set aside $175 million for the ultimate construction of the massive facility if approved in the 2023 legislative session and by a new, incoming governor.

Frakes did say that some of the 10 state senators who toured the facility remarked that they had a clearer picture of what the larger, proposed prison would look like.

For the full article click HERE

WILDFIRE BURNING NERBASKA NATIONAL FOREST NEAR HALSEY

HALSEY- Multiple agencies and fire crews are battling a wildfire at the Nebraska National Forest.

District Ranger Julie Bain said five fires were started in the forest by lightning strikes earlier in the week. Crews were able to put out the fires. However, two of the fires re-ignited a day later. One is now under control, while the other is still in progress. 

So far, the fires have destroyed between 15 to 50 acres. The Whitetail Campground and the ATV trails are closed and it is believed that structures or private property are not currently at risk.

Bain said although the area recently received 3 inches of rain, it hasn’t been enough to recover from the ongoing dry conditions.

Forest officials say the smell of smoke could make its way into the surrounding areas pending the containment process. 

For the full article click HERE

TREVOR JONES, HEAD OF HISTORY NEBRASKA FOR THE PAST SIX YEARS, TO RESIGN JULY 1

LINCOLN — Trevor Jones, the executive director/CEO of History Nebraska, submitted his resignation Wednesday, effective July 1.

Jones, who served in the position for the past six years, was unsure about his future plans in a message shared with the staff at the state historical society.

After talking with his wife about what is "truly important," he said he decided to "leave my position while still doing my best work."

“I don’t know what will come next, but I look forward to finding out,” he wrote. “It has been my honor to serve the organization charged with preserving and interpreting Nebraska’s history. …  I have enjoyed the work immensely.” 

Jones, who previously managed the Historical Resources division of the Kentucky Historical Society, had made a number of changes at History Nebraska. He pushed hard for the digitization of the agency's historical archives and even won approval to change the name of the organization from the Nebraska State Historical Society to History Nebraska.

In his note, Jones said that he was proud of what History Nebraska has accomplished.

“We’ve digitized millions of records and seen the use of our collections increase exponentially. We have launched innovative new programs, increased our budget, staff size, attendance, and earned income dramatically,” Jones wrote.

For the full article click HERE

NEBRASKA'S LONE ASTRONAUT RETURNS HOME TO HEAD SAC MUSEUM

ASHLAND - For 167 days of his life, Clayton Anderson floated far above the Earth. But it’s his hometown of Ashland that Nebraska’s only astronaut has always gravitated toward.

Anderson spent 30 years with NASA and the latter 15 years as an astronaut. Anderson’s 15 years as an astronaut include flying on two space shuttle missions and six spacewalks that totaled 38 hours and 28 minutes. Anderson describes being able to spacewalk as “the ultimate” milestone. 

After a decade of retirement, he landed the position of president and CEO of the Strategic Air Command & Aerospace Museum. The museum is located near his hometown along Interstate 80 between Omaha and Lincoln.

“I’m just very excited,” he said in an interview. “There are special people here. There are dedicated, hardworking and amazing people that helped raise me … and made me the man I’ve become. It’s time for me to come home and give back.” 

Since his retirement from NASA, Anderson had been teaching intro to aerospace engineering to first-year students at Iowa State University. 

Anderson hopes to continue the SAC Museum's mission of educating, entertaining, and inspiring those who come through its doors. 

He envisions he and the 30 employees of the museum will implement more interactivity that "can bring the museum even to bigger life."

For the full article click HERE

UNO CHANCELLOR LI: PAID INTERNSHIPS WILL TURN THE TIDE IN NEBRASKA'S 'BRAIN DRAIN' FIGHT

OMAHA- While student academic achievement is the primary mission of every university, the importance of building connections between students and prospective employers — primarily through internships — is undeniable.

A recent study from the National Association of Colleges and Employers found that in 2021, students who worked paid internships were nearly twice as likely to receive a job offer than those who didn’t take on an internship at all.

Nebraska has lost 2,000 college-educated people per year to other states over the last 10 years. To make matters worse, 72% of those losses are from individuals between the ages of 20 to 29 years old. Added up over time, the lost economic potential is staggering.

Earlier this month UNO announced partnerships with nearly 50 Omaha-based companies and non-profits called UNO Career Connect to close this gap. Through this program, partner employers that include Fortune 500 companies, small businesses, and nonprofits pledge a certain number of internship positions to UNO students.

For employers, it provides a new level of access to the talent they need to move their businesses forward. Most importantly, for our state, it keeps top talent in Nebraska, effectively turning the tide against brain drain.

For the full article click HERE

METRO LEARNING COMMUNITY CANDIDATE BRENDA BANKS INDICTED ON WIRE FRAUD CHARGES

OMAHA- Brenda Banks, the leading candidate for the District 1 seat on the Learning Community Council for Douglas and Sarpy counties, faces an eight-count federal indictment for wire fraud.

Federal prosecutors allege Banks "perpetrated a series of fraudulent schemes resulting in awards of over $464,000" to her nonprofit organization "Angels on Wheels" organization between April 2018, and June 2020 Investigators accuse her of repeatedly submitting altered documents to receive federal COVID-19 relief money.

The federal indictment alleges Banks, who is listed as the organization's executive director, provided altered check images and fictitious invoices to NET, the Nebraska Environmental Trust, totaling $220,334.

Banks, 60, advanced to the general election by finishing first in a field of four candidates in the May Primary race for the District 1 seat on the Learning Community Council.

For the full article click HERE

SOUTHEAST NEBRASKA MINE COULD BE NATION'S SECOND LARGEST RARE EARTH DEPOSIT, ACCORDING TO A GEOLOGICAL STUDY

ELK CREEK- The nation's second-largest deposit of rare-earth magnet material is sitting under the ground in southeast Nebraska.

At least that's what Colorado-based NioCorp estimated from a study they conducted.

The company references a 2022 feasibility study, with further research ongoing. It was already planning on pulling niobium, scandium, and titanium out of the ground south of Tecumseh.

"With the addition of the magnetic rare earths, the Elk Creek Project will stand out from virtually every other greenfield project in the U.S. in terms of its potential ability to produce multiple critical minerals that are essential to electrified transportation, renewable energy production, green mega-infrastructure projects, and many other applications that are in increasing demand around the world," Mark Smith, NioCorp chief executive, said in a statement.

NioCorp took the big step of buying the land in 2021, but it still needs to raise the money to start the mining project. The estimated lifespan of the mine, according to geological surveys, is 38 years.

For the full article click HERE

AMID CRITICISM, NERBASKA ENVIROMENTAL TRUST MOVES TO CLARIFY GRANT ELIGIBILITY RULES

LINCOLN- The Nebraska Environmental Trust Board responded to criticism of their eligibility requirements by reviewing the structure of those requirements this week.

State Sen. John McCollister of Omaha, in a recent op-ed in the Lincoln Journal Star, questioned the Trust Board for declaring that 34 of the 118 grants submitted to it last year were ineligible for funding.

There was a much higher rejection rate from the Board this year, affecting projects such as recycling operations in Omaha and Ogallala, that had received funding for years.

Former board members, state senators, and community advocates voiced their displeasure with the board's recent decisions.

In response, the Trust Board voted this week to set up an ad hoc committee of board members to review the rules and regulations of the agency, the so-called Title 137, which were last reviewed in 2017.

“The altered funding priorities have many people feeling that the Trust is failing to follow its original mandate and is becoming beholden to outside influences,” McCollister wrote in his recent op-ed.

For the full article click HERE

WHERE HERBSTER STUMBLED AND HOW PILLEN WON NEBRASKA'S GOP GUBERNATORIAL PRIMARY

OMAHA — Nebraska’s GOP primary voters handed former President Donald Trump his first loss of 2022 when they chose Jim Pillen over Trump’s pick for governor, Charles Herbster.

"58-1. Charles W. Herbster came VERY close despite tremendous headwinds!" said the former President on his new social media app, Truth Social. 

Understanding why Herbster lost to Pillen is more complex than the assertion that Trump's hold on Republican politics is waning. Interviews with political scientists and reporting from the campaign trail have contributed to the following observations and analysis.

First, Herbster spent less time on the campaign trail than his Republican competitors. He was, however, the first candidate to run TV ads.

Only a handful of days were spent campaigning in person until March for the Herbster campaign. In fact, at least a third of Nebraska's counties show no record of Herbster attending a campaign event during this cycle. This was critically important in the 3rd Congressional District, 47% of the GOP's vote, where voters prefer meeting candidates face to face. 

Second, Herbster's attempts to focus his campaign on Trump's endorsement and national issues contributed to views that he did not have a clear plan for Nebraska. 

Third, too much time was spent criticizing Pillen, his top opponent, and not enough defining himself in a positive light. Nebraskans reportedly recoil from negative ads, said Paul Landow, a political scientist at the University of Nebraska at Omaha.

For the full article click HERE

SLAMA LAWSUIT MOVES FORWARD WITH NEW GROPING DETAILS; HERBSTER DENIES

LINCOLN — State Sen. Julie Slama’s lawyers made clear in a new filing Monday that her counter-lawsuit alleging sexual battery by Charles Herbster will continue after Herbster’s loss last week in the GOP primary race for governor.

Slama’s lawyers asked that Herbster’s defamation lawsuit against her be thrown out as being “frivolous” and in “bad faith.” They added details to Slama’s counter-suit, including a new claim alleging that Herbster’s political defense cast Slama in a false light.

The new filing said: “Herbster and his counsel know, or should know, that Senator Slama’s statements in question are true or substantially true.” 

Slama, the filing said, is still coping with the mental and emotional toll of being groped and with how Herbster responded to her allegation in April. The filing said she is dealing with anxiety, depression, and feared loss of reputation. 

Slama’s new filing provides the most detailed account yet of what she said Herbster did to her during the Elephant Remembers fundraising dinner in Omaha in 2019. It said Slama, then 22, was walking to her table at the dinner. 

For the full article, including a detailed account of the allegations, click HERE.

U.S. SENATE DEMOCRATS FAIL TO ENSHRINE NATIONWIDE ABORTION PROTECTIONS, VOW MORE ACTION

WASHINGTON — Efforts to secure the nationwide right to an abortion stalled for a second time Wednesday when U.S. Senate Democrats failed to get enough votes to overcome the legislative filibuster. 

Republicans, including Maine Sen. Susan Collins and Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski, voted uniformly against limiting debate on the bill while Democrats, save West Virginia’s Joe Manchin, voted to advance the measure toward final passage. 

The bill, sponsored by Connecticut Sen. Richard Blumenthal, would have given health care providers the right to perform abortions and for patients to terminate their pregnancy without having to adhere to 11 different government restrictions. Health care providers would not have been required to perform tests or procedures that weren’t medically necessary or to give patients medically inaccurate information before performing an abortion. Governments couldn’t have banned abortions before the viability threshold, typically between 22 and 24 weeks into a pregnancy, and post-viability abortions couldn’t be restricted when “in the good-faith medical judgment of the treating health care provider, a continuation of the pregnancy would pose a risk to the pregnant patient’s life or health.” Health care providers could not be restricted from prescribing medication for abortion as long as it was based on “current evidence-based regimens or the provider’s good-faith medical judgment, other than a limitation generally applicable to the medical profession.”

The 49-51 procedural vote was the second time this year Senate Democrats have attempted to advance a bill to codify the right to an abortion. But it was the first vote on abortion access since Politico published a leaked draft opinion from Associate Justice Samuel Alito showing the U.S. Supreme Court poised to overturn Roe v. Wade within the next two months.

For the full article click HERE

RICKETTS SEEKING APPLICATIONS FOR PAHLS' REPLACEMENT IN NEBRASKA LEGISLATURE

LINCOLN- Gov. Pete Ricketts is seeking applicants to fill an open seat in the Nebraska Legislature that was created after the death of State Sen. Rich Pahls of Omaha.

Applications to fill the vacancy in Legislative District 31 will be accepted until 5 p.m. May 27, according to a press release. To be eligible, applicants must be at least 21, be registered to vote, and must have lived within the district for at least one year. 

District 31 lies in Douglas County and includes most of the Millard neighborhood in southwest Omaha. The boundaries are between South 192nd Street and South 144th Street, and between West Center Road and Harrison Street.

Interested individuals may complete an application for an executive appointment online at governor.nebraska.gov/board-comm-req.

The appointee will serve until Jan. 3, 2023. During the November 2022 general election, voters will elect a member of the Legislature for District 31 to serve the remainder of Pahls’ original term, which lasts until January 2025. 

For the full article click HERE

PRIMARY SUCCESS ENERGIZES CONSERVATIVE CANDIDATES FOR NEBRASKA'S STATE EDUCATION BOARD

LINCOLN- Elizabeth Tegtmeier of North Platte, Sherry Jones of Grand Island, and Kirk Penner of Aurora all finished the primary night holding wide margins over their general election opponents. 

The fourth candidate, Marni Hodgen, advanced to the general election as well, edging out former state board member John Sieler in the Douglas County district. If they maintain their margins in the general election, the board will have some new conservative faces in January. To win seats, they will have to beat four candidates backed by the Nebraska state teachers union: Robin Stevens, Danielle Helzer, Helen Raikes and Deborah Neary. All four of them advanced.

“I think for so long, the state board has flown under people’s radar, and this past year has really highlighted that our representatives are not reflective of the voters,” Tegtmeier said. “Instead, they seem to be the mouthpiece for special interest groups.” 

The four conservative candidates were endorsed by the Protect Nebraska Children PAC, the group that mounted a relentless fight against proposed health education standards last year. 

For the full article click HERE

EVNEN FENDED OFF TWO CHALLENGERS TO WIN GOP PRIMARY FOR SECRETARY OF STATE

LINCOLN- Secretary of State Bob Evnen fended off two challengers in Tuesday’s Republican primary who claimed that widespread voter fraud cost Donald Trump the 2020 election.

Evnen claimed 44% of the last week's primary, outdistancing his GOP rivals, Robert Borer and Rex Schroder, who polled 32% and 24%, respectively. The victory means that Evnen, a 69-year-old attorney from Lincoln, likely will win a second term. No Democrats filed to run for the post this year.

“I am grateful to Nebraska Republicans for putting their trust in me,” Evnen said in a statement Tuesday night. “I will continue to work to secure our elections and to perform the many other responsibilities of the office.” 

Both Borer, a retired Lincoln firefighter, and Schroder, a small business owner from Palmyra, had based their campaign largely on claims that the state’s vote-counting machines have been compromised and that fraudulent voting had occurred under Evnen’s watch. Both questioned whether Joe Biden had truly won an electoral vote in Nebraska’s 2nd Congressional District, where he outpolled Trump by more than 22,000 votes.

For the full article click HERE

POLITICAL PARTIES CONFIDENT ABOUT FLIPPING SEATS IN NEBRASKA LEGISLATURE

LINCOLN- Republicans could gain a filibuster-proof majority in the Nebraska Legislature if the results of the Nebraska primary election are repeated in November. 

Election tallies from the Secretary of State’s Office show Republican candidates leading in two districts now held by Democrats, while a Democrat leads in one district held by a Republican.

If that proves to be the general election outcome, Republicans would have 33 seats in the 49-member Legislature, enough to push through bills banning abortion, allowing Nebraskans to carry concealed guns without a permit and returning the state to a winner-take-all Electoral College system.  

Jane Kleeb, chair of the Nebraska Democratic Party, dismissed that possibility. She said she’s confident of keeping all 17 seats held by Democrats and possibly adding one or two. Her watch list includes an Omaha race in which Cindy Maxwell-Ostdiek, an independent, is running against R. Brad von Gillern, a Republican. 

For the full article click HERE

NEBRASKA REPUBLICANS RALLY FOR 'UNITY' AS PARTY SHOWS CRACKS HEADING INTO FALL

LINCOLN- Nebraska’s Republicans upheld their last week of hosting a “unity rally” the day after GOP candidates compete in contested primary elections. 

Charles Herbster, the second-place finisher in the gubernatorial race, attended, as did Theresa Thibodeau, Herbster’s former running mate, who finished fourth in the governor’s primary. Thibodeau and several others who lost primary elections Tuesday attended the rally to show that they back the winning candidates, including University of Nebraska Regent Jim Pillen, the GOP nominee for governor. State Sen. Brett Lindstrom, who finished third in the governor’s primary race, didn’t attend the rally in order to spend time with his family, although he endorsed Pillen during his concession speech.

GOP incumbents faced stiffer-than-usual protest votes on Tuesday, including many from voters who lodged complaints online about the state’s “political establishment.” 

For the full article click HERE

MEDICAL MARIJUANA BACKERS FILE A LEGAL CHALLENGE IN PETITION PROCESS

LINCOLN- Supporters of medical marijuana in Nebraska have launched a legal challenge to the state’s requirement that 5% of registered voters in at least 38 counties sign a petition to get the measure before voters on the ballot.

Nebraskans for Medical Marijuana joined the American Civil Liberties Union of Nebraska in filing the federal civil rights lawsuit in U.S. District Court. 

The organizations requested a decision by July 7 on the constitutionality of the multicounty signature distribution requirement. They also requested a court order to suspend the requirement by that date, which is the deadline for petitioners to submit their collected signatures. 

The lawsuit argues that the multicounty distribution requirement is an unconstitutional roadblock that violates the U.S. Constitution’s First Amendment guarantee of free speech and the 14th Amendment’s equal protection and due process clauses.

“Nebraska’s counties vary widely in population,” the lawsuit says. “As a result, Nebraska’s signature distribution requirement gives disproportionate influence to voters in sparsely populated counties.”

For the full article click HERE

RICKETTS SIGNS OFF ON NEBRASKA CASINO RULES BUT FIRST BETS ARE STILL MONTHS AWAY

LINCOLN- Gov. Pete Ricketts has signed off on rules to allow casino gaming in Nebraska, but residents are still a ways off from feeding slot machines. 

The regulations approved this week and set to go into effect on May 16th open the window for potential casino operators to apply for licenses some 18 months after voters approved expanded gambling at the state's horse racing tracks. 

The Nebraska Racing and Gaming Commission earlier this year approved licensing forms for casino operators and key personnel. But at the last meeting, the board delayed a vote on the fee structure for those applications.

That means none of the entities seeking to operate casinos can apply until the commission approves the fees, which is likely to happen at its next meeting on June 2, said Lynne McNally, executive vice president of the Nebraska Horsemen’s Benevolent and Protective Association.

Assuming those fees are approved on June 2, potential casino operators could then apply for licenses the next day.

Tom Sage, Director of the Nebraska Racing and Gaming Commission, said he expects it will take 30-60 days to process the applications, which will then have to go on a commission agenda for approval. 

For the full article click HERE

NURSES SAY THEIR FIELD IS CHALLENGING AND REWARDING, DESPITE WORKFORCE CHALLENGES

LINCOLN — Nursing remains a rewarding job despite the workforce challenges facing the profession.  

A handful of nurses shared this message Monday, May 9 during a Zoom press conference regarding the annual commemoration of Nurses Week, May 6-12.

The increased workload and stress caused by COVID-19, as well as earlier than expected retirement in the field, is contributing to a workforce shortage in the field.

By the year 2025, Nebraska is expected to be short 5,400 nurses according to Jeremy Nordquist, president of the Nebraska Hospital Association.

“We really need to invest in education in the long haul, but if we’re going to get through this workforce crisis, we’re going to have to retain who we have,” Nordquist said. 

He went on to say that the shortage of nurses and certified nursing assistants has run between 15% and 20% in some areas of the state in recent weeks. However, he also noted that some nurses are beginning to return to full-time positions after working as "traveling" nurses during the height of the pandemic. 

The Nebraska Legislature took several steps towards addressing the workforce challenges in the 2022 session, including increased funding for loan forgiveness programs and scholarships for those entering the health care field.

For the full article click HERE

OFFUT AIRMEN ASK JUDGE TO BLOCK COVID VACCINE MANDATE, CITING RELIGIOUS BELIEFS

BELLEVUE- Three current or former Offutt airmen who have refused the COVID-19 vaccine on religious grounds asked a federal district court judge in Omaha to stop the Air Force from discharging or otherwise punishing them.

Capt. Ian McGee, an RC-135 instructor pilot with the Offutt-based 55th Wing, said he applied for a religious exemption eight months ago but hasn’t received a response from his chain of command. He expects it to be denied, as the Air Force has denied nearly all of the more than 7,800 airmen who have applied for them under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, known as RFRA.

McGee said he would give up his nine-year military career rather than be injected with a vaccine tested with cell lines taken many years ago from aborted fetuses.

“It goes against my sincerely held religious beliefs as a born-again Christian,” McGee testified. 

The three airmen are part of a larger group of 36 — including active-duty, National Guard and reserves — who filed suit in U.S. District Court in Nebraska in March seeking to overturn the mandate issued by the Pentagon last August. They argue it is a violation of their First Amendment rights.

For the full article click HERE