FAMILIES FEAR ‘DEVASTATING’ CHANGES TO NEBRASKA PROGRAM SERVING PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES, ELDERLY

LINCOLN — A proposal from the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services for changes to a Medicaid waiver allowing aging Nebraskans and those with a disability to remain at home is causing panic for some families and caregivers.

The 238-page proposal to the state’s Aged and Disabled Waiver would limit the need-determined reimbursable hours of caregivers from a current cap of 112 hours to 70. Of those hours, a paid live-in family caregiver could be reimbursed up to 40 hours, a part of the program with no current cap. 

The annual costs that Medicaid would reimburse under the waiver would also be limited based on changes in the yearly costs of nursing home care statewide.

“If they truly do this, it’s going to be pretty devastating to our family,” said Anna Keyzer of Lincoln, who has utilized the payments for up to 112 weekly hours to help afford to care for her 21-year-old son, Simon. “I don’t know how anyone would suddenly lose 72 hours’ worth of a paid job and be OK.”

Yearly nursing home costs were $92,438 in the last fiscal year, which ended June 30. Families would need an administrative review once costs reach 150% of the annual cost ($138,657), and families could be paid as much as 175% of the cost of that care ($161,767) if they pass a clinical review from a DHHS team. 


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THE CHANCELLOR REPORT NEBRASKA SAYS DOESN’T EXIST. UNIVERSITY PAID $15K FOR IT.

LINCOLN - The University of Nebraska hired an outside consultant to evaluate the performance of Rodney Bennett as chancellor of the system’s flagship campus earlier this year.

But despite paying $15,000 to the Center for Applied Research (CFAR), according to a contract obtained by the Journal Star, NU said it is not in possession of the “360-Degree Assessment” of Bennett’s time leading the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. “Upon searching, the university did not identify any records of or belonging to the University responsive to your request,” the university told the newspaper in response to a formal public records request filed in November.

It’s not unusual for universities to outsource a review of top administrator’s performance to a third party. Bringing in someone outside the institution can create more comfort for those who work for an administrator to be more candid with their thoughts.

The timing of the review ordered by NU President Jeff Gold on June 16 has raised eyebrows for some on UNL’s campus, however. 

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NEW OMAHA CHAMBER REPORT URGES STATE BUSINESS INCENTIVES OVERHAUL, WAYS TO STEM ‘BRAIN DRAIN’

OMAHA — Critical that Nebraska has “stepped back” from its award-winning focus on economic development, Omaha area business leaders have launched an offensive plan to regain a competitive edge.

The Greater Omaha Chamber of Commerce today released a 24-page “Omaha Competes” report that urges major updates to the state’s key business incentive program and outlines strategies to help reverse what it says is a trend pushing quality jobs and talent elsewhere. “Nebraska is at a crucial moment in its approach to economic development,” begins the report that included participation from the Omaha Mayor’s Office, Omaha Public Power District and numerous corporations.

The recommendations will be used to form legislative and policy proposals and guide the chamber’s outreach and programming over the next few years, said Heath Mello, president and CEO of the chamber, which represents corporate and business interests in the state’s largest metro area. 

Authors describe state business attraction efforts as having retreated since hitting a “high water mark” from about 2016 to 2019. That period, which the report described as one of “better jobs, stronger communities and more robust budget revenue,” was reflected in a three-year streak of winning Site Selection Magazine’s “Governor’s Cup.”


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UNK FINALIZES PLAN TO ELIMINATE FOUR DEGREE PROGRAMS TO HELP CLOSE $4.5M BUDGET GAP

KEARNEY - University of Nebraska at Kearney Chancellor Neal Schnoor forwarded a plan to eliminate four degree programs to the Board of Regents for its consideration in February.

A fifth academic program that was initially included in Schnoor’s plan to address a $4.5 million budget deficit — a Bachelor of Science in Family Science — will not be part of the budget-cutting package. On Monday, Schnoor said the program will undergo a realignment and shift to online delivery in order to continue meeting strong workforce demand instead of being cut.

UNK will also keep one family science faculty position as well as a history position to meet an anticipated increase in demand for an online master’s degree program in public history, Schnoor said. 

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PILLEN WILL FULLY FUND $15 MILLION BUSINESS STARTUP PROGRAM HE HAD CUT BY 25%

OMAHA — On the same day the Greater Omaha Chamber released a report seeking updates to Nebraska business incentives, Gov. Jim Pillen announced plans Monday to restore funding to a state program that invests early in local startups.

Pillen’s proposal to restore funding to $15 million for the state’s Business Incentive Act — which provides seed capital for local businesses — reverses course on state money he previously proposed cutting. He originally proposed trims of $5 million a year and directed his Department of Economic Development to evaluate the program’s effectiveness.

Earlier this year, the Legislature accepted most of Pillen’s proposed cut. During budget negotiations, lawmakers restored about $1.25 million a year after statewide testimony from business leaders. The state also briefly paused grants under the program late this year, spurring concerns from Nebraska’s startup community.

Pillen on Monday said his team’s research now backs up what many in the business community had told him about the return on state investment, which strengthened his support for the program. 

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OVERTIME OVERDONE? 27 STATE EMPLOYEES DOUBLE PAY BY WORKING VAST AMOUNTS OF OVERTIME

A small number of state employees dramatically boost their annual salaries by clocking extreme amounts of overtime hours. 

At least 27 state employees made more money in overtime than they did from their base salaries during the fiscal year that ended in June 2024. They did so even as the majority of the state’s 19,000 employees work no or negligible amounts of overtime.

One, Tarnue Korvah, a corporal with the Nebraska Department of Correctional Services, made $127,231 in overtime on top of his regular $66,206 base salary, according to data provided by the Nebraska Department of Administrative Services following a Flatwater public records request. Korvah couldn’t be reached for comment.

The 27 overtime overachievers all work in either Nebraska’s corrections system or for the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services. And nearly all of the DHHS employees who doubled their take-home pay through overtime are “mental health security specialists,” a position similar to correctional officers, who work at the state’s two state psychiatric hospitals, the Lincoln Regional Center and the Norfolk Regional Center.

The Fraternal Order of Police, Lodge 88, represents both corrections workers and DHHS mental health security specialists in Nebraska. The union’s president, Jay Wilson, said that both roles face similar challenges with staffing. 

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FORMER U.S. SEN. BEN SASSE ANNOUNCES TERMINAL STAGE-FOUR CANCER DIAGNOSIS

OMAHA — Former Nebraska Republican U.S. Sen. Ben Sasse is dying of “metastasized, stage-four pancreatic cancer,” he announced on social media Tuesday.

“Advanced pancreatic is nasty stuff; it’s a death sentence. But I already had a death sentence before last week too — we all do,” Sasse wrote.

Most of the political world knows Sasse from his time tussling with President Donald Trump over the direction of the Republican Party, including being one of seven Republicans who voted to convict the president following his impeachment in 2021. Sasse has been, in many ways, a traditional small-government conservative with an intellectual bent. He often critiqued the GOP’s turn toward populism under Trump and paid a price in public.

He made waves as a candidate running from academia, as then-president of Midland University in Fremont before being elected to the Senate in 2014. His friends describe him as an intense and philosophical thinker. 

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NEBRASKA AG MIKE HILGERS FORMALLY LAUNCHES 2026 REELECTION BID

LINCOLN — Nebraska Attorney General Mike Hilgers formally launched his 2026 reelection campaign Monday, vowing to continue to fight for Nebraskans and the state’s conservative values.

Hilgers, in an interview with the Nebraska Examiner, said his team has sought to make good use of every day since taking office in 2023. 

He said that includes infusing a business background into his office’s “DNA” and working to fight “otherwise unaccountable powerful interests who are taking advantage of or otherwise harming Nebraskans.” “It is an honor every day to wake up to be the attorney general, to be able to take on these fights,” Hilgers told the Examiner. “They matter so much, and I’m just beyond grateful that Nebraskans trusted me in this particular role.”

Under his leadership, Hilgers said his office has a mission to be the most tenacious, energetic, entrepreneurial and conservative AG’s office in the country. Hilgers now serves as vice chair of the Republican Attorneys General Association. 

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STATE SEN. DAN MCKEON CHANGES PLEA TO NOT GUILTY ON MISDEMEANOR DISTURBING THE PEACE CHARGE

LINCOLN — After initially filing a plea of no contest that wasn’t accepted when he didn’t attend his hearing, State Sen. Dan McKeon of Amherst has changed course and now plans to fight the allegation against him.

On Tuesday, the day before his rescheduled arraignment on a misdemeanor charge of disturbing the peace, McKeon filed a new plea of not guilty and waived his formal arraignment. The court accepted the plea and set his next court date for January 26, ordering him to appear.

A legislative staffer accused the state lawmaker of groping her at an end-of-session party in May. The Nebraska State Patrol received a report in September that McKeon had allegedly “made inappropriate contact with her buttocks with his hand, over the top of her clothing,” Patrol spokesman Cody Thomas said.

McKeon’s second arraignment was scheduled for Wednesday morning after his arraignment was delayed when he tried to file a no-contest plea by written waiver. Lancaster County Court Judge Matthew Acton said a no-contest plea must be submitted in person and postponed the arraignment one week. A no-contest plea would have allowed McKeon to accept any criminal penalties without formally admitting guilt and would waive his right to a trial.

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IOWA ATTORNEY GENERAL BRENNA BIRD FILES LAWSUIT AGAINST ROBLOX

Iowa Attorney General Brenna Bird filed a lawsuit Tuesday against Roblox, the popular online gaming company, for allegedly putting Iowa children in danger of sexual exploitation.

n online game platform, has over 80 million daily users, “many of those are Iowans and most of whom are children under the age of 18,” according to a news release from the attorney general’s office. Despite having a large base of child users, Bird said the company had taken insufficient action to address problems with sexual exploitation and stop the distribution of child sex abuse material on the platform.

In the petition filed Tuesday, Bird wrote Roblox had promised parents the platform was safe for children and equipped with safety measures “while knowing that the platform lacked necessary guardrails and facilitated the sexual exploitation of teen and preteen children and the distribution of child sexual abuse material.”

There are several lawsuits filed against the Roblox Corporation alleging the company has facilitated child sex crimes. One of the lawsuits was filed by an Iowa family, who claims their 13-year-old daughter was found in Tennessee after being taken from her grandmother’s house and sexually abused by a person she met in a Roblox chat room.

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PILLEN APPOINTS BACON COMMS DIRECTOR, POLICY ADVISER AS DOUGLAS COUNTY ELECTION COMMISSIONER

LINCOLN — Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen appointed a communications director and senior policy adviser to U.S. Rep. Don Bacon, R-Neb., on Wednesday to oversee elections in the state’s most populous county. Danielle Jensen of the Elkhorn area will succeed Douglas County Election Commissioner Brian Kruse, effective Jan. 10. Jensen has been with Bacon since he first joined Congress in 2017.

She previously served as a public and legislative affairs officer for the former Nebraska Energy Office. Jensen will hold the role through at least the end of 2027, the end of Kruse’s four-year term.

Jensen said Wednesday she was grateful to Pillen and his team for their trust. She thanked Bacon and Bacon’s chief of staff, Mark Dreiling, for their endorsements of her and their work together serving Nebraska’s Omaha-based 2nd Congressional District. “I am truly honored and look forward to serving the voters of Douglas County,” Jensen said in a statement. “I would like to thank Brian Kruse for his years of service and will continue his work of integrity and transparency.”

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2 BIG RAIL UNIONS OPPOSE $85B UNION PACIFIC–NORFOLK SOUTHERN MERGE

LINCOLN - The proposed $85 billion merger of Union Pacific and Norfolk Southern has lost the support of two unions that represent more than half their railroad workers over concerns it will jeopardize safety and jobs, raise shipping rates and consumer prices, and cause significant disruptions. 

The Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen and the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes Division are among the most prominent critics of the deal to create the nation's first transcontinental railroad. They join the American Chemistry Council, an assortment of agricultural groups and competing railroad BNSF in raising concerns the merger would hurt competition.

The deal has the support of the nation's largest rail union, which represents conductors and hundreds of individual shippers, and President Donald Trump has said the deal sounds good to him. The U.S. Surface Transportation Board will weigh the opinions of all stakeholders to determine whether the merger is in the public interest once the railroads file their formal application, which is expected later this week.

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TOP NEBRASKA DATA SECURITY OFFICER TARGET OF AUDITOR PROBE OF ‘SUSPICIOUS’ REIMBURSEMENTS

LINCOLN — A Nebraska state official responsible for overseeing state data security and privacy allegedly submitted duplicate travel reimbursement claims on two occasions for his own financial benefit, according to a new report from the state auditor.

Auditor Mike Foley this week made public his office’s review of reimbursements sought by the state’s “chief information security and privacy officer,” a man whose state employment has since ended.

Identified as Patrick Wright, he worked under the Department of Administrative Services’ Office of the Chief Information Officer. The state information office said it alerted Foley’s office and the Nebraska Attorney General’s Office in December, when it found alleged improprieties. The Auditor’s Office issued a 24-page report, largely copies of reimbursement forms, and recommendations for improvement to Wright’s supervisors, who said Wright at first was placed on administrative leave and then resigned during the investigation.

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HILGERS, RICKETTS CRITICIZE TRUMP’S FED MARIJUANA RECLASSIFICATION; NEBRASKA ADVOCATES CELEBRATE

LINCOLN — Nebraska Attorney General Mike Hilgers criticized President Donald Trump’s efforts to loosen federal restrictions on marijuana as local advocates applauded the change. Trump, via a new executive order he signed Thursday, seeks to expedite a move started under President Joe Biden to federally downgrade marijuana from a Schedule I to a Schedule III drug. Schedule I drugs, such as heroin, LSD, ecstasy and peyote, are drugs the federal government has classified with a high likelihood of abuse and no currently accepted medical value.

Schedule III drugs are defined as those with moderate to low potential for physical and psychological dependence, such as Tylenol with codeine, ketamine, anabolic steroids and testosterone.

Trump’s order directs U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi to “take all necessary steps” to complete the rulemaking process related to rescheduling marijuana and to do so in the “most expeditious manner” possible. “We will evaluate the order closely to determine how we can best continue to engage, protect the public health, and ensure the safety of our citizens,” Hilgers and seven other Republican attorneys general said in a joint statement.

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IN NEBRASKA'S COMPETITIVE CD2 RACE, ONE CANDIDATE DRAWS EARLY LABOR UNION SUPPORT

OMAHA - As a firefighter and sprinkler fitter exchanged haymakers at Baxter Arena Saturday, hundreds of electricians, plumbers, police officers, teamsters and other organized workers cheered on their siblings in labor who converted to amateur pugilists for the night. The annual Blue Collar Boxing event pits representatives from different unions against each other in a boxing ring while bringing together the Omaha area's labor community to raise money for the United Way of the Midlands. The event also brings out Nebraska politicians, candidates and campaign operatives looking to court labor support. 

On that front, Omaha State Sen. John Cavanaugh is off to a fast start. Cavanaugh wears a literal and figurative white collar in his work as an attorney and state lawmaker. But the candidate seeking the Democratic nomination for Nebraska's 2nd Congressional District looked at home at the blue-collar event, shaking hands, sipping a Miller Lite and talking shop with union members. 

He's the only candidate in the crowded race to replace Rep. Don Bacon who has announced endorsements from local unions. About five months ahead of the Democratic primary, he's racked up support from seven, including multiple electrical worker locals and a union representing government employees. 

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NEWLY REELECTED NEBRASKA FARMERS UNION PRESIDENT SAYS CURRENT FARM POLICY IS ‘NOT WORKING’

LINCOLN - Newly reelected Nebraska Farmers Union President John Hansen warned that current U.S. farm and trade policy is “not working” and leaving family farmers in a precarious economic position.

Hansen, who will continue leading the Nebraska Farmers Union after winning reelection, spoke about the challenges facing farmers amid volatile commodity markets and federal policy decisions. He discussed a recent $12 billion federal aid package intended to offset losses from tariffs, but said it falls far short of covering the hundreds of billions in value that farmers have lost due to depressed prices and trade disruptions. Farmers continue to face high production costs and unstable market prices that don’t reflect those costs, undermining their ability to remain financially viable. 

Hansen argued that the lack of stability and dependable pricing mechanisms in current farm and trade policy forces producers to rely heavily on government assistance rather than fair market returns. He stressed the need to rethink the structure of national agriculture policy so that family farmers aren’t pushed out of business and can sustain operations without depending primarily on federal support. '

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NEBRASKA’S RURAL ECONOMY SHOWING SIGNS OF LIFE AS SOME TARIFF PRESSURES EASE

LINCOLN  - Nebraska's rural economy is showing signs of life. That's one upshot of the December edition of the Rural Mainstreet Index, a report compiled by Creighton University economist Ernie Goss. 

The Index represents an early snapshot of rural economies that are heavily agriculture- and energy-dependent. It produces a score ranging from 0 to 100 for a 10-state region in the Midwest and West. It also assigns scores to each individual state. A score of 50 is "growth-neutral," meaning anything above a 50 signifies growth. 

Both the region-wide score and the Nebraska score improved from November to December, and both scores were above growth-neutral. The regional score jumped from 44 in November to 50.1 in December. The Nebraska-specific score jumped from 49.2 in November to a region-leading 54.2 in December. The region-wide score was above 50 for just the second time in 2025. 

The survey captures data about 200 rural communities with an average population of 1,300. Bank presidents throughout Colorado, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wyoming contribute information.

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NEBRASKA’S PROMISED FUNDING FOR DOMESTIC VIOLENCE SURVIVORS IN LIMBO

LINCOLN - Nebraska lawmakers allocated $3 million to support domestic violence survivors, but that funding may never be released because the state source lawmakers tapped is now over-committed and lacks enough money to cover all budgeted programs. 

The $3 million was supposed to come from the Medicaid Managed Care Excess Profit Fund, which holds surplus profits from the state’s Medicaid managed care insurers. However, the fund’s revenues have declined sharply and it’s now projected to be over-obligated — meaning more programs were approved than there is money available. Without clear legislative direction on how to prioritize the various earmarks, officials have not released the domestic violence funds, leaving advocates unsure if the support will ever arrive.

Domestic violence service providers in Nebraska are already stretched thin, with rising demand amid limited resources. Prior attempts to use other funding streams, like Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, were thwarted because federal confidentiality rules prevented their use. With the Excess Profit Fund short on cash, providers may face deeper cuts to shelters and services just as many survivors need help most. 

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NEBRASKA LAWMAKERS BUDGETED $3 MILLION TO HELP DOMESTIC VIOLENCE SURVIVORS. THE MONEY MAY NEVER COME.

LINCOLN - Nebraska lawmakers set aside $3 million to expand support for domestic violence survivors, but the funds may never reach the providers who urgently need them. That’s because the state tapped a volatile funding source that now lacks sufficient money to cover all of the programs legislators approved.

The $3 million was earmarked from the Medicaid Managed Care Excess Profit Fund, a pot of money made up of surplus profits from the state’s Medicaid managed care insurers. But the fund’s revenue has significantly declined in recent years, and it’s now over-committed, with projected expenditures exceeding available dollars. Because the fund is stretched thin and lacks clear legislative direction on prioritizing spending, officials have not distributed the money to domestic violence service providers — leaving advocates and lawmakers uncertain if it will ever materialize. 

 Advocates warn the funding gap comes at a critical time, as demand for domestic violence services across Nebraska continues to rise. Providers have already cut shelter capacity and laid off staff due to previous funding shortfalls, and without the promised $3 million, they may struggle to meet survivor needs. Lawmakers and advocates are now reassessing how to secure stable financing for these services, as well as for other programs also affected by the shortfall in the Excess Profit Fund. 

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NEBRASKA BECOMES FIRST STATE TO ADD NEW MEDICAID FEDERAL WORK REQUIREMENTS

LINCOLN — Nebraska stepped Wednesday toward becoming the first state in the country to start its implementation of new federal work requirements for Medicaid health insurance recipients beginning May 1 of the new year. Gov. Jim Pillen, joined on Zoom by Administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Dr. Mehmet Oz and in person by state health officials, rolled out the state’s plans for the new federal requirement as a “hand up and not a hand out.” 

“We’re not here to take everybody to the curb … [but] making sure we get every able-bodied Nebraskan to be part of our community,” Pillen said. State health officials said the new requirements apply to work-eligible adults in the Medicaid expansion population aged 19 to 64. Those Medicaid recipients will be required to work at least 80 hours a month or be enrolled in school at least half-time to receive or keep health coverage. 

Steve Corsi, Director of Nebraska’s Department of Health and Human services, said people will begin receive notice of the new requirements by Jan. 1, and the agency is working on details on how it will track work status.

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