GRAND ISLAND SCHOOL BOARD APPROVES $2 MILLION NETWORKING BID

Grand Island - All Grand Island Public Schools buildings will soon have upgraded wired networking after the school board approved a nearly $2 million bid Thursday night. “This includes six facilities,” said Dan Petsch, director of buildings and grounds.

The buildings include Gates, Howard, Knickrehm, Lincoln and Wasmer elementary schools, as well as the Kneale Administration Building. “We go in and do a total upgrade for the wiring that will support security cameras, phone system, as well as our infrastructure for our APs,” Petsch said, referring to access points. Hamilton Information Systems submitted the lower of two bids for $1,948,778.

“Hamilton was actually the contractor that did the work for us this last summer,” Petsch said. Money for the project will come from the Qualified Capital Purpose Undertaking Fund. All seven board members present voted in favor of the bill. Lisa Albers was absent, and the board accepted the resignation of Josh Sikes at Thursday’s meeting.

The board also approved a $248,500 bid from Mechanical Sales for a cooling tower replacement at Grand Island Senior High. A cooling tower removes waste heat from a building.

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NEBRASKA LAWMAKER REMOVES, LATER RETURNS PART OF PRAGERU ‘FOUNDERS MUSEUM’ AT CAPITOL

LINCOLN — In plain view of the public, progressive State Sen. Machaela Cavanaugh of Omaha tore down and later returned part of a Nebraska Capitol display distributed by the conservative nonprofit PragerU and the White House on the first day of the legislative session.

Gov. Jim Pillen had said the purpose of hosting the display, sponsored by the state’s Semiquincentennial Commission, was to let the state “celebrate the country’s 250th anniversary.”

The nonprofit behind the images has faced criticism for sharing content that historians consider misleading and inaccurate. The latest display is part of a push from the Trump administration’s White House Task Force 250, outreach designed to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the U.S.

Cavanaugh told the Examiner she removed the frames because “we are not allowed to adhere anything to walls in the hallway of the Capitol.”  She said generally any such display would be placed near the information desk and not in the Capitol’s hallways. “I have always been a stickler for the rules … so I removed the prohibited objects,” Cavanaugh said.

Speaker John Arch of La Vista confirmed that Cavanaugh told him that she had removed the portraits. Arch said the commission can display in the Capitol with approval, which he said the group had received from the Nebraska Capitol Commission.

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NEBRASKA RECEIVES $218.5M FOR RURAL HEALTH TRANSFORMATION PROGRAM, LAWMAKERS PUSH PASTURE-TO-POLICY AGENDA

LINCOLN — Nebraska has been awarded $218.5 million through the federal Rural Health Transformation Program, marking one of the largest allocations nationwide and providing a major boost to efforts aimed at strengthening health care access in rural parts of the state. The initiative, championed by Gov. Jim Pillen and scheduled to begin in 2026, is designed to modernize rural health care delivery and address long-standing challenges such as provider shortages, geographic barriers and limited access to emergency and preventive services.

The program will allow the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services to implement coordinated strategies including regional hub-and-spoke health networks, expanded mobile health units, enhanced pharmacy services and broader use of eHealth technologies. State leaders say the investment is intended to bring care closer to home for residents in rural and frontier counties while also helping recruit and retain health care workers as demand increases, particularly among aging populations.

In her “Capitol Conversations: From Pasture to Policy” commentary, State Sen. Tanya Storer highlighted the funding as a significant step toward aligning state policy with the needs of Nebraska’s agricultural and rural communities. She described the program’s emphasis on prevention, innovation and local access as a long-term opportunity to improve health outcomes and infrastructure, even as lawmakers continue broader discussions on rural development and sustainability during the legislative session.

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TIKTOK SUES NEBRASKA AG OVER SECRET LAW FIRM DEALS

LINCOLN - Social media giant TikTok has sued Nebraska's Attorney General, accusing him of violating state law by redacting and withholding public records concerning his office retaining two private law firms in their civil lawsuit against them. 

Attorney General Mike Hilgers hasn't yet responded to the petition filed Tuesday in Lancaster County District Court. But his spokesperson, Suzanne Gage, said Wednesday that the documents "were properly withheld under Nebraska law."

The new case relates to the lawsuit the state filed against TikTok in May 2024, in which Hilgers' office accused TikTok of falsely marketing and promoting its "addictive and otherwise harmful product" to Nebraskans and said it has fueled a youth mental health crisis in Nebraska.

Specifically, it accuses TikTok of making misrepresentations by calling its product a "family friendly" platform that is safe and appropriate for users 12 and up. Hilgers is seeking civil penalties and injunctive relief and has likened the case to claims brought in the ’90s against Big Tobacco. The newly filed case involves who is representing the state of Nebraska in the case.

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NEBRASKA REPORT FINDS DECREASE IN UNFILLED TEACHING POSITIONS STATEWIDE

LINCOLN - The number of unfilled teaching positions in Nebraska decreased by nearly 50% over the past two school years, according to data from a statewide teacher vacancy survey.

The number of reported unfilled teaching positions statewide was 490 for the 2025-26 school year, according to a report from the Nebraska Department of Education. That number is down from a peak of 908 unfilled positions in the 2023-24 school year and 669 unfilled positions in the 2024-25 school year. Of the unfilled positions for the 2025-26 school year, 23% were left vacant, while the remainder of the positions were filled with an underqualified educator. The percentage of positions left vacant in 2024-25 was 30%. 

Special education was the area with the most unfilled positions for both this school year and last, decreasing from 149 in 2024-25 to 140 in 2025-26. Other subject areas with the most unfilled positions included elementary education, career education, science and math. The report also included teacher shortages by region, with the Omaha metro region seeing the highest number of shortages. The metro region had 175 unfilled teaching positions in 2025-26, down from 239 in 2024-25.

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NEBRASKA GOV. JIM PILLEN TAUNTS $10 MILLION CAMPAIGN WAR CHEST AHEAD OF 2026 REELECTION BID

LINCOLN — Fresh off securing President Donald Trump’s endorsement, Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen announced his campaign has raised $7.6 million, bringing the governor’s political war chest to $10 million ahead of his 2026 reelection bid. 

The incumbent governor’s fundraising haul comes as a potential Republican primary election rematch is on the horizon with multi-state agribusinessman Charles Herbster, a longtime Trump donor. 

The Pillen campaign said the amount is “almost seven times” that of any previous incumbent governor going into reelection. Pillen finished 2024 with more than $3 million in cash on hand, according to state campaign finance reports. Dona-Gene Barton, a political science professor at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln who studies political behavior, said, “This massive war chest creates a David vs. Goliath situation for potential challengers.”

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RESPECT NEBRASKA VOTERS EFFORT BEGINS SIGNATURE GATHERING, MEETS EARLY PUSHBACK

OMAHA — Advocates seeking an amendment to the Nebraska Constitution to “protect” and make it harder to tweak citizen-initiated laws, such as those around payday lending, gambling, minimum wage, paid sick leave and medical cannabis, will start gathering signatures this week for the 2026 ballot.

Proponents see the changes as necessary in light of recent legislative action or inaction on voter-backed laws. But some advocates of recent ballot measures and a few state senators said they worry about unintended consequences. The new group, “Respect Nebraska Voters,” kicked off its 2026 campaign this week in Omaha. If successful, the effort would increase the threshold of lawmakers required to change voter-approved laws from 33 state senators (two-thirds) to 40 (four-fifths). 

Nebraska’s officially nonpartisan one-house Legislature has 49 state lawmakers. Former State Sen. Al Davis, a Sandhills rancher, helped lead a 2020 measure to cap payday lending rates. It passed with about 83% of the vote. He is now a co-sponsor of Respect Nebraska Voters and said the push could be important for the future of ballot measures. “I fear we’re now in the unfortunate place where many everyday Nebraskans are left wondering if initiatives matter at all, or if lawmakers will simply reach for the eraser after every election,” Davis said. “I believe we can restore trust and do better by putting more power in voters’ hands.”

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GOVERNOR PRESENTS ANNUAL THREAT ASSESSMENT, PRAISES TRUMP'S CAPTURE OF MADURO

LINCOLN —As dominoes tumble to an unseen endpoint in Latin America, Nebraska leaders discussed the state's role in projecting U.S. power and what threats Nebraskans face in their own backyards. Gov. Jim Pillen, Lt. Gov. Joe Kelly and Adjutant General Craig Strong of the Nebraska National Guard presented a summary of the annual threat assessment from the state's Committee on Pacific Conflict in an Air National Guard hangar.

"This year we tried to make sure we made a focus on ag security, agriculture as a strategic infrastructure," Kelly said. "We heard from several witnesses in that regard. But we know that here in Nebraska, our defense starts with the 44 million acres of land that are in ag production." Nebraska ag land and who owns it has been the subject or recent legislation. The Foreign-Owned Real Estate National Security Act looked to tighten up restrictions on adversaries. State leaders also want to push Nebraska toward de-coupling with adversarial economies.

"Stop buying stuff made in China," Pillen said. "Stop buying it. Do business with your neighbors. Do business with Main Street, Nebraska." One of the committee's champions, Sen. Eliot Bostar of Lincoln, said the start of the 2022 Russo-Ukrainian War was a wake-up call for the state. "With the Russian invasion of Ukraine, all of the investments we had, all of the trade arrangements that we had, immediately evaporated," Bostar said. Bostar said this committee, in part, is aimed at preventing that possibility in the future. Kelly referred to Nebraska as an "adversary-free zone."

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ENVIRONMENTAL TRUST LOTTERY FUNDS AGAIN TARGETED TO HELP CLOSE STATE BUDGET GAP

LINCOLN — With state government facing a $471 million budget shortfall, one state agency again seeks to use state lottery funds, through the Nebraska Environmental Trust, to help finance its operations.

The proposal was described by trust supporters as a new and probably unconstitutional “raid” of trust funds — state lottery proceeds that are granted out to environmental projects.

A state official, meanwhile, described the transfer as necessary to continue soil and water conservation projects and said it complies with a recently amended state law that expanded the allowable uses of the money. The Nebraska Department of Water, Energy and Environment (NDWEE), in a mid-budget funding request, seeks an $8 million transfer from the Trust, of which $6 million would be used for a soil and water conservation program and $2 million for salaries and administrative costs.

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NEBRASKA MEDICINE, NU CLASH PUBLICLY AS $800 MILLION BUYOUT SLOWS AHEAD OF REGENTS VOTE

OMAHA —University of Nebraska leaders and Nebraska Medicine officials are publicly staking out opposing positions as a high-stakes proposal to consolidate control of the state’s largest health system moves forward amid growing calls for caution from lawmakers.

Nebraska President Jeffrey Gold told University of Nebraska Medical Center faculty and staff this week that the NU Board of Regents has no plans to use Nebraska Medicine funds, state appropriations or tuition dollars to finance the proposed buyout of Clarkson Regional Health’s 50% stake in the system. Gold said the roughly $800 million transaction would be handled separately from the university’s budget through debt service, letters of credit and revenue tied to real estate that NU would acquire as part of the deal. “There will not be a single dollar of state appropriation, tuition or research funding that goes into doing this,” Gold said during a campus forum.

As the debate intensified, the Nebraska Medicine board launched an informational website aimed at rallying opposition to the proposal, arguing that increased state involvement could threaten compensation for physicians, nurses and staff and undermine the system’s independence. The public pushback coincided with a decision by the NU Board of Regents to delay a planned vote on the deal after more than 30 state lawmakers urged the board to slow down, citing concerns about transparency, financial risk and limited legislative and public review. Regents postponed the vote to allow additional time for scrutiny as the dispute over the future governance of the nonprofit health system continues to play out in public view. The regents were set to meet at 3 p.m. Friday. They will now meet at 9 a.m. next Thursday. Thirty-one state lawmakers also sent a letter Thursday urging the regents to “tap the brakes” and delay the vote.

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UNL CHANCELLOR BENNETT TO RESIGN EARLY, RECEIVE $1.1 MILLION PAYOUT AMID BUDGET CUTS

LINCOLN  — University of Nebraska-Lincoln Chancellor Rodney Bennett, who announced he will resign Jan. 12, will receive a one-time payment of about $1.1 million under a resignation agreement negotiated with University of Nebraska President Jeffrey Gold and approved by the NU Board of Regents. Bennett, 59, had been in the role since July 2023 and will leave nearly six months before his contract was set to expire. 

Bennett’s time leading UNL was marked by $27.5 million in budget cuts, including the elimination or merger of several academic programs last fall — decisions that drew significant criticism from faculty and contributed to a rare vote of “no confidence” by the UNL Faculty Senate. In his brief email to the campus community announcing his departure, Bennett cited his decision to conclude his service and expressed gratitude for the opportunity to serve. 

The resignation agreement, which Bennett signed Jan. 2, includes the lump sum plus continued salary and benefits through his resignation date, but also bars him from future employment at any NU campus for three years. The payout has been condemned by the UNL chapter of the American Association of University Professors, which says the severance package stands in stark contrast to the financial sacrifices being made elsewhere on campus and undermines the narrative of fiscal necessity that accompanied program cuts and layoffs.

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LAWMAKERS FAST-TRACK EXPULSION PROCEEDINGS AGAINST STATE SEN. DAN MCKEON

LINCOLN  — Nebraska lawmakers are moving swiftly on what could become the Legislature’s first-ever expulsion of a sitting state senator, suspending rules and setting a hearing date as formal allegations continue to unfold. Lawmakers voted overwhelmingly to suspend the rule requiring seven days’ notice before a hearing, clearing the way for the Legislature’s Executive Board to hold a hearing Jan. 12 on Legislative Resolution 282, the motion to expel State Sen. Dan McKeon of Amherst. The board unanimously recommended McKeon’s expulsion after an internal investigation found that he had inappropriately touched a legislative staffer and exhibited a pattern of conduct that violated workplace policy.

McKeon, who denies the severity of the allegations and has called parts of the case exaggerated, now faces a process that could move quickly if the resolution advances. An expulsion motion requires 33 votes and just one round of floor debate to remove a member and would take effect immediately if approved, leaving the seat vacant until an interim appointment and special election can be held. The Executive Board hearing will include invited testimony only, including from McKeon or his attorney and the outside counsel who conducted the investigation.

The decision to suspend the notice rule highlights the urgency lawmakers have placed on resolving the matter early in the legislative session. The case has drawn heightened attention within the Capitol due to the rarity of expulsion proceedings and the broader questions it raises about legislative conduct, accountability and precedent.

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NU REGENT O’CONNOR RESIGNING, EFFECTIVE JAN. 9, IN WAKE OF DUI ALLEGATION, POSSIBLE IMPEACHMENT

LINCOLN — Embattled University of Nebraska Regent Elizabeth O’Connor, who increasingly faced likely impeachment proceedings, announced Tuesday that she is resigning her post. O’Connor, 35, faces a felony charge of drunken driving causing bodily injury from a Douglas County crash that police say totaled two vehicles and broke the back and pelvis of a passenger.

Authorities allege the Omaha-area regent and former student regent tested with a blood alcohol content of 0.321% after the May 21 crash in the Benson area, in her eastern Douglas County district. That’s four times the legal limit.

The father of three young children injured in the crash had lobbied the NU regent to resign and called on lawmakers and other politicians to ramp up the pressure on O’Connor to resign.

State Sen. Kathleen Kauth of Omaha, a Republican in the officially nonpartisan Legislature, had pledged to pursue impeachment if O’Connor, a Democrat, didn’t resign. Impeaching her would require at least 25 votes and the approval of her removal by the Nebraska Supreme Court. The Nebraska Legislature last impeached a state official in 2006, then-NU Regent C. David Hergert.

O’Connor, who has served as an elected member of the NU board since 2019, said in a statement that she did not want to “become a distraction to the Board’s important work.”“I am choosing to resign now because I want to do the right thing for our great university,” she said in a statement. 


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UNK FINALIZES PLAN TO CUT $4.5 MILLION, ROUNDS OUT NU-WIDE CUTS OF $43 MILLION

LINCOLN — The University of Nebraska at Kearney’s finalization this month of a plan to trim its budget by $4.5 million brings total cuts across the University of Nebraska in this budget year to $43 million.

UNK’s total annual budget is about $170 million, including $80.3 million primarily from tuition and taxpayer dollars.

UNK’s final budget proposal mirrors much of the original plan announced on Dec. 9, minus $300,000 following campus feedback. Campus leadership has chosen to preserve a family science bachelor’s degree and one related faculty position, resulting in fewer across-the-board cuts and reduced graduate assistantships than initially proposed.

A history instructor will also be retained as UNK seeks to revamp its online master’s degree in public history to increase demand via expanded online marketing.

The NU Board of Regents will consider eliminating four other UNK degrees in early 2026:

  • Higher education student affairs, master of science in education (eight candidates).

  • Music comprehensive – music business emphasis, Bachelor of Music (three majors).

  • Modern languages — German emphasis, Bachelor of Arts (one major).

  • Modern languages 7-12 teaching endorsement — German emphasis, Bachelor of Arts in Education (zero majors).

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NEBRASKA LAWMAKERS SEEK DETAILS ON SECRETARY OF STATE ‘NEGOTIATIONS’ WITH FEDS ON VOTER DATA

LINCOLN — A group of state lawmakers sent a letter Wednesday asking Nebraska Secretary of State Bob Evnen to explain his “negotiations” with the federal government over the release of sensitive voter information.

Five state senators, all Democrats, referred in their letter to correspondence they had with Evnen in October when they reminded him of an “obligation to protect Nebraska voter privacy from unwarranted federal overreach.”

They said Evnen had indicated in a response at the time that he would not comply with the federal government’s request to turn over detailed voter information due to pending litigation. 

Voting advocacy group Common Cause Nebraska has sued to block the sharing of that voter data with the U.S. Department of Justice.

But Wednesday’s letter was penned in light of a more recent news story published in the Nebraska Examiner on Dec. 18, which led lawmakers to believe Evnen, a Republican, had been communicating with the DOJ regarding the release of the data. 

State Sen. Margo Juarez of Omaha was joined in the request by Sens. Ashlei Spivey of Omaha,  Danielle Conrad and Jane Raybould of Lincoln and Victor Rountree of Bellevue.

The group sought to learn more about the “timing and results of negotiations” between Evnen’s office and the federal government. 

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MCKEON ROLLS OUT CHARACTER DEFENDERS AMID GROPING ALLEGATION, CALLS TO RESIGN

CAIRO, Nebraska — State Sen. Dan McKeon of Amherst tried making the case Tuesday close to home that attempts to remove him from the Nebraska Unicameral are a “political game.” 

McKeon, at the event he hosted Tuesday in central Nebraska, hinted that other lawmakers might be getting influenced by the governor to vote him out. He said people are “sick and tired of the false accusations that happen culturally” and that his colleagues jumped the gun and don’t have all the facts.

“I’ve officiated [in sports], if I’m not in the right position to make the right call … if I don’t have all my facts, and if I don’t know everything, how can I make that call?” McKeon said at Ol’ Ironsides Barbecue and Banquet Hall in Cairo. 

McKeon has been accused by a legislative staffer of making “inappropriate contact with her buttocks with his hand, over the top of her clothing,” according to an incident report filed with the Nebraska State Patrol that a spokesman relayed.

McKeon and his attorney, Perry Pirsch, have denied wrongdoing by the senator, saying his actions were not sexually charged. 

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NEBRASKA STATE AGENCY AWARDS MILLIONS TO OUT-OF-STATE NONPROFIT FORMERLY RUN BY AGENCY’S CEO

When Nebraska’s Department of Health and Human Services announced its plan to divvy up millions in opioid settlement money, one recipient stood out: The Central Wyoming Counseling Center.

The Wyoming nonprofit is the only out-of-state organization slated to receive some of Nebraska’s Opioid Treatment Infrastructure Cash Fund, receiving $3.4 million to build a crisis stabilization center in Kimball County, which borders Wyoming.

The Central Wyoming Counseling Center’s former acting CEO: Steve Corsi, now CEO of Nebraska’s DHHS. 

The state agency declined to release any application materials from the Central Wyoming Counseling Center and other grantees, citing state laws allowing “proprietary or commercial information” and “examination records” to be withheld from public records requests. 

Corsi had no involvement in the grant review or selection process, said DHHS spokesperson Jeff Powell. He also has had no involvement with the Counseling Center since leaving the organization in 2023, Powell said in a written response to Flatwater questions about the proposed project and Corsi’s former employer.

In total, 23 organizations applied for this round of opioid funding, Powell said. Two of those applicants were from outside Nebraska. The Central Wyoming Counseling Center’s proposed project was the only such project in the Nebraska Panhandle, Powell said. 


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NEBRASKA GRAND JURY INDICTS ALLEGED TREN DE ARAGUA MEMBERS IN ATM JACKPOTTING SCHEME

LINCOLN — A federal grand jury in Nebraska charged 54 people with deploying malware and stealing millions of dollars from ATMs around the country, Nebraska U.S. Attorney Lesley Woods announced this month. 

One indictment, returned Dec. 9, charges 22 people with offenses corresponding to their alleged roles in the conspiracy, including conspiracy to provide material support to terrorists, conspiracy to commit bank fraud, conspiracy to commit bank burglary and fraud and related computer activity and conspiracy to commit money laundering. 

A related indictment, returned Oct. 21, charged 32 people, alleging 56 crimes, including one count of conspiracy to commit bank fraud, one count of conspiracy to commit bank burglary and computer fraud, 18 counts of bank fraud, 18 counts of bank burglary and 18 counts of damage to computers, Woods’ office said. 

The indictments also allege that the gang Tren de Aragua used jackpotting to steal millions of dollars in the U.S. and transferred the proceeds among its members and associates to conceal the illegally obtained cash. Tren de Aragua is a Venezuelan gang that started in a prison and has since expanded into Central America and the U.S., including to Texas, New York, Colorado and Wisconsin. 

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BUDGET FIRST: SPEAKER JOHN ARCH BREAKS DOWN BIGGEST TASKS FOR NEBRASKA LEGISLATURE

LINCOLN — Heading into his final legislative session as a term-limited Nebraska state senator, Speaker of the Legislature John Arch of La Vista said he expects the short, 60-day session to fly by.

The session begins Jan. 7, and between the possible expulsion of a senator, discord over the repurposing of a state prison facility into an ICE detention center and a continued push for property tax relief, Arch acknowledged there are more than enough issues to occupy lawmakers’ time before they adjourn in April.

Arch’s top priority among those issues is filling a $471 million budget hole by Day 50, he said, the deadline lawmakers have to complete budget adjustments and send the proposal to Gov. Jim Pillen’s desk.

“Honestly, there is the budget, and then there’s everything else,” Arch said.

Budget struggles also took precedence during the Legislature’s 90-day session this spring, when lawmakers worked to fill a budget deficit that at one point grew to $432 million. After making numerous cuts that senators acknowledged were painful, the session concluded with the state’s two-year budget projecting a modest $4 million surplus.

That surplus didn’t last long, because new economic projections made in July put Nebraska back into a projected deficit of $95 million. When Nebraska’s Economic Forecasting Advisory Board met again in October, projections brought the expected shortfall to $471 million. 

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NEBRASKA AG WILL DROP LAWSUIT AGAINST OPPD, NORTH OMAHA POWER PLANT — FOR NOW

LINCOLN — Nebraska Attorney General Mike Hilgers is ending his lawsuit against the Omaha Public Power District, for now, after the public utility board delayed plans to modify power production in North Omaha until 2028.

Hilgers, on Tuesday, announced his office would voluntarily dismiss his lawsuit filed Oct. 9, but that it could be brought again “if circumstances change.” The OPPD board on Dec. 18 voted 6-2 for a resolution that puts off plans to “modernize” North Omaha Station and end coal production at the site until at least 2028, rather than 2026. OPPD Directors Eric Williams and Sara Howard opposed the resolution.

OPPD’s vote introduced new requirements before the North Omaha transition could occur. In a separate vote, OPPD approved average rate increases of 6.3%, effective Jan. 1. OPPD Director Amanda Bogner and Howard opposed the increase.

“We brought this lawsuit because public power providers should not achieve their self-imposed environmental goals by raising prices for Nebraska consumers,” Hilgers said in a Tuesday statement. “After last week’s vote, OPPD’s plans for the North Omaha Station now align with their twin mandates of affordability and reliability in delivering electricity to Nebraskans.”

Craig Moody, an OPPD member who voted in favor of the Dec. 18 resolution, said in a recent social media post that whether board directors supported or opposed the resolution would have still delayed changes at North Omaha Station until the end of 2028, if not later. 

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