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Fire chief who’d been put on leave decides to retire

SCOTTSBLUFF, Neb. (AP) — The longtime Scottsbluff fire chief has retired after being placed on administrative leave.

Dana Miller was put on the paid leave Nov. 29. He would say only that he was on leave pending an investigation. City Manager Nathan Johnson has declined to discuss Miller’s being placed on leave, saying it was a personnel matter.

Miller had headed the department for 18 years. He said Thursday that he’s been eligible to retire for some time.

Scottsbluff Police Chief Kevin Spencer has been named interim fire chief.

Semitrailer driver dies in crash on I-80 in Nebraska

DARR, Neb. (AP) — Authorities say the driver of a semitrailer died after it crashed on Interstate 80 in south-central Nebraska.

The accident occurred around 9:20 a.m. Wednesday near the Darr interchange, northwest of Lexington in Dawson County. The Nebraska State Patrol says the westbound truck left the roadway and then rolled when the driver tried to return it to the pavement.

The patrol identified the driver as 36-year-old Jeremiah Ford, who lived in Bertrand.

Mom gets 60 to 70 years in 2nd child abuse case

ORD, Neb. (AP) — A central Nebraska woman who served prison time for intentional child abuse in 2014 has been sentenced to 60 to 70 years for the child abuse death of her 4-week-old baby last year.

Court records say 26-year-old Jocelyn Nordin, of North Loup, was sentenced Tuesday in Valley County District Court in Ord. She’d pleaded no contest to child abuse.

Prosecutors say Nordin called 911 on May 2, 2016, and reported that her baby wasn’t breathing. The baby eventually was flown to an Omaha hospital, where she died seven days later. Authorities say the baby had been dropped on her head twice and violently shaken.

In her previous child abuse case, Douglas County Court records say Nordin was sentenced in October 2014 to 18 to 24 months after pleading guilty.

Record number of people employed last month in Nebraska

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — The Nebraska Labor Department says a record number of people were employed in the state in November.

The department said in a report released Friday that more than 984,000 people were employed last month. Labor Commissioner John Albin says the employment has increased each of the past six months and set records each month since August.

The report says the November unemployment rate was unchanged at 2.7 percent, matching the October figure. The rate was down six-tenths of a percentage point from the November 2016 rate of 3.3 percent.

The November rate also remained well below the U.S. rate, which was unchanged at 4.1 percent.

Lincoln man charged with murder in Hastings slaying

HASTINGS, Neb. (AP) — A 19-year-old Lincoln man has been charged in the September slaying of a Hastings man.

Court records say Deante Mullen was charged Thursday with first-degree murder and with the use of a firearm to commit a felony. The records don’t list the name of an attorney who could comment for him about allegations that he killed 19-year-old Jose Hansen.

Police say Hansen’s body was found Sept. 11 by a couple out for a walk. He’d been shot to death.

2 University of Nebraska dorms collapse in planned implosion

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Two high-rise dormitories at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln have crashed to the ground in a planned implosion.

The university demolished Cather and Pound halls simultaneously Friday in about 10 seconds. Crews spent several weeks placing dynamite into support columns on select floors and wiring charges to ensure the detonation went as planned. Roughly 500 pounds (225 kilograms) of dynamite was used.

Preparations began in May, when the university began removing windows, heavy furniture and mechanical parts from the dorms.

Engineers estimate each building weighed 200 million tons (180 million metric tons). The dorms had housed thousands of university students since 1963, but were outdated.

University housing director Sue Gildersleeve says imploding the buildings proved more feasible than destroying them with a wrecking ball. The implosion was timed to coincide with the university’s holiday break.

Ricketts visits Nebraska Guard members in Guantanamo Bay

Gov. Pete Ricketts
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Gov. Pete Ricketts has made an unannounced holiday trip to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to visit Nebraska National Guard members who are stationed on the island.

The governor’s office says Ricketts visited Guantanamo Bay Naval Station on Thursday and returned later that evening. The Nebraska National Guard has had more than 50 soldiers stationed at the base since April for a nearly year-long deployment to support detainee operations.

Ricketts delivered gifts from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, including a volleyball signed by volleyball head coach John Cook and a football signed by new Nebraska coach Scott Frost. He was accompanied by Maj. Gen. Dayrl Bohac and Command Sgt. Maj. Marty Baker.

Omaha police make 2nd arrest in death of man found in lot

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Omaha police have made another arrest in the death of a man whose body was found in a vehicle in a police station parking lot.

Police say homicide investigators on Friday arrested 19-year-old Governor D. Tate on charges of first-degree murder and use of a weapon to commit a felony. It’s the second arrest in the death of 29-year-old Julio Cesar-Ortega, whose body was found Nov. 9 in a vehicle parked in a northeast Omaha police station.

Homicide investigators believe Cesar-Ortega died after driving himself to the station with injuries suffered elsewhere. Cesar-Ortega’s family members say he had been shot

Last week, investigators charged 18-year-old Tyjanae Allen with first-degree murder and use of a weapon to commit a felony.

Obamacare enrollment up in Nebraska despite challenges

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Health care enrollments through the federal marketplace have increased in Nebraska despite numerous challenges that threatened to undermine the annual sign-up campaign.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services reported this week that nearly 88,400 plans were sold in Nebraska, compared to about 66,400 in 2016.

The numbers surprised many advocates who worked to sign residents up for coverage during the enrollment period, which is part of the Affordable Care Act. The Trump administration cut the groups’ funding, slashed the law’s advertising budget by 90 percent and shortened the open enrollment period by half, to six weeks.

Some advocacy groups tried to make up for the lack of outreach with their own efforts. Jeff Sheldon, a spokesman for Nebraska Appleseed, says enrollment plans also remained affordable for many residents.

Nebraska motor fuels tax rate to increase in January

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska motorists will soon pay more per gallon at the gas pump.

The Department of Revenue announced Friday that the state motor fuels tax will increase more than 1 cent per gallon, starting in January. The new rate will be 28.4 cents per gallon, up from 27 cents.

The fuels tax is composed of a wholesale, variable and fixed tax. The wholesale is set based on the wholesale price of fuel. That tax will drop from 9.5 cents to 8.7 cents per gallon.

The variable tax is based on legislative appropriations for transportation. That rate will increase to 4.9 cents per gallon from the current 4.2 cents.

The fixed tax will increase to 14.8 cents per gallon, compared to 13.3 cents, because of a bill approved by lawmakers in 2015.

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