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Survey: Banks raising farm loan collateral requirements

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A monthly survey of rural bankers in parts of 10 Plains and Western states shows nearly two-thirds of banks in the region have raised farm loan collateral requirements on fears of weakening farm income.

The Rural Mainstreet survey for February showed nearly one-third of banks report an increase in the farm loan rejection rate for the same reason.

The survey’s overall index dropped to 50.2 from January’s 51.5. Any score above 50 suggests a growing economy in the months ahead, while a score below 50 indicates a shrinking economy.

Creighton University economist Ernie Goss, who oversees the survey, says the rural economy appears to be expanding outside of agriculture, but that tariffs and low agriculture commodity prices continue to weaken the farm sector.

Bankers from Colorado, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wyoming were surveyed.

Man convicted of 1 of 2 murder counts in Omaha shootings

Marcus Short

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — An Omaha man has been found guilty in one of two fatal shootings in August 2015.

A Douglas County jury found 29-year-old Marcus Short guilty Thursday of first-degree murder for the Aug. 8, 2015, killing of 19-year-old Garion Johnson. The jury found him found not guilty of the Aug. 6, 2015, killing of 23-year-old DePrecia Neelon. Short faces life in prison when he’s sentenced at a later date.

Short’s first trial in May ended in a mistrial amid accusations of jury tampering.

Police say Neelon was fatally shot after a fire was started at the back door of her home. When Neelon went out to pull her 4-year-old daughter away from the flames and douse the fire, she was shot seven times.

Johnson was killed two days later outside his girlfriend’s house.

Driver of pickup that woman fell or jumped off is sentenced

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — The driver of a pickup truck from which a woman fell or jumped to her death in Lincoln has been sentenced for drunken driving.

The Lincoln Journal Star reports that 32-year-old Seth Noble on Thursday was given seven days of house arrest in lieu of jail time, was fined $500 and lost his license for six months. He’d pleaded no contest.

A police report says the pickup Noble was driving ran over 25-year-old Amanda Terrell on Sept. 5 after she jumped off or fell north of the Nebraska Innovation Campus in north Lincoln. She died later at a hospital.

Prosecutor Ashley Bohnet says Noble was intoxicated at the time he was driving, but investigators couldn’t find any evidence that his being under the influence was what led to Terrell’s death.

Nebraska county seeks help in paying $28M judgment

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A Nebraska lawmaker is looking to help a southeastern county pay a $28 million federal judgment owed to six people wrongfully convicted for a 1985 slaying.

Sen. Myron Dorn of Adams is a former chairman of the Gage County Board. The county has had to raise its property tax by more than 30 percent to pay for the judgment.

Dorn asked the Legislature’s Judiciary Committee on Thursday to consider a bill that would allow a political subdivision facing a federal judgment for wrongful conviction or imprisonment to file a claim with the state.

Dorn is also pursuing options that would allow counties facing a federal judgment to impose a sales tax or receive a state loan.

The six people were wrongfully convicted for the rape and murder of 68-year-old Helen Wilson. DNA evidence cleared them in 2008.

Holdrege man arrested after 2 killed in shooting

FEBRUARY 21, 2019 (NORTH PLATTE, NEB.)  — A Holdrege man has been arrested following the shooting deaths of two people and the wounding of a third person in multiple incidents that occurred in Holdrege during the afternoon hours of Thursday, February 21.

At approximately 2:30 p.m., the Holdrege Police Department responded to a report of a shooting at 416 Logan Street. Multiple law enforcement agencies responded to the incident. Additional crime scenes were then identified in multiple units at the Sunrise View Apartments at 1422 12th Avenue.

A short time later, a vehicle owned by the suspect was seen traveling in the north part of Holdrege. A short, low-speed pursuit ensued and the suspect drove to the Phelps County Sheriff’s Office where he was taken into custody without further incident.  

The suspect, Manuel Gomez, 45, of Holdrege, has been lodged in Phelps County Jail. Gomez is the only suspect in all three shootings.

The victims are identified as Raymond Burton, 65, David Rogers, 54, both of whom were found deceased in separate units of the Sunrise View Apartments. The third victim, Doyle Morse, 64, was able to call 911 after being shot at 416 Logan Street. He has been life-flighted to Good Samaritan Hospital in Kearney in critical condition.

The Nebraska State Patrol has been assisted by the Holdrege Police Department, the Phelps County Sheriff’s Office, and South Central Area Law Enforcement Services in the investigation. The investigation is ongoing.

Leonard M. ‘Bud’ Priel

Leonard M. “Bud” Priel, 89, of North Platte passed away February 20, 2019 at the North Platte Care Center.  Bud was born on June 28, 1929 in Sutherland to Patrick E. and Isabell (Wilmes) Priel.

Bud attended the 8th and 9th grades at Kearney Catholic School, returning to Sutherland and graduating from the high school there in 1947.  He hired out on the Union Pacific Railroad with the Maintenance of Way Department.  He married Betty Hughes on June 18, 1950 at Betty’s parents home south of Sutherland.  The couple moved with the railroad up and down the railroad lines, settling in Gothenburg where they stayed for 13 years before moving to North Platte in 1970, where Bud continued to work for the UPRR in the signal department until his retirement in 1989.

Bud was instrumental in starting Operation Life Saver, was a union griever, a member of the Elks serving as a past Exalted Ruler, and a member of the Presbyterian Church.  He and Betty hosted Miss Rodeo America for 15 years during the Nebraskaland activities.  Bud enjoyed hunting, and always had dogs, gardening, yardwork, auctions, and refinishing furniture.  He loved his wife, children, and grandchildren.

Survivors include his wife, Betty of North Platte; children, Dan (Connie) Priel of Cambridge,  Tamara (Rick) Rasby of Lincoln, and Kent (Cara) Priel of North Platte; grandchildren, Holli (Mike) Oberg of Farnam, Zach (Mona) Priel of Cozad, Nick (Sarah) Rasby of Lincoln, Andra Rasby of Los Angeles, CA., and Brittney Mullins of Hoxie, KS; 7 great-grandchildren; sister, Mary McVay of North Platte; brother-in-law, Donald Fleecs of Sutherland; numerous other family members; and many friends.

He was preceded in death by his parents; and a sister, Peggy Fleecs.

Memorials are suggested to the Miss Rodeo Nebraska Scholarship Program and online condolences may be shared at www.adamsswanson.com.

Funeral Services will be 11:00 a.m. Monday, February 25, 2019 at the First Presbyterian Church.  Burial will follow at Riverview Cemetery near Sutherland.  Visitation will be 12-8 p.m. with the family receiving friends 5-7 pm Sunday at Adams & Swanson Funeral Home which is in charge of arrangements.

Business groups back income tax bill; farm groups lukewarm

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska business groups backed a proposal Wednesday to cut the state’s top income tax rates and put millions of dollars into a tax credit for property owners, but farm and ranching groups raised concerns that it wouldn’t do enough for their struggling industry.

The bill presented to the Legislature’s tax-focused Revenue Committee seeks to address the concerns of business owners who say Nebraska can’t compete with most of its neighboring states.

“We need to grow. We need to have our young people stay here and have people actually move to Nebraska and start businesses,” said Sen. Mike Hilgers, a Lincoln attorney and business owner who sponsored the bill.

The bill would trigger automatic cuts in Nebraska’s top individual and corporate income tax rates anytime state revenue grows by more than 3.5 percent and the state’s emergency cash reserve holds at least $500 million. It also would steer $75 million a year into Nebraska’s Property Tax Credit Fund, a state account used to reduce local property tax bills.

Business groups said they support efforts to reduce property taxes, but not if it means raising other taxes, as agriculture groups have suggested. The dispute has prevented lawmakers from passing any sort of major tax package in recent years.

“We support property tax reform, but merely doing so on the backs of other taxpayers who are already paying high income taxes and high sales taxes is not sustainable,” said Joseph Young, an advocate for a coalition of Nebraska business groups. “It has proven time and again that it will not work.”

Nebraska’s current top tax rate is 6.84 percent for individuals and 7.81 percent for corporations. The bill would ratchet both of those rates down to 5.99 percent over time, which Young said would help Nebraska businesses compete with nearby states.

But John Hansen, president of the Nebraska Farmers Union, said the bill would provide relatively little benefit to farmers whose incomes are already down because of low crop prices. Hansen said Nebraska has created a tax system over time that relies too heavily on local property taxes.

“The fact that you own property doesn’t mean you have the corresponding earned income to pay the tax load,” he said.

Mick Mines, a lobbyist for a seven-member coalition of Nebraska farm groups, said the bill is worth discussing but stressed that reducing property taxes should be a major part of the package. Mines said boosting money for property tax credit fund isn’t enough because it doesn’t offset the huge increases farmers and ranchers have experienced.

“The property tax credit fund isn’t working,” he said. “It doesn’t provide meaningful tax relief.”

Other critics said the bill favors wealthy Nebraskans who pay a larger share of their income at Nebraska’s top tax rate. The measure would reduce state revenue available for state services, said Renee Fry, executive director of the OpenSky Policy Institute. Fry also took issue with the automatic nature of the tax cuts.

“Putting tax cuts on autopilot without regard for current or future realities isn’t good tax policy,” she said. “It ignores the budget challenges we face and the need to build up the cash reserve.”

Nursing home closing in southern Nebraska

CAMBRIDGE, Neb. (AP) — Health system officials say they can’t afford to keep open a nursing home in the southern Nebraska community of Cambridge, so they’re closing it.

Tri-Valley Health System announced Wednesday that it will be shuttering Cambridge Manor on June 30. The system says it’s losing $143 per patient per day at the nursing home.

Tri-Valley Health interim CEO Keith Leudders says government payments are just not enough to stay open.

Leudders says he and his staff are working with residents and their families on transferring the residents.

The system also says it’s losing $300,000 a year at an assisted living apartment complex in town known as the Heritage Plaza.

Platte River ice jam poses flood possibility in Hall County

GRAND ISLAND, Neb. (AP) — An ice jam on a Platte River channel is posing the possibility of flooding just south of Grand Island.

The Hall County Sheriff’s Department says the biggest current risk is to a fast-food restaurant and hotel parking lot near the Grand Island interchange. Some houses upstream also are at some risk.

Hall County Chief Deputy Jim Castleberry told station KSNB the water is still flowing beneath the ice. But if it gets cold enough, the ice expands toward the bottom and water also freezes from the bottom up, blocking the flow and causing water to back up and overflow the channel upstream.

Online sales tax bill advances out of Nebraska committee

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A bill that would clear the way for Nebraska to collect sales taxes on online purchases has advanced out of a legislative committee.

Members of the Revenue Committee voted Thursday to send the measure to the full Legislature.

The bill was introduced in the wake of last year’s U.S. Supreme Court ruling that lets states tax online sales from out-of-state businesses. Smaller sellers with $100,000 or less in gross sales or fewer than 200 separate transactions were exempt.

The Nebraska Department of Revenue has already ordered businesses to start collecting sales taxes on orders placed within the state, but senators haven’t passed a formal law to require it.

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