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Allen Henry ‘Al’ Robey

Allen Henry ‘Al’ Robey, age 65, passed away on February 6, 2019 in Oberlin, Kansas.  Al was born on January 21, 1954 in North Platte, Nebraska to Jean and Shirley (Bruhn) Robey.  He graduated from North Platte High School and then served in the United States Army Corps of Engineers.  Al worked at Rayes Grocery Store in Oberlin for over 30 years.  He enjoyed riding motorcycles and was an awesome people person.

Al is survived by his brother, Terry (Mary) Robey of Wichita, Kansas and many friends.  He was preceded in death by his parents.

A Celebration of Life will be held on April 6, 2019 from 2:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. at the American Legion, 114 S. Rodehaver Avenue in Oberlin, Kansas.  If you have any photos of Al you would like to share at the celebration, please bring them along.

Nebraska schools reopen after flooding closures

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska students are heading back to class after recent flooding forced almost 200 schools to close, according to state education officials.

The Nebraska Department of Education said the closures affected nearly 34,700 students, the Omaha World-Herald reported.

Logan View Public Schools, Douglas County West Community Schools and Boyd County Schools resumed classes on Monday. North Bend Central Public Schools reopened Wednesday and was the last district to resume classes, the department said.

“Did all students return? I doubt it,” department spokesman David Jespersen said. “But the school is open, and there are classes.”

Academic testing won’t be delayed despite the missed class time. The ACT will be administered to Nebraska juniors on April 2, while state academic testing will be conducted until May 3.

The state will help districts conduct testing if they’re running into issues with resources or testing supplies, Jespersen said.

Districts will also have to evaluate if the closures will cause schools to miss the required instruction hours, Jespersen said. Students in elementary school through eighth grade must receive 1,032 hours of instruction, while high school students are required 1,080 hours.

“I think everybody can now evaluate where they’re at and what’s next,” Jespersen said.

Superintendents can apply for a waiver if they believe their district won’t meet the requirement, though it’s rare for such waivers to be requested, Jespersen said.

The request would first need to be approved by the district’s school board, before going before the state Commissioner of Education Matt Blomstedt, who would then make a recommendation to the state Board of Education.

Dozens arrested in WING drug investigation operation

The Western Nebraska Intelligence and Narcotics Group (WING) has conducted a drug enforcement operation this week, resulting in the arrest of 32 individuals throughout the Nebraska Panhandle. Arrest warrants and search warrants were served throughout the Panhandle. Additional arrests are expected and some of the cases are on-going.

Throughout the week, WING was assisted by the sheriff’s offices of Cheyenne County, Scotts Bluff County, and Box Butte County, the police departments of Sidney, Kimball, Gering, Scottsbluff, Bayard, Alliance, Chadron, Ogallala, and the Nebraska State Patrol. The following is a list of arrests made as part of this operation.

Alliance/Chadron:

-Bethany Wacker – Two counts of conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine, possession of methamphetamine, possession of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia

-Kamron Seebomb – Three counts of distribution of methamphetamine, possession of methamphetamine, possession of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia, tampering with evidence

-Dennis Griffin – Three counts of distribution of methamphetamine

-Penny Overshiner – Three counts of distribution of a controlled substance

-Jo Len Valdez – Three counts of possession of a controlled substance

-Henrietta Dawn – Five counts of distribution of methamphetamine

-Derek Warbonnet – Three counts of distribution of marijuana

-Dalton Hunger – Three counts of distribution of methamphetamine

-Shawn Hollowhorn – Three counts of distribution of methamphetamine

-Leander Poor Bear – Three counts of distribution of a controlled substance

-Shane Lame – Four courts of distribution of methamphetamine

-Rick Haak – Possession of methamphetamine, distribution of methamphetamine, possession of marijuana

-Summer Haak – Possession of methamphetamine, distribution of methamphetamine, possession of marijuana

Scottsbluff/Gering

-Lacey Calder – Attempt of a class IV Felony and Possession of Marijuana

-David Iron Bear – Distribution of a controlled substance in a school zone

-Roxanne Trevino – Distribution of a controlled substance in a school zone

-Amber Camacho – Attempt of Class 4 Felony, Possession of Controlled Substance

-Shelley Parker – Distribution of a controlled substance in a school zone

-Cory Poor Bear – Distribution of a controlled substance

-Janae Iron Bear – Three counts forgery and failure to appear

-Cathica Vasquez – Theft by shoplifting

-Floyd Bolton – Possession of methamphetamine

Kimball/Sidney/Ogallala

-Jose Hernandez – One count of distribution of methamphetamine

-Mariah Medina – Possession of methamphetamine, possession of marijuana less than an ounce

-Myriah Tyan – Cited for possession of marijuana – less than an ounce

-Travis Graham – Two counts of distribution of marijuana

-Kandy Cook – One count of distribution of a controlled substance

-Jerry Roa – Two counts of distribution of marijuana

-Timothy Tscharner – One count of distribution of marijuana

-Tiara Tiden-Benzel – One count of distribution of marijuana

-Tony Christensen – One count of distribution of methamphetamine

-Clinton McCrea – Domestic assault

Those arrested were lodged in the county jails representing the county in which the arrest was made. The WING Task Force is made of up investigators from several law enforcement agencies in the Nebraska Panhandle, including Sidney PD, Cheyenne County Sheriff’s Office, Gering PD, Scottsbluff PD, Scotts Bluff County Sheriff’s Office, Alliance PD, Chadron PD, and the Nebraska State Patrol.

Spalding man claims prize in Lucky for Life lottery game

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) – A central Nebraska man has claimed his Lucky for Life lottery prize.

The Nebraska Lottery says Troy Kleffner took the lump sum of $390,000 on Tuesday instead of the annuity that would have paid him $25,000 a year for life. He bought the ticket at Peoples Service of Spalding in the Greeley County community of Spalding, where he lives. The ticket matched the numbers on five white balls in Monday’s drawing but didn’t match the Lucky Ball number. If it had, the ticket would have been worth $1,000 a day for life.

Kleffner says he’s planning on using some of the prize money for his kids’ college fund.

Authorities release names of 3 killed in Saline County

WESTERN, Neb. (AP) – Authorities have released the names of three people fatally injured when two pickup trucks collided on a state highway in southeast Nebraska.

The collision occurred March 17 on Nebraska Highway 15, about 5 miles north of Western. The Saline County Sheriff’s Office says a northbound pickup was pulling a trailer when it collided with the southbound pickup.

The Lincoln Journal Star reports that state officials say 74-year-old Fred Kujath, of Fairbury, was killed that day in one of the pickups and that 18-year-old Garrett Klipp, of Tobias, died in the other pickup. The officials say 16-year-old Peyton VanWesten, of Tobias, died a week later.

Flood-damaged Air Force base near Omaha reopens runway

OFFUTT AIR FORCE BASE, Neb. (AP) — The flood-damaged U.S. Air Force base south of Omaha has reopened its runway to aircraft.

The Omaha World-Herald reports that some of the nine aircraft flown from Offutt Air Force Base to other bases returned Thursday, once it was determined that the flooding didn’t damage the runway and taxiways. Other aircraft had been towed to higher ground.

Earlier this month Missouri River floodwaters breached one levee and overtopped another near the sprawling complex, flooding the southeastern third. The water inundated nearly 80 buildings and covered more than a quarter of the runway.

On Wednesday Air Force Secretary Heather Wilson said the Air Force needs $4.9 billion in extra funding over the next three years to rebuild and repair Offutt and Tyndall Air Force Base in Florida, which sustained hurricane damage last fall.

Buffett says issues with Boeing jet won’t hold back aviation

Warren Buffett

GRAPEVINE, Texas (AP) — Investor Warren Buffett, who has major stakes in three airlines that operate the Boeing 737 Max, says safety issues with the jet won’t have a long-term effect on the aviation industry.

The plane is grounded after two deadly crashes within five months. Boeing is upgrading flight-control software.

“Obviously there’s a problem with this 737 Max, but Boeing, you can bet they’re staying up 24 hours a day to get it worked out,” Buffett said Thursday.

The 88-year-old chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway praises the safety of flying, saying it’s almost impossible to believe how much it has improved during his lifetime.

Berkshire Hathaway holds stakes in Delta, Southwest, United and American. All but Delta have Max jets. The firm had no Boeing shares as of Dec. 31.

Buffett, who spoke at a benefit event in Grapevine, near Dallas, said Berkshire’s shares in Delta Air Lines accidentally went above his normal limit of a 10 percent stake in a company this month when the airline borrowed money to buy back stock. Then he bought more shares, and now owns 10.4 percent of the Atlanta-based carrier.

Berkshire owns 9.9 percent of Southwest, 9.7 percent of American and 8.2 percent of United. Buffett was once famously averse to investing in airlines. Many U.S. carriers went through bankruptcy in the 1990s and 2000s, but they are now solidly profitable, and there is speculation that Buffett, who began investing in them in 2016, might buy one.

“The airline industry is a very, very competitive business, and it will always be a competitive business,” he said. “I don’t think it’s a suicidal business anymore, but it was for quite a while.”

Flooding prompts criticism of way Missouri River dams run

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — After this spring’s massive flooding along the Missouri River, many want to blame the agency that manages the river’s dams for making the disaster worse, but it may not be that simple.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers says much of the water that created the flooding came from rain and melting snow that flowed into the river downstream of all the dams, and at the same time, massive amounts of water filled the reservoirs and some had to be released.

For instance, the National Weather Service estimates that enough water poured into the reservoir behind Gavin’s Point Dam on the South Dakota-Nebraska border during nine days in mid-March to totally fill the reservoir from empty more than twice.

But many people who live near the Missouri River believe the Corps isn’t doing enough to prevent floods or is placing too much emphasis on other priorities, such as protecting endangered species and preserving barge traffic.

Republican U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri said Corps officials told him this week that they treat all eight priorities for the river equally.

“I was told point-blank, ‘Flood control is not our top priority. It is not. Period.’ They were very firm on that point,” Hawley said. “I said, ‘You’ve got to be kidding me.'”

Corps officials say they work to balance all the priorities Congress approved when operating the dams, but no single priority outweighs all the others. Their operating model tries to maximize the benefit to several priorities when possible.

Hawley said Congress should consider “serious reform,” such as deciding if the Corps should be taken out of the Department of Defense and placed under direction of another agency, such as the Department of Transportation or the Department of the Interior.

The Corps manages the Missouri River’s system of dams and locks and decides when and how much water is released from reservoirs into the river. The severe flooding this month in Nebraska, Kansas, Iowa and Missouri has renewed criticism of the Corps’ management of the river.

Officials estimate that the flooding caused more than $1 billion of damage to farms in Nebraska and Iowa, destroying stored crops and killing livestock. And the damage total will grow as floodwaters recede and other states assess conditions.

Nearly 400 farmers, landowners and business operators sued the Corps after the historic 2011 floods — and won. U.S. District Judge Nancy B. Firestone’s ruling last year determined that severe Missouri River flooding “was caused by and was the foreseeable result” of the agency’s management practices.

R. Dan Boulware, the St. Joseph, Missouri-based attorney for the lawsuit’s plaintiffs, said those management practices are still in place, contributing to the flooding this month. He said the Corps stores more water in six upper-Missouri River basins than it needs to, and has also modified structures like dikes.

“The river itself is changed,” Boulware said. “It spreads out and it doesn’t flow like it used to flow. It’s like a sluggish drain — it backs up.”

Corps officials declined to discuss the lawsuit because it is still ongoing, but they defended the way they handled this spring’s flooding. John Remus oversees the dams, including Gavin’s Point Dam, for the Corps.

“There was far more water coming into Gavin’s Point than we could hold,” Remus said.

And the National Weather Service’s Kevin Low said significantly more water poured into the Missouri River from rivers in Nebraska and Iowa with no dams, so officials couldn’t regulate the flow from those. Low said the Platte River peaked at over 170,000 cubic feet per second of water on March 17.

Most other rivers that feed into the lower Missouri crested around the same time after heavy rains helped melt lingering snowpack that flowed right into rivers because the ground was still mostly frozen.

Emergency management directors in two northwestern Missouri counties that took the brunt of this year’s flood damage have differing views on the Corps’ responsibility.

Buchanan County Emergency Management Director Bill Brinton said a dam failure to the north sent a surge of additional water into the river, worsening an already bad situation.

“That dam failed and you had billions of gallons of water,” Brinton said. “I don’t see how you can blame the Corps. But I seem to be in the minority.”

In Holt County, Missouri, 460 homes were damaged when the flood reached a foot above the 2011 record, and most are still underwater, Emergency Management Director Tom Bullock said.

Bullock’s home is among the flooded ones. He’s taken a motorboat out to it a few times but won’t know the extent of the damage until he gets inside the home.

“They told us after the flood of ’11 if you build up and elevate above this certain level it’ll never happen again, so I did that,” Bullock said. “It still wasn’t high enough. So I don’t know what the answer is. It gets pretty expensive.”

Much of the concern about the Corps’ management dates to 2004, when it initiated a management change partly to protect endangered species, including the pallid sturgeon, a seldom-seen, bottom-feeding fish.

Bullock agreed 2004 was the turning point when the Corps “started managing the river for recreation and wildlife.”

“Used to be at the top of the list was flood control first place, and navigation second place. Those two things have moved to the bottom of the list,” Bullock said.

“Ever since that happened, we’ve been flooded out regularly down here in the bottom,” he added.

He’s worried his and his neighbors’ homes will be hit again this spring.

“We don’t see an end in sight yet,” Bullock said. “All of our levees are just destroyed. We have no protection from the high river now, or spring rains. We’re sitting there exposed.”

NP resident finds old explosive device in coffee can

The Nebraska State Patrol (NSP) is reminding anyone who may find a suspected explosive device to immediately report it to authorities.

On Wednesday, troopers with the Nebraska State Patrol Bomb Squad were called-in to examine a suspected explosive found inside an antique coffee jar. The jar was found by a citizen in a box purchased at an auction.

Upon finding the suspicious device, the citizen notified the North Platte Police Department, who brought it to the attention of the NSP Bomb Squad. A NSP Hazardous Device Technician examined the jar with x-ray technology and determined that the jar contained an old M-series explosive. The device has been safely stored and will be disposed of at a later date.

“Anyone who comes across something they suspect could be an explosive device should stop immediately and call the authorities,” said Lt. Dain Hicks, Commander of the NSP Bomb Squad. “Any explosive device can be extremely dangerous and should be handled by trained experts.”

The NSP Bomb Squad is available to assist law enforcement agencies throughout the state in any situation such as this.

Juvenile arrested following pursuit near Greenwood

Troopers with the Nebraska State Patrol (NSP) arrested one juvenile following a pursuit Wednesday morning on Interstate 80 that began near Gretna and ended near Greenwood.

At approximately 7:15 a.m. Wednesday, March 27, a trooper observed a Chevy Equinox traveling at 110 miles per hour on westbound I-80 near mile marker 431. The trooper attempted a traffic stop. The vehicle fled and the trooper initiated a pursuit.

The Equinox continued driving at speeds between 100 and 120 miles per hour, while weaving through traffic and passing vehicles on the shoulder. As the vehicle attempted to exit at mile marker 420, the driver lost control and crashed into the ditch. The driver and passenger were then immediately apprehended. The Equinox was also determined to have been stolen from Carroll, Iowa. A firearm was also found in the vehicle.

The driver, a 17-year-old male, was arrested for felony flight to avoid arrest, possession of a stolen vehicle, willful reckless driving, possession of a firearm while committing a felony, no operator’s license, minor in possession of alcohol, and other traffic violations. The 17-year-old was lodged in the Sarpy County Juvenile Detention Center.

The passenger, an 18-year-old male, was transported to Bryan Medical Center West Campus in Lincoln for non-life-threatening injuries suffered during the crash.

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