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Nebraska community college assistance program bill advances

Sen. Kate Bolz
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) – Nebraska lawmakers have advanced a bill to expand the number of community college programs that are eligible for special state assistance.

Senators sent the measure through the first of three required readings on Monday with a 43-0 vote.

The bill by state Sen. Kate Bolz, of Lincoln, focuses on the Community College Gap Assistance Program. The program provides funding that can be awarded to students who are training for an in-demand occupation.

The bill would allow specific for-credit courses that aren’t currently eligible to qualify.

Recital will highlight NPCC faculty

Pam Koch will be among the featured performers during a faculty recital April 16 at North Platte Community College. Koch will play the piano. (Courtesy Photo)
The musical talents of instructors at North Platte Community College will be showcased during a faculty recital April 16.

The recital is free and open to the public. It will begin at 7 p.m. in the McDonald-Belton Theater on NPCC’s south campus.

Songs will include selections from Bach, Brahms and the musical, “Little Women.”

The featured performers will include Kristin Simpson, on violin; Karen Lukas, with the harp; Sue McKain and Pam Koch, playing piano and Melissa Mitchell, singing.

Police say wounded Omaha man died at hospital

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Authorities say a man found by officers in an Omaha street died later at a hospital.

Police identified the man as 25-year-old Dylan Kenney, who lived in Omaha.

Officers sent early Sunday morning to check a call about a stabbing on the city’s east side found Kenney, who had several stab wounds in his chest. He died later at Nebraska Medical Center.

No arrests have been reported.

Kearney man pleads not guilty to charges over false tax returns

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A Kearney man has pleaded not guilty to charges that he filed false tax returns.

U.S. District Court records say Thomas Hird entered the pleas Wednesday to five counts of filing false returns for the tax years of 2012 through 2016. Prosecutors say he didn’t report more than $520,000 in income over those five years.

His next hearing is scheduled for June.

Police say dentist died of medical issue after crash

BEATRICE, Neb. (AP) — Police say a driver died of a medical issue at a hospital after crashing his pickup truck in Beatrice.

The crash occurred Sunday afternoon after the pickup ran off U.S. Highway 136, crossed a grassy area and struck a tree. Officer Christine Gill says the medical issue is suspected of causing the crash. The driver was taken to a Lincoln hospital, where he died.

Station KWBE reports that police identified the driver as 66-year-old John Russell, a Beatrice dentist.

University of Nebraska launches flood recovery efforts

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — The University of Nebraska system is taking steps to help people deal with historic flooding across the state, such as connecting residents with resources and offering financial assistance to students and staff.

The University of Nebraska-Lincoln is coordinating mobile water-testing units, resource open houses showcasing agencies offering recovery aid, and volunteer reception centers, the Lincoln Journal Star reported

“These volunteer reception centers are so important because we need to know what their skills are, what they can do, we need to understand how they can contribute,” said Chuck Hibberd, the dean of Nebraska Extension. “We need to ensure they are upstanding individuals because the people who can prey on victims are out there.”

Early estimates indicate the March blizzard and subsequent flooding caused nearly $1.4 billion in damage to property, farm operations and infrastructure in Nebraska. The flooding inundated multiple states in the Midwest.

March runoff in the upper Missouri River Basin above Sioux City, Iowa, reached 11 million acre-feet — nearly 4 million acre-feet more than the previous record of 7.3 million set in 1952, according to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The average March upper basin runoff is 2.9 million acre-feet, the Corps said.

“We’re not getting out of this anytime soon, folks,” Hibberd said. “That’s why I think the university has an opportunity to put in a thoughtful, coordinated, systemwide effort to help Nebraska deal with this flood.”

UNL is adjusting some financial requirements for students facing hardship because of the flood, such as waiving application fees or deferring enrollment deposits, said Chancellor Ronnie Green.

“If covering the cost of your education is a significant challenge, we will work with you to find the best financial options available,” Green said.

The university is also working with students who will need to postpone moving to Lincoln to begin classes.

“There are students that are not going to be able to come this fall because of this,” Hibberd said, “and to defer their admission and scholarship offers until spring is just huge for those folks.”

The University of Nebraska Foundation has launched an emergency assistance fund for students and employees.

The Nebraska Extension has also compiled information from a number of resources to aid people with flood recovery.

Bellevue couple dies in weekend motorcycle crash

BELLEVUE, Neb. (AP) — Authorities are investigating a motorcycle crash that killed a Bellevue couple over the weekend.

The Omaha World-Herald reports that 39-year-old Jason Burgess and his 29-year-old wife, Megan Burgess, died Saturday after their motorcycle crashed into a pickup truck.

Bellevue Police say the Burgess’ Harley Davidson struck a truck driven by a 16-year-old near 21st Street and Cornhusker Road.

Tractor safety courses scheduled across Nebraska

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Members of the Central States Center for Agricultural Safety and Health in the University of Nebraska Medical Center College of Public Health will provide a tractor safety course from May through July in 12 towns across Nebraska.

The Nebraska Extension Tractor Safety & Hazardous Occupations Course is aimed at youths 14 and 15 years old. Those under age 14 aren’t eligible.

Federal law prohibits children under 16 from using certain equipment unless their parents or legal guardians own the farm. But certification received through the course grants an exemption, allowing 14- and 15-year-olds to drive tractors and work with certain equipment.

The course costs $60. Training will be held in Ainsworth, Geneva, Gering, Gordon, Grand Island, Kearney, McCook, Nelson, North Platte, O’Neill, Wayne, and Weeping Water.

Contact the appropriate Extension Office for more information or to register.

Some Nebraska State Fair gate tickets as low as $2

GRAND ISLAND, Neb. (AP) — Prices for admission tickets to this year’s 150th Nebraska State Fair will be as low as $2.

The Grand Island Independent reports that one package deal called The Hometown Pass sells for $10 and includes five gate admissions. Tickets bought at the gate Monday through Thursday are $6 for adults.

The Hometown Pass and other ticket deals are being offered online until midnight Aug. 22.

The Nebraska State Fair will take place Aug. 23 to Sept. 2 in Grand Island. This year’s fair will be the tenth in Grand Island after the fair moved from Lincoln in 2010.

Nebraska business leaders draw attention to workforce crisis

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska employers are struggling to find qualified workers to fill tens of thousands of open positions, and business leaders are calling for action to attract, train and retain local graduates and out-of-state prospects.

The Nebraska Labor Department says there are more than 36,000 open jobs in the state, the Omaha World-Herald reported . The state has just a 2.8% unemployment rate.

“We have a workforce crisis in this state,” said University of Nebraska President Hank Bounds.

Hudl, a Nebraska-based software company that creates technology for football teams, has grown from three employees to 1,400 in just 13 years, said Brian Kaiser, one of the company’s founders. But the organization has filled about a dozen high-paying tech positions with people living elsewhere because of the lack of homegrown talent.

“It’s turning into more and more of a problem for us,” Kaiser said. “We have some skills sets that are very hard to hire in the state of Nebraska.”

The worker shortage could cause some firms to leave the state if the issues persist, said Tonn Ostergard, CEO of Crete Carrier, a trucking company.

“You don’t want to sound like Chicken Little,” he said. “But we also have to be objective and say we have issues staring us in the face.”

The state’s biggest challenge in the coming decade will likely be retaining, attracting and training the people needed to fill jobs, said Bryan Slone, the president of the Nebraska Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

“This is now the most pressing economic issue in the state,” Slone said. “It doesn’t get a lot of attention, but we are on the cusp of this becoming the 1,000-pound gorilla.”

Business leaders say the state could do more to retain high school graduates, increase training of underemployed workers and step up efforts to lure workers from other states. And investment in scholarships at the state’s colleges and universities, community colleges and nontraditional training programs is key.

Kandace Miller of Omaha’s AIM Institute said the nonprofit has identified 100 students who want to enroll in code school, which focusses on computer programming and website design, but can’t afford to do so.

Gov. Pete Ricketts in January proposed spending nearly $7 million over two years on additional college scholarship aid. The plan would give about 1,000 Nebraska students up to $4,000 in annual scholarships.

Bounds is pushing for more funding and has backed another legislative proposal that would allocate $30 million annually to scholarships.

“I think the workforce issue is that big,” Bounds said.

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