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New water algae warnings issued in Gage, Pierce counties

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska health officials are warning people to stay out of Big Indian Lake in Gage County and Willow Creek Reservoir in Pierce County because of toxic blue-green algae blooms.

Officials said in a news release that the alerts were issued following water tests.

Alerts continue at Rockford Lake in Gage County and Maple Creek Recreation Area Lake in Colfax County. An alert for Holmes Lake in Lincoln has ended.

Skin exposed to the toxin can develop rashes and blisters, and drinking tainted water could cause headaches, nausea and muscle pain.

When a health alert is issued, signs are posted advising the public to use caution, and designated swimming beaches are closed. Recreational boating and fishing are permitted, but the public is warned to use caution and avoid water exposure.

Iowa trial set for man charged in 2-state police chase

SIOUX CITY, Iowa (AP) — An October trial in Sioux City has been scheduled for a man accused of ramming police cars on a chase that began in northeast Nebraska and ended in western Iowa.

Woodbury County court records say 43-year-old Larry Johnson II pleaded not guilty Friday to assault on an officer. His trial is set to begin Oct. 2.

The Nebraska State Patrol says the incident occurred July 6 when a Nebraska trooper tried to stop a pickup truck being pursued by South Sioux City police. Officials say the truck rammed the trooper’s car, which had maneuvered in front of it, from behind before crossing into Iowa.

The trooper and a Dakota County sheriff’s cruiser following the truck onto Interstate 29 before it went out of control and became stuck in a median. Officials say the truck then rammed both the trooper’s car and the sheriff’s vehicle before Johnson was arrested.

2 men injured when gas vapor explodes outside school

MALCOLM, Neb. (AP) — Authorities say two men were badly burned by a fireball that erupted when gasoline vapor ignited in a semitrailer in eastern Nebraska.

The two were working with a generator in the semitrailer Monday morning outside Westfall Elementary School in Malcolm when the explosion occurred. Malcolm Fire Chief Jim Densberger says both the men were taken to a Lincoln hospital. Their names haven’t been released.

Authorities say the two are subcontractors working on a school expansion project. The school was not damaged.

No other injuries were reported. School is not in session.

Nonprofit proposes $16M indoor dog park in Omaha

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A nonprofit wants to build a $16 million indoor, off-leash dog park in Omaha.

Omaha-based animal health technology startup Corbyt has proposed the 90,000 square-foot private facility named the Nebraska Canine Commons, the Omaha World-Herald reported. The indoor dog park would be run by the new nonprofit Nebraska Canine Commons.

The group’s plans include a play area with dog agility equipment, a micro-clinic and classrooms for dog training and specialized turf that drains liquid waste and manages pet odor. Customers would pay a membership fee of $79 per month and an extra $15 per month for each additional dog.

The idea for the indoor facility came from a vizsla dog breed owner group.

“As we went into the winter months we realized there’s nothing really we can do (for vizslas) and there would be a great demand for an indoor facility for dogs,” said Sarah Dring, who helped run the dog breed group and now serves as co-founder of Nebraska Canine Commons.

Dring and Corbyt CEO Jon Cady collaborated with a design team to envision the indoor dog park, and now they’re working to fund the project.

The nonprofit hasn’t yet chosen a location.

The indoor dog facility could begin construction next year and open in 2020 if the group can complete fundraising.

Report: Keystone XL would have no major impact on Nebraska

By GRANT SCHULTE ,  Associated Press
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A new planned route for the Keystone XL pipeline through Nebraska would not have a major impact on the state’s water, land or wildlife, according to an updated environmental study produced by the Trump administration.The U.S. State Department released a draft study Monday of the pipeline’s potential environmental impact in Nebraska, where opponents have repeatedly thwarted the project. The study is now subject to public input through Aug. 29 before it’s finalized.

The announcement marks another step in pipeline developer TransCanada’s quest to finish the 1,184-mile oil pipeline, although the company continues to face obstacles in Nebraska.

Environmentalists, Native American tribes and an organized minority of landowners in the state have prevented the company from moving ahead with construction, and they’re now trying to block the project with a lawsuit currently pending before the Nebraska Supreme Court. Oral arguments in that case aren’t expected until October at the earliest, and a decision won’t come down until months later.

TransCanada spokesman Matt John said the company will review the environmental assessment “and provide comment to the Department of State as necessary.”

The new report came as no surprise Art Tanderup, a farmer in Neligh, Nebraska, whose property lies on the pipeline’s proposed pathway. Tanderup said he hadn’t yet read the State Department report, but voiced concerns that the project is “just being pushed through” despite the warnings of local landowners who oppose it.

Tanderup, a plaintiff in the Nebraska lawsuit, said he’s worried the pipeline will leak and contaminate local groundwater. He said the region has porous soil and a water table so high in some areas that you can’t drill a posthole without hitting water.

“Once those chemicals (from a pipeline spill) get in the aquifer, they cannot be cleaned up,” he said. “It’s not a good place to be running a tar sands pipeline.”

The report said most of the disruption would take place during pipeline construction and would have a “moderate” impact at most, and in those cases, crews could mitigate the damage. TransCanada has said it will compensate affected landowners for damage, although opponents say the company isn’t offering enough.

“It is estimated that disturbed pastures, croplands and grassy rangelands may take one to five years to recover to pre-construction levels,” the report said.

The president of a leading pipeline opposition group said she was concerned that the State Department wouldn’t schedule any public hearings on the new route. In 2011, State Department hearings in Nebraska drew hundreds of supporters and opponents of the project.

“For me, this is one more sign that the Trump administration doesn’t care about property rights,” said Jane Kleeb, who has fought the project for years.

The Trump administration signed a federal permit for the project in March 2017, reversing the Obama administration’s decision to reject the company’s request. But a new federal review was needed because Nebraska state regulators approved a substantially different route in November than the one the State Department had initially studied.

The new route approved by the Nebraska Public Service Commission is five miles longer than the original proposed pathway, requires an additional pumping station and runs next to an existing TransCanada-owned pipeline for nearly 89 miles.

The pipeline would carry up to 830,000 barrels of crude oil per day from Canada to Steele City, Nebraska, where it would connect with the original Keystone pipeline that runs down to Texas Gulf Coast refineries.

The State Department’s new report noted two major spills in South Dakota involving the original Keystone pipeline, which went into operation in 2010, but added that TransCanada has a lower overall spill rate than average in the oil pipeline industry.

Crews have replaced all of the contaminated soil and reseeded the affected farmland after the November 2017 spill in Marshall County, South Dakota, according to the report. Another spill near Freeman, South Dakota, in April 2016 led to increased supervision of the pipeline in that area, and nearby aquifers were not affected, the report said.

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Follow Grant Schulte on Twitter at https://twitter.com/GrantSchulte

Joleen Michelle “Shelly” (Black) Arensdorf

Joleen Michelle “Shelly” (Black) Arensdorf, age 62 of Tryon, passed away unexpectedly on Friday, July 27, 2018.

Shelly was born September 25, 1955 in Mullen, NE to Orval and Leah (Hardin) Black. She attended elementary and high school in Tryon and graduated from McPherson County High School in 1973. She married Jeff Arensdorf on May 25, 1975 and they began a life of ranching in McPherson County. They had three sons: Jason, Jeremy, and Jared.

Shelly was the ultimate hard worker: raising three boys, helping grow a ranch, volunteering with community activities like the Heart Fund and county fair, and working at the U.S. Postal Service in North Platte. She recently retired from the Postal Service.  Shelly was especially proud of her sons and loved each of her grandchildren with all her heart. She was a great listener. Her sons and extended family frequently called just to talk and she was always willing to listen and help. She was supportive, accepting, and loving – often rooting for and championing the underdog in life.  She loved beautiful flowers, colorful lilies in particular, and had her mother’s green thumb with plants and flowers.  As she approached retirement, her flower garden and collection of potted plants grew and grew. Shelly passionately followed Nebraska Volleyball and watched every match she could and attended many memorable games. She enjoyed traveling and was always looking forward to the next trip. Although she would say she was fine without pets, any she encountered would gravitate to her, and the many cats she cared for would argue that she enjoyed mothering them. She had a special touch and saved many sick and injured ranch animals over the years.

Shelly will be lovingly remembered by Jeff, her husband of 43 years; their sons, Jason (Jennifer), Jeremy, and Jared (Amanda); her five grandchildren, Faith, Noah, Isabella, Jazlyn, and Isaiah; brother Ed Black; sisters Jodeen Carroll, Jerry (Gary) Neal, and Susan Crapo; mother and father-in-law, Esther and Dale Arensdorf; sisters and brothers-in-law; numerous nieces and nephews; and extended family and friends.

She was preceded in death by her parents, Orval and Leah Black; sisters Janis Nielsen, Joanne Jennings, Joyce Wilkins, and Beth Ehrbar; brother Rick Black; and brothers-in-law Darwin Nielsen, Dale Jennings, Bud Wilkins, Dallas Mulford and Larry Carroll.

Memorials are suggested to the Tryon Volunteer Rescue and Fire Department and online condolences may be shared at www.adamsswanson.com. Funeral services will be 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, August 1, 2018 at the McPherson County High School Gymnasium with the Reverend Dr. Douglas Delp officiating.  Burial will follow at the Miller Cemetery.  Visitation will be 5:00 p.m. until 8:00 p.m. Tuesday, July 31, 2018 at Adams and Swanson Funeral Home, which is in charge of arrangements.

Virginia Lee “Ginny” Becker

Virginia Lee “Ginny” Becker, 92, of Sutherland, passed away at home surrounded by her family on July 28, 2018.

Virginia was born on Aug. 28, 1925, to Carl and Fern Greisen at North Platte where she grew up. She graduated from North Platte High School then attended the nursing program at Baylor University.

In February 1946, Virginia was united in marriage to the love of her life, William James “Bill” Becker, while he was serving in the U.S. Navy. Following his discharge from the service they moved to Lincoln, then to Elgin, Illinois, with Bill’s job. The couple had five children and eventually moved to Playa del Rey, California, to enjoy the beach community and the fact they no longer had to shovel snow.

While in Lincoln, Virginia worked as a nurse in the V.A. and vet’s hospital. She went back to school to become a teacher and later earned her master’s degree in education from the University of Southern California. In 1975, Virginia started teaching kindergarten to children in inner-city Los Angeles. She loved teaching and helping people any way she could. Virginia also learned Spanish so she could teach English to those who wanted to learn and had traveled to Costa Rica to help others learn English.

When the kids were younger, Virginia enjoyed baking cookies and cinnamon rolls as treats for her kids. She had a great love for books, reading thousands over the years, and enjoyed music. Virginia had a kind heart for animals and was known for feeding the neighborhood cats, opossums and raccoons, much to her husband’s dismay.

Virginia was preceded in death by her husband, Bill, and their son, John Tom; her parents, Carl and Fern Greisen; stepmother, Catherine Calhoun Greisen; and sister, Margaret Little.

She is survived by her children, Jim Becker of Sutherland, Carla Becker of Sacramento, California, William Mark Becker of Morehead City, North Carolina, and Wendy Becker of Sutherland; grandchildren, Stacy, Gus, Michelle, Theresa, Christopher and Michael; great-grandchildren, Katherine, Alexia, Lucas, Skyler, Chase and Carter; and other family members.

In lieu of flowers, memorials are suggested to Sutherland Public Library or donors’ choice. Online condolences may be shared at odeanchapel.com.

Services will be at 10 a.m. on Friday, Aug. 3, at the Sutherland Presbyterian Church with Vicar JA Welsh officiating. Cremation was chosen. Inurnment will follow at Fort McPherson National Cemetery near Maxwell. Odean Colonial Chapel at C & Sycamore is in charge of arrangements.

NSP issues missing/endangered alert for Nebraska woman

Issued On:Monday, July 30, 2018 at 10:15:03 AM

An Endangered Missing Advisory has been activated to determine the whereabouts of Terrese Tressler.

An Endangered Missing Advisory has been issued for eastern Nebraska. The Nebraska State Patrol is attempting to locate, Terrese A. Tressler, who is a 63 year old, white female, approximately 5’6″ tall, approximately 200 lbs, with blonde/grey long hair, and blue eyes. Tressler has a tattoo on her right wrist of infinity and a tattoo on her right big toe of a flower. Tressler wears glasses and has a scar on her forehead. Tressler is missing from the Meadow Grove area and was last seen in the Nebraska City area at about 2:30 AM, July 30, 2018. Tressler is known to drive a silver, 2012 Toyota Corolla, bearing Nebraska license plate number 7C5071. If you have any information, please call 911 or contact the Nebraska State Patrol at 402-331-3333.

Transient survived jump off moving train near Sutherland

On July 29, 2018, at 11:40 p.m., Deputies were asked to help remove a transient from Union Pacific Railroad property in Bailey Yards. Deputies did locate the individual with several Union Pacific Employee’s. The thirty-nine-year-old homeless man was arrested for trespassing at the scene.

The individual began to tell Deputies his traveling friend was high on Methamphetamine and Vodka earlier in the evening. The transient advised his friend had committed suicide near Sutherland Nebraska, jumping from the train. The transient guessed the train was traveling approximately thirty-five miles per hour at the time his friend jumped off.

A Union Pacific Railroad employee did locate the victim transient. The transient was found to be alive, void of life-threatening injuries, but unable to leave without assistance. A rescue unit was called and the individual was taken to Great Plains Health.

Firefighters put out flames at another Omaha fire station

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Firefighters from a northwest Omaha station have put out a fire that erupted at another Omaha fire station.

A battalion chief caught a whiff of smoke at the station a little after 10 a.m. Sunday and found the station kitchen ablaze. He called for help because most of the firefighters assigned there were out on a call.

Fire crews from a station less than 5 miles (8 kilometers) away responded. It took them about 15 minutes to put out the fire in the kitchen and living areas. No injuries were reported.

The fire cause is being investigated. Most of the station’s firefighters and equipment were moved temporarily to another station.

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