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Woman pleads guilty in crash that killed 3 family members

HOLTON, Kan. (AP) – A Nebraska woman involved in a crash that killed three Kansans will be sentenced in June after accepting a plea agreement.

The Topeka Capital-Journal report s Jackson County Attorney Shawna Miller confirmed Monday that 49-year-old Maria Perez Marquez, of Omaha, pleaded guilty in April to three misdemeanor counts of vehicular homicide and one felony count of aggravated battery. She had originally been charged with three felony counts of involuntary manslaughter.

The November 2017 crash on U.S. 75 killed three family members of two Sabetha High School football players shortly after their team won a state title.

The Kansas Highway Patrol said Perez-Marquez was trying to pass another vehicle about 12 miles north of Holton when her vehicle hit a minivan driven by 42-year-old Carmen Ukele, of Sabetha. The crash killed Ukele, her daughter and her brother-in-law.

Omaha could soon roll out electric scooter pilot program

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Omaha pedestrians and drivers may soon have to make way for electric scooter riders on the city’s sidewalks and streets.

The Omaha World-Herald reports that the City Council will vote Tuesday on a pilot project to bring up to 1,500 dockless scooters to the city through November.

Scooter companies Lime and Spin say they could make the electric scooters available as early as Wednesday.

The scooters are equipped with GPS so users can track them down for rent through a smartphone app.

Many officials have expressed support for the project but there’s some hesitation about how the scooters are operated and parked.

Council member Chris Jerram is concerned about scooters being left on streets, in parking spots or near business entrances.

The company plans to educate renters about proper parking.

Ricketts blasts proposed sales tax increase on car repairs

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska Gov. Pete Ricketts is once again turning to the public to stop a bill that seeks to lower property taxes by raising other taxes and imposing a sales tax on services including car repairs.

Ricketts railed against the measure on Monday during an appearance at a Lincoln car repair shop one day before lawmakers are set to begin debate on it. He’s urging residents to contact their senator.

The measure would impose a half-cent sales tax increase and levy sales taxes on 29 services that are currently exempt, including haircuts, pop, bottled water, and professional lawn care.

Ian Oehm, who works at Norm’s Car Care, says the sales tax on car repairs will almost certainly raise the cost of maintenance on people who predominantly drive older, used cars.

Microsoft offers software tools to secure elections

Microsoft announced an ambitious effort it says will make voting secure, verifiable and more transparent with open-source software. Two of the three top U.S elections vendors have expressed interest in potentially incorporating the software into their voting systems.The software kit is being developed with Galois, an Oregon-based company separately creating a secure voting system prototype under contract with the Pentagon’s advanced research agency, DARPA.Dubbed “ElectionGuard,” the Microsoft kit will be available this summer, the company says, with early prototypes ready to pilot for next year’s general elections. CEO Satya Nadella announced the initiative Monday at a developer’s conference in Seattle.Nadella said the program’s software would help “modernize all of the election infrastructure everywhere in the world.”

Three little-known U.S. companies control about 90 percent of the market for election equipment but have long faced criticism for poor security, antiquated technology and insufficient transparency around their proprietary, black-box voting systems. They are Election Systems & Software of Omaha, Nebraska; Dominion Voting Systems of Denver and Hart InterCivic of Austin, Texas.

ES&S and Hart InterCivic both expressed interest in partnering with Microsoft for ElectionGuard. A spokeswoman for Dominion said the company looks forward to “learning more” about the initiative.

Microsoft officials said the ElectionGuard development kit will be provided free of charge as part of its Defending Democracy Program. They also announced a cut-rate Office 365 application suite for political parties and campaigns at a 75 percent discount, the price the company charges nonprofits. Both Microsoft and Google provide anti-phishing email support for campaigns.

ElectionGuard is designed to work as a standalone product or alongside existing election systems, said Josh Benaloh, a senior cryptographer at Microsoft Research and key contributor to the ElectionGuard project. “It can be used with a ballot-marking device. It can be used with an optical scanner, on hand-marked paper ballots.”

Benaloh helped produce a National Academies of Science report last year that called for an urgent overhaul of the rickety U.S. election system, which faced serious threats from Russian hackers who in 2016 attempted to infiltrate voting administration systems in several states.

That report called for all U.S. elections to be held on human-readable paper ballots by 2020. It also advocated a specific form of routine post-election audits intended to ensure that votes are accurately counted. While U.S. officials say there is no evidence of hackers tampering with election results, experts say systems used by millions of U.S. voters remain susceptible to tampering.

ElectionGuard aims to provide “end-to-end” verification of voting in two ways, Benaloh said. First, it lets voters confirm that their votes are accurately recorded. Second, the unique coded tracker it produces registers an encrypted version of the vote that keeps the ballot choice itself secret while ensuring votes are accurately counted. Outsiders such as election watchdog groups, political parties, journalists and voters themselves can verify online that votes were properly counted without being altered.

The system would also allow for reliable post-election audits and recounts. Microsoft executives say they also plan to build a prototype voting system for reference.

A spinoff of Galois called Free & Fair developed the sophisticated postelection audits , known as “risk-limiting,” for Colorado, which was the first U.S. state to require the audits recommended in the National Academies of Sciences report.

ElectionGuard is not designed to work with internet voting schemes — which experts consider too easily hackable — and does not currently work with vote-by-mail systems.

ES&S told The Associated Press via email that it was exciting to partner with Microsoft and “still exploring the potentials” for incorporated the software kit its voting systems.

Hart InterCivic, the No. 3 vendor, said it planned a pilot project with Microsoft to “incorporate ElectionGuard functionality as an additional feature” layered over its core platform.

A spokeswoman for Dominion, the No. 2 vendor, said: “We are very interested in learning more about the initiative and being able to review the various prototypes that are being planned, along with hearing more about other federally-supported efforts in the elections space.”

Edgardo Cortés, a former Virginia elections commissioner now with New York University’s Brennan Center, welcomed additional private sector support for election systems.

“I think it’ll take a while to catch on and see how beneficial (ElectionGuard) ends up being,” he said. “But I think it certainly does have a great deal of potential.”

Columbia University will be partnering with Microsoft to audit the pilots.

Nebraska Guard says soldier died in training exercise

BROKEN BOW, Neb. (AP) – A member of the Nebraska Army National Guard has died from an unexpected medical episode during routine fitness training in Broken Bow.

The Lincoln Journal Star reports that 29-year-old Staff Sgt. Trevor J. Kurtzhals, of Lexington, died Saturday at a local hospital. He had had been at the Nebraska Army National Guard armory in Broken Bow as part of the Guard’s 1075th Transportation Company.

Kurtzhals was an 11-year veteran of the Nebraska Army National Guard whose service included a deployment to Afghanistan in 2010.

It’s unclear what the medical episode was.

Gov. Pete Ricketts says Kurtzhals’ service to Nebraska and the country won’t be forgotten

Possible tornado flattens food stand in Lincoln

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) – A possible tornado demolished a Lincoln food stand shortly after workers at the business scrambled into a storm cellar.

The Lincoln Journal Star reports the storm hit about 6 p.m. Sunday and flattened the C & L Dairy Sweet, just after workers sought safety, leaving a cheeseburger on a grill.

The storm also damaged the roof of a Lincoln motorcycle dealership, part of a car wash and a plane at the Lincoln Airport. Electricity was knocked out to about 4,000 homes and businesses.

No injuries were reported.

A National Weather Service team will examine the damage and determine of the storm was a tornado or straight-line winds.

Prairie Doc® Perspectives: Men would rather face a charging lion

Rick Holm

Men Would Rather Face a Charging Lion

By Richard P. Holm, MD

Did you know that an average South Dakotan male lives to 75-years-of-age, and the average woman lives to 80?  Why is that? Is it because we men are more prone to violent deaths early by going to war, riding motorcycles or driving cars faster? Nah! This accounts for only a small part of the difference.

I think more likely it is because men, who are genetically built larger and more muscular (likely in order to be the defender or hunter for the family) no longer need to use those muscles in this modern world.

Just look at most 22-year-old men, they come built almost automatically ready to fight or lift or throw or build. But instead, in this society, you find them driving a car, sitting at a desk or laying on the couch rolling through the channels looking for videos of people playing games and being physically active.

Even our young boys are often living through the pretend movements of action figures or computer-generated warriors, rather than actually running through fields in some sort of sport, or chase, or hunt. As men age, their activity drastically reduces while their caloric intake continues excessively on. All the while their bellies grow. I truly believe this combination of excessive calories and reduced activity accounts for the sleep apnea, diabetes, vascular disease and, overall, increased death rate of men over women.

But there is one more factor, which should be added here. Men are also built to deny and do what they can to avoid going to the doctor to have a check-up. Let’s face it, denial has something to do with being a man. It goes with the testosterone, guns, action toys, and channel changers. You would think a man would rather face a charging lion than the yearly physical exam.

Men, please don’t just think about it, find a way to stay active, participate, don’t just watch. Prevent or lose the belly by eating smaller amounts (fewer calories) and by being more active. Also, go see your doctor every once-in-a-while. You just might live longer and feel better too.

For free and easy access to the entire Prairie Doc® library, visit www.prairiedoc.org and follow The Prairie Doc® on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter featuring On Call with the Prairie Doc® a medical Q&A show streaming live on Facebook most Thursdays at 7 p.m. central.

Nebraska headed for property tax showdown and ballot drive

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A proposal that seeks to lower Nebraska’s property taxes by raising other taxes will face its biggest hurdle yet on Tuesday when lawmakers begin debate on the measure against the backdrop of a new property tax ballot campaign that could lead to sharp spending cuts.

The legislative proposal faces strong opposition from Gov. Pete Ricketts, and getting it through the one-house Legislature will require support from at least 33 of Nebraska’s 49 senators to overcome an expected filibuster.

Meanwhile, conservative activists who have lost faith in lawmakers are preparing to take the issue to voters in the 2020 election. Some frustrated senators have already endorsed the ballot measure, which would guarantee taxpayers a 35 percent state refund on their local property tax payments. It would cost the state an estimated $1.1 billion a year out of a budget that currently calls for about $4.5 billion in annual spending.

“We’ve never had the intestinal fortitude to make necessary cuts in spending,” said Sen. Steve Erdman, of Bayard. “This will force the Legislature to make cuts.”

Erdman said he hasn’t seen the latest version of the legislative property tax bill and doesn’t know whether he’ll support it.

Paul Von Behren, president of the ballot campaign TRUE Nebraskans, said lawmakers have introduced more than 500 property tax bills since 2000, yet average property taxes have risen more than 250 percent in that time. Von Behren said he expects no action from lawmakers this year, given that local government officials are lukewarm on the current tax bill and Ricketts is actively fighting it.

“We have the makings of a first-class stalemate,” he said. “I don’t believe the people who actually want to do something will be able to do it.”

Supporters of the bill say it would provide a large net savings for farmers, ranchers and homeowners throughout the state even if they end up paying more in other taxes. It’s a better approach than Nebraska’s current practice of using the state’s property tax credit fund, said Sen. Mike Groene, of North Platte.

Groene, a fiscal conservative who helped craft the bill, said property taxes have continued to rise even as lawmakers and governors dumped more money into the tax credit.

“It hasn’t worked,” Groene said. “It hasn’t done what it’s supposed to do.”

The property tax credit fund distributes state tax money to local governments and can only be used to lower property tax bills. Ricketts is proposing a $51 million annual increase for the fund, nearly doubling the yearly allocation since he took office in 2015.

Ricketts has railed against the property tax bill floated by lawmakers, pointing to past plans that boosted aid to local governments in a failed effort to lower property taxes. The current bill was crafted by the tax-focused Revenue Committee, which is composed of seven Republicans and one Democrat. Two Republican senators abstained from voting on it.

The measure would impose a half-cent sales tax increase and levy sales taxes on 29 services that are currently exempt. The list would raise the cost of haircuts, tattoos, moving services, lawn care, candy, pop, bottled water, weight-loss programs, ride-hailing services and professional home maintenance, among other items.

Because sales taxes disproportionately hurt the poor, the bill would expand Nebraska’s earned income tax credit, which benefits low-income taxpayers.

It also would boost state funding for all K-12 schools while restricting the taxing power of mid-sized and larger schools that already receive state equalization aid.

Nebraska’s cigarette tax would increase from 64 cents to $1 per pack — higher than neighboring Colorado, Missouri and Wyoming, but still lower than Iowa, Kansas and South Dakota.

Paying for the measure would also require lawmakers to take $119.5 million out of the property tax credit fund, leaving it with a balance of $104.5 million.

Sen. Lou Ann Linehan, the Revenue Committee’s chairwoman, said she’s not a big fan of the fund because it provides a relatively small benefit to taxpayers. Linehan said the new tax package isn’t perfect, but lawmakers can always change it next year if it doesn’t work as intended.

“We’re trying something brand, brand new,” she said. “It’s a little nerve-wracking for everyone. It’s nerve-wracking for our schools. It’s nerve wracking for the property owners. It’s nerve-wracking for 49 state senators.”

Companies helping water-short city open pool for summer

PLATTSMOUTH, Neb. (AP) — Two local companies are helping an eastern Nebraska city that suffered flood damage to its water facilities and can’t fill the community’s pool.Severe flooding in March damaged the Plattsmouth water treatment and wastewater facilities, forcing the city to impose restrictions: no lawn watering, no washing vehicles in driveways or filling private pools.

Plattsmouth Mayor Paul Lambert said there simply isn’t enough water left to fill Plattsmouth’s popular Twin Rivers Water Park’s pool and other water features. Most of the city’s limited temporary supply of water is coming from the Cass County Rural Water District system.

The two companies that came to the rescue of summer fun for kids and families are Fast Grass sod farm and Liquid Trucking. Fast Grass is donating its well water, which has been tested for safety. Liquid Trucking is hauling it to the water park at a cost that could exceed $30,000 for labor, gasoline and maintenance.

They hope to have the pool filled by May 15, in time for a June 1 opening.

Liquid Trucking owner Roger Schmidt told the Omaha World-Herald that the expense is worth it.

“My kids both grew up in Plattsmouth and went to the pool and went to swim team and learned to swim — that was their summertime fun,” Schmidt said. “We figured the kids of Plattsmouth needed a summer, and we could help out.”

The owner of Fast Grass, Robert Meisinger, said his company and Schmidt’s were uniquely equipped to help their community.

“You’d hate to have that water restriction get in the way of kids swimming in their pool,” Meisinger said.

Both men are asking for donations to defray their expenses.

“If we get less, we’ll take it out of our pockets,” Schmidt said. “And if we get more, we’ll donate the money back to Plattsmouth somehow.”

Growing demand for cyberdefenders in Iowa, Nebraska

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The demand for cybersecurity experts has grown as crooks with computers hack their way into business, government and other networks.

CyberSeek, a project funded by the U.S. Commerce Department, says nearly 4,600 people are working on cybersecurity in Nebraska and that there are openings for more than 2,000 workers. Nearly 4,300 are doing cybersecurity in Iowa, with openings for more than 2,400 people.

The Omaha World-Herald reports that colleges in both states have been trying to meet the need for more cyberdefenders.

Bellevue University in Bellevue has invested $1.3 million into its new Intelligence Systems Lab, where students learn how to break into networks and then make them more secure.

The university is among the few honored for a strong academic cybersecurity program by being named a center of academic excellence by the National Security Agency and the Department of Homeland Security. Three others in Nebraska are the University of Nebraska at Omaha, Omaha’s Metropolitan Community College and Norfolk-based Northeast Community College.

Only Iowa State holds that distinction in Iowa, and it was one of the first seven schools in the nation to win that designation, in 1999, said Doug Jacobson, director of the Information Assurance Center there.

“Since the adversary is dynamic and persistent, the field changes constantly,” Jacobson said. “We need more schools in the game to help produce the students.”

The endorsement means among other things that a college has put the necessary resources and expertise into offering up-to-date cybersecurity classes.

Cybersecurity salaries vary depending on expertise and responsibilities, according to CyberSeek. But the average for cybercriminal investigators is $85,000 a year. The average for cybersecurity architects who design system concepts: $129,000.

Janel Nelson, who’s taught at Bellevue University, said the need for more cybersecurity experts remains acute.

“We’ve had 20 years to work on this problem — more than 20 years — and it’s just as bad as when I started,” Nelson said.

Cybersecurity was undermanned then, she said. And it’s undermanned now.

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