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Noon Rotary and ‘Josh the Otter’ partner in drowning prevention efforts

Rotarian Mark Tillman with Josh the Otter and the Osgood Kindergarten class of 2018.

During April and May, the North Platte Noon Rotary Club will bring the Josh the Otter Water Safety and Literacy Project to the kindergarten classes of North Platte. This is North Platte Rotary’s 7th year participating in the water safety project. The project will reach the 308 kindergarten students in 11 elementary schools in North Platte, including all the North Platte Public Schools, McDaid Elementary, and Our Redeemer Lutheran School.  Josh will begin visiting the kindergarten classrooms on Monday, April 29, 2019. In seven years, the club will reach over 2,601 students.

“Our Noon Rotary Club first learned about Josh the Otter from our friend Trudy Merritt with the North Platte Rec Center when she spoke at one of our meetings.  Trudy shared what the Rec Center was doing with the “Little Otters” water training program and provided information about the Josh the Otter reading program that many Rotary clubs have taken on as a project,” Misty Robertson, Chair of the Rotary Josh the Otter Committee.

Robertson continued, “Bringing Josh the Otter to kindergarten classes seemed like a great way to promote water safety in our community, in a way that would be fun and memorable for the kids.

“After this year’s program, which runs through mid-May, we will have reached over 2,601 kids in North Platte in these seven years since Noon Rotary started the project”

The North Platte Noon Rotary Club partners with the drowning prevention nonprofit that created the program, the Joshua Collingsworth Memorial Foundation (JCMF). JCMF has nationally recognized for its partnership work with organizations such as Rotary International.

From the coast of eastern Florida to the shores of Hawaii, the message of Josh the Otter is spreading quickly! Rotarians across the country and even the world are hearing the life-saving message and are excited at the positive changes that a partnership between Josh the Otter and Rotary International can bring to communities everywhere. Since 2010, Rotarians have distributed thousands of Josh the Baby Otter books and every day more clubs are starting their own Josh the Otter literacy and water safety projects. Currently, over 20 U.S. states and the country of Pakistan, Brazil, Virgin Island and Canada are pursuing the Josh the Otter project within their own clubs. With drowning a leading cause of unintentional death for children all over the world, Rotarians are helping to save thousands of lives.

Joshua Collingsworth Memorial Foundation, Lincoln, Nebraska
Parents Blake and Kathy Collingsworth honor the memory of their two-year-old son Joshua, who died on June 4, 2008, after falling into the family pool three days earlier. They believed they had every safety precaution in place, but the reality is that a drowning can occur in mere moments. After losing Joshua, they felt compelled to help reduce the dramatic numbers of death by drowning that occur in our country and around the world. The Joshua Collingsworth Memorial Foundation was created in July of 2008 to serve as a catalyst to strengthen water safety awareness and create an early childhood education program.  Their goal is to empower children to be safe in and around all bodies of water to prevent similar tragedies. The Josh the Otter Water Safety and Awareness Project is dedicated to teaching young children about water safety through the use of Josh The Otter a book written by Blake Collingsworth.

The book has now been translated into twelve languages and has been published in Spanish, Urdu, and Portuguese with the hopes to reach even more. The foundation and its partners have distributed nearly 250,000 books and have reached over one million children.  The program has been presented in classrooms, community centers, zoos, aquatic centers, and childcare facilities around the world. 1.2 Million people around the world die by drowning every year, that is more than two persons per minute. (International Life Saving Federation)

Drowning is preventable. Let’s not make a tragedy necessary to alert people to consider water safety and awareness. www.joshuamemorial.org

Joshua Collingsworth Memorial Foundation is a qualified IRS 501 (c)(3) organization.

Nebraska prisons announce incentives to attract workers

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska’s short-staffed prison system is now offering cash incentives to attract new workers and keep its current employees from leaving.

The Nebraska Department of Correctional Services announced the effort on Monday, less than a week after state officials announced a new contract with the union representing prison workers. The new contract offers raises based on longevity, which prison employees have sought for years.

Corrections Director Scott Frakes says the new programs are designed to draw new talent and show appreciation for corrections workers who accept supervisory duties.

The new programs are separate from the contract. They include a $3,000 signing bonus for high-demand positions at certain prisons, referral bonuses and rewards of $125 to $150 for supervisors who successfully retain employees. Prison administrators have also expanded a merit incentive program.

Authorities ID crash victim as Lincoln car dealership owner

NEBRASKA CITY, Neb. (AP) – Authorities have identified an Otoe County crash victim as the owner of a vehicle dealership in Lincoln.

He’s been identified 47-year-old Eric Bigler, who owned Bigler Motors.

The crash occurred Wednesday night on U.S. Highway 75 south of Nebraska City. Firefighters had to extinguish flames consuming a semitrailer and a pickup truck that had collided.

Investigators say the pickup crossed into the path of the semitrailer. The semi driver suffered non-life-threatening injuries.

The pickup driver was Bigler.

Man accused of dragging Nebraska deputy arrested in Texas

GRAND ISLAND, Neb. (AP) — A driver accused of dragging a Nebraska sheriff’s deputy as the deputy tried to stop the car has been arrested in Texas.

Authorities say 33-year-old Tristan Bush was arrested Friday in Pasadena, Texas, near Houston. He’s being held in the Harris County Jail until he can be returned to Grand Island for trial.

Nebraska court records say he’s charged with escape using a deadly weapon, intentional child abuse and other crimes. The records don’t list the name of an attorney for him.

Authorities say Bush was a passenger in a car stopped April 12 in western Hall County but slid over and began driving away to keep the deputy from arresting him on several warrants. A Hall County Court affidavit says a dog in the car bit the deputy and that the deputy had to shoot the dog to make it let go.

The affidavit says a chase was quickly ended out of concern for a 7-year-old child in the back seat.

Ex-director accused of stealing nearly $208K from show choir

GRAND ISLAND, Neb. (AP) — A former teacher has been accused of stealing nearly $208,000 from the show choir he directed at a Grand Island high school.

David Sackschewsky had been a teacher at Northwest High School until he resigned earlier this month after being on medical leave since a vehicular accident last fall. The 46-year-old’s arrest follows an investigation into suspicious transactions on the bank account of the 14 Karat Gold Show Choir at Northwest. He was the choir’s director at the time.

The charges are four counts of forgery and one of theft.

His attorney, Mark Porto, says he thinks Sackschewsky is not guilty, and “we’re prepared to have this out in court.”

Allegedly drugged driver arrested following pursuit near Kearney

Troopers with the Nebraska State Patrol arrested a California man following a pursuit on Interstate 80 early Saturday morning.

At approximately 12:40 a.m. a trooper observed a Ford Mustang traveling at just 4 miles per hour on I-80 near Kearney at mile marker 269. As the trooper attempted to perform a traffic stop, the Mustang showed no response and continued driving slowly. Moments later, the vehicle accelerated to approximately 70 miles per hour. The trooper initiated a pursuit.

The Mustang began driving recklessly, passed vehicles on the shoulder, and reached speeds up to 147 miles per hour. Near mile marker 285, the vehicle came to a stop voluntarily. As troopers approached the vehicle, the driver accelerated rapidly. Troopers continued the pursuit.

A few minutes later, additional troopers were able to successfully deploy spike strips and bring the Mustang to a stop near Wood River at mile marker 302. The driver, Jonathan Suckow, 37, of Lomita, California, was arrested for driving under the influence of drugs, willful reckless driving, and felony flight to avoid arrest. Suckow was lodged in Hall County Jail.

The entire pursuit lasted approximately 22 minutes.

Troopers find 368 LBs of marijuana during I-80 traffic stop

(LINCOLN, NEB.) – Troopers with the Nebraska State Patrol (NSP) found 368 pounds of marijuana and arrested an Indiana man during a traffic stop on I-80 near Goehner on Saturday.

At approximately 11:50 a.m. Saturday, April 20, a trooper observed an eastbound Dodge Ram failing to stay in its lane. During the traffic stop, the trooper detected the odor of marijuana coming from the pickup.

Troopers searched the vehicle and found 16 large trash bags containing marijuana in the cargo area. The total weight of the marijuana was 368 pounds.

The driver, Bradley Wooten, 37, of Carmel, Indiana, was arrested for possession of marijuana – more than one pound, possession with intent to deliver, and no drug tax stamp. Wooten was lodged in Seward County Jail.

Police: 6-year-old died after being struck by vehicle

BELLEVUE, Neb. (AP) – Police say a 6-year-old girl was fatally struck by a sport utility vehicle in Bellevue.

The accident was reported a little before 8 p.m. Sunday. Police say Aubrey Oregon was hit when a friend of her family was moving a sport utility vehicle from a driveway into the street. The man driving, 59-year-old Dale Valverde, told police he didn’t know the SUV had struck Aubrey. She was pronounced dead at Nebraska Medical Center.

No arrest or citations have been reported.

2 dead after vulture strikes motorcycle head on in Kansas

BARBER COUNTY, Kan. —Two people died in an accident just after 3p.m. Saturday in Barber County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2015 Harley Davidson motorcycle driven by Brandon Husband, 42, Fowler, was southbound on East River Road thirteen miles northwest of Medicine Lodge.

A vulture came out of the north ditch and struck the driver in the head. The vehicle traveled off the road into the north ditch, struck a barbed wire fence and overturned.

Husband was pronounced dead at the scene and transported to Larison Funeral Home. A passenger Jennifer Husband, 43, of Fowler, was transported to Wesley Medical Center where she died. They were not wearing helmets, according to the KHP.

Barber County is in south-central Kansas.

*Information for this story came from Hays Post*

Energy plant suspending production to make repairs

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SOUTH SIOUX CITY, Neb. (AP) — A northeast Nebraska renewable energy plant is suspending production so it can make repairs that its owner hopes will solve ongoing discharge and odor issues.

Big Ox Energy spokesman Kevin Bradley told the Sioux City Journal that it won’t be accepting truckloads of organic waste from customers and will wind down operations until early next month.

Bradley says the extent of damage and necessary repairs will determine how long production will be halted. Bradley say the damage has occurred since Big Ox began operations in September 2016.

Earlier this month Nebraska officials cited Big Ox for failing to control emissions. Inspectors had noticed gas leaking from a damaged anaerobic digester structure. The plant has been under scrutiny since neighbors complained about the plant’s odor.

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