OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The Omaha Public Schools board has voted to put a nearly $410 million bond issue that would build five new schools on the May ballot.
The board voted unanimously Monday night to approve the project list and price tag for a bond referendum.
The $409.9 million bond proposal would be used to construct 1,500-student high schools at south-central and far northwest Omaha. It would also build two 600-student elementary schools, at eastern Omaha and in Bellevue, and a 1,000-student middle school in south-central Omaha.
The board will still have to draft and approve official ballot language to place the bond measure on the May 15 ballot. The deadline to submit that ballot language is March 1.
MINDEN, Neb. (AP) — Growing financial pressure has caused officials to shut down a nursing home and assisted living facility in south-central Nebraska.
Kearney County Health Services will close its Hinterlong Living assisted living and Countryside Living nursing home facilities at the end of April. The move will displace 32 people and affect about 50 employees.
The facilities have been struggling financially because their services aren’t covered by Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement policies, officials said. Declining resident occupancy and increasing contract labor costs also contributed to the facilities’ operating losses last year.
“From an operations perspective we run in the red on those two departments substantially to the point where in the last five years they’ve been continually, gradually worse losses,” said KCHS CEO Luke Poore.
The KCHS Board of Trustees voted to close the facilities last month after being alerted by auditors in August that they needed to review the facilities’ long-term viability.
Bethany Home is another Minden nursing home facility that is helping find housing options for displaced residents.
“Luke called and said, ‘What beds do you have available?’ We told him how many beds we had, and so we’ve been working closely with the hospital as far as transferring residents,” said Bob Tank, Bethany Home’s administrator. “We’ll be able to take most of them; probably 95 percent of the residents that were over there we’ll be able to take by the end of April.”
The church-affiliated private nonprofit has also been working with KCHS employees looking to remain local. The nursing home has about a dozen positions to fill.
KCHS also operates a hospital and medical clinic, which will remain open.
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Officials have rescued two dogs that were inside a vehicle that crashed and killed the driver.
The Douglas County Sheriff’s Office says its deputies responded Sunday morning to a crash believed to have happened the night before near the Irvington community just north of Omaha. Investigators say 29-year-old Adam Bortle, of Omaha, died when his Jeep went out of control, went airborne and came to rest on its roof in a ditch. Officials say Bortle was either thrown or crawled from the vehicle, and died at the scene.
Rescue workers removed a Rottweiler that was trapped in the car, but uninjured. A mixed-breed dog that had also been in the Jeep was found nearby with an injured leg by a neighbor. The Nebraska Humane Society has taken in both dogs.
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Gov. Pete Ricketts has revoked an honorary admiralship from a University of Nebraska-Lincoln associate professor and lecturer who were involved in a protest against a conservative student group.
The Republican governor withdrew the “Nebraska Navy” admiralships for Amanda Gailey and Courtney Lawton on Jan. 31, less than a month after granting them at the request of one of their allies.
Lawton, a university lecturer, was told her contract wouldn’t be renewed after she was filmed protesting a campus recruiting event for Turning Point USA, a conservative group that maintains a public “watchlist” of professors that it alleges are biased.
In the Aug. 25 video, Lawton referred to second-year student Kaitlyn Mullen as a “neo-fascist” and accused her of advocating for the destruction of public schools and universities. Mullen, who was trying to recruit students to the group’s local chapter, began to cry, and campus police eventually took her home.
An accompanying photo of the incident shows Lawton making an obscene hand gesture while holding a sign that said, “Just say NO! to Neo-Fascism.” Lawton was fired in November. Gailey, an associate English professor, was photographed with a sign that said, “Turning Point: Please put me on your watchlist.”
Admiralships to the Nebraska Navy are a lighthearted award often granted to people who are retiring, changing jobs, or have reached a milestone in their lives.
The honor is a joking reference to the fact that Nebraska is the nation’s only triply landlocked state and has no navy or seas to defend. Admiralships are granted at the governor’s discretion and can only be given when the nominee or nominator is a Nebraska resident.
Ricketts spokesman Taylor Gage said Lawton and Gailey were disqualified because of the recent controversy and Lawton’s behavior. In a letter to Jay Grabow, an Omaha man who nominated Gailey and Lawton, Ricketts said the admiralships are issued as a courtesy for special occasions and that the women received them due to a “clerical error.”
In his nomination letters, Grabow said Gailey and Lawton both deserve the honor because of their advocacy for free speech.
Gage said the governor’s office routinely fulfills requests for admiralships for residents of all political stripes, including those made by state senators from both parties.
“Courtney Lawton’s behavior does not embody ‘Nebraska values,’ which the original request represented,” he said.
The awards were rescinded one day after a legislative hearing on a campus free speech bill that was inspired by the university incident. Gailey and Grabow testified against the measure, which would require Nebraska’s universities and colleges to develop campus free-speech guidelines.
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — An eastern Nebraska chiropractor is running for an open seat in the state Legislature.
Dr. Ben Hansen of Blair announced his candidacy Tuesday to represent Legislative District 16, which includes Burt, Cuming and Washington counties.
Hansen is looking to replace state Sen. Lydia Brasch of Bancroft, who is ineligible to run again this year because of term limits.
Hansen, a registered Republican, owns Hansen Chiropractic Wellness Center in Blair, Blair Rent-It Center and Heritage Barnwood Company. He was appointed to the Blair city council in 2015 and elected the following year.
Hansen and his wife, Jill, were married in 2002 and have a 15-year-old daughter.
Former University of Nebraska Regent and Democratic gubernatorial candidate Chuck Hassebrook is also running for the seat.
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A man charged in an overnight New Year’s Day crash that killed an Omaha woman has been ordered to stand trial.
A judge on Monday bound 19-year-old Vismar Carmona-Martinez’s case over to district court.
Prosecutors say Carmona-Martinez’s car rear-ended another car around 12:30 a.m. Jan 1. The driver of the car he hit, 67-year-old Ann Smock, died at an Omaha hospital.
Police say Carmona-Martinez’s blood alcohol content was .240 — three times the legal limit to drive. Prosecutors also say Carmona-Martinez is in the country illegally.
He faces up to 20 years in prison if he’s convicted.
PAPILLION, Neb. (AP) — A 19-year-old former Nebraska high school football standout has been sentenced to up to 40 years in prison for his role in a sex trafficking case.
DeArch Stubblefield was sentenced Monday to 20 to 40 years after pleading guilty in October to attempted human trafficking, aiding and abetting child sexual assault and child pornography possession.
Prosecutors say he arranged for a man to have sex with a 15-year-old girl and recorded the encounter for money, which he and the girl shared.
Stubblefield, who had been a defensive back on the 2016 state champion Bellevue West team, had sought probation, as he had no criminal record.
The man who had sex with the girl, 41-year-old Jason Gibson, was sentenced last year to six months in jail, followed by five years’ probation.
Troopers with the Nebraska State Patrol (NSP) have arrested one man and seized thousands of vape pen cartridges of hash oil and a firearm at a rest area on Interstate 80.
The seizure occurred Friday, February 2, at the eastbound rest area on I-80 near Brady. A trooper was engaging in conversation with a man at the rest area when he became suspicious of criminal activity. The driver then granted consent to search his vehicle, a 2018 Nissan Rogue.
During the search, the trooper discovered four large boxes containing hash oil vape pen cartridges. In total, NSP found 9,550 hash oil cartridges in the vehicle with an estimated street value of $238,000. The search also revealed a loaded, concealed handgun.
The driver, David Poarch, 58, of Breaux Bridge, Louisiana, was arrested on multiple charges, including possession with intent to deliver, no drug tax stamp, possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, possession of a firearm during a felony drug violation, and carrying a concealed weapon. Poarch was lodged in the Lincoln County Jail.
A North Platte man is facing charges following a pursuit on Monday.
On February 5, 2018, around 8:50 p.m., Deputies were asked to assist with a pursuit involving a stolen car. The North Platte Police Department was chasing a stolen car north of North Platte, NE. As Deputies responded to the area the pursuit was called off as speeds reached in excess of 95 miles per hour. The vehicle was last seen in the area of Suburban Road and U.S. Highway 83.
While searching for the vehicle Deputies received a call of a rollover accident on North Sandhills Road. They responded and found a lone male driver drinking an alcoholic beverage in the vehicle. The vehicle was the same stolen car from the North Platte Police Pursuit. The driver was injured and transported to Great Plains Health.
Deputies identified the driver as 48-year-old Robert Glen Cheever of North Platte, NE. Mr. Cheever was left at the hospital because of his injuries. Charges are pending and the investigation is ongoing.
The Buffalo County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the circumstances surrounding a two-vehicle fatal crash west of Kearney on Highway 30 between Eagle Road and Sartoria Road. The crash occurred at approximately 4:10 PM on Monday, February 5, 2018. The crash resulted in the death of two adult individuals and injury to 2 other adults.
According to a preliminary investigation, an eastbound 1998 Toyota 4 Runner lost control and crossed into the westbound driving lane where it collided with a westbound 2014 Kia Soul SUV. The driver of Kia died at the scene. The passenger in the Kia later died at the hospital. The two occupants of the Toyota were transported to CHI GSH with injuries. Weather and roadway conditions may be a contributing factor in this crash.
Members of the Buffalo County Fatality Accident Investigation Team, Kearney Police Department, Kearney Volunteer Fire Department, Buffalo County Attorney’s Office, Air Care and Paramedics of the CHI Good Samaritan Health Systems assisted at the scene. A portion of Highway 30 between Eagle Road and Sartoria Road was closed for a number of hours during the investigation.
Next of Kin have been notified. The Buffalo County Attorney has ordered autopsies. The investigation is continuing. **********************************************************************************************************************************************************
UPDATED February 6, 2018
The individuals involved in the crash have been identified as follows: