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Nebraska bill targeting wind-energy projects stalls

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LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A bill that would have made it harder to install new wind-energy farms in Nebraska has died in the Legislature.

Lawmakers voted 23-8 Wednesday in favor of the bill, two votes shy of the simple majority needed to advance it.

The bill would have barred Nebraska’s public power organizations from using eminent domain to install transmission lines for use by privately developed wind-energy farms. Opponents say it would have stifled wind energy development in Nebraska.

The bill was introduced by state Sen. Tom Brewer, of Gordon, whose rural district includes a vast swath of north-central and western Nebraska.

Many of Brewer’s constituents are fighting a proposed transmission line that would cut through their area. They also fervently oppose wind turbines in the Sandhills, a scenic region of grass-covered sand dunes.

1 person killed, 1 injured in northwest Omaha shooting

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Authorities say a woman was killed and a man wounded in a shooting at a northwest Omaha home.

Deputies were dispatched to the house a little before 5 p.m. Tuesday after a man called 911, reported a shooting and hung up. Capt. Wayne Hudson of the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office says a deputy got to the home within three minutes and found the woman’s body and the wounded man. The man was taken to a hospital.

Hudson didn’t provide the two people’s names or other details about the shooting’s circumstances. He did say, however, that the shooting presents no danger to the public.

Nebraska man stands trial in killing of Iraq War veteran

Michael Benson

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — An Omaha trial has begun for a man accused in the road-rage killing of an Iraq War veteran.

Michael Benson, 26, is charged with second-degree murder in the shooting death of James Womack, 32, The Omaha World-Herald reported. The shooting occurred at a busy Omaha intersection in 2017.

Dashcam video from another vehicle shows that the altercation began after Womack got out of his semitrailer and yelled at Benson, pounded on the passenger-side window of Benson’s truck and started to walk back to his semitrailer.

Witnesses testified in a Douglas County courtroom Tuesday that they heard gunshots and then saw Womack fall to the ground. Womack was taken to a local hospital where he later died.

Benson’s attorney, Beau Finley, said there’s no proof his client fired the shots or was even in the truck involved in the dispute. After the shooting, Benson told police that his truck had been stolen days before the shooting.

Prosecutors Ryan Lindberg and Amy Jacobsen said a GPS tracking device on Benson’s vehicle and surveillance video show he was driving the vehicle the day of the shooting. They said they’re confident the evidence will lead to a conviction.

Benson was originally charged with being an accessory to a felony in the shooting before prosecutors increased the charge to second-degree murder in March 2018.

Womack was in the Army and served three tours in Iraq before he moved to Omaha with his wife to raise their three children.

Missouri man sentenced in Nebraska for woman’s I-80 death

Victor Genetti

AURORA, Neb. (AP) — A Missouri man has been jailed and put on probation for fatally striking a woman with his semitrailer as she was walking to a tow truck along Interstate 80 in central Nebraska.

Hamilton County Court records say 30-year-old Victor Genetti, of Sugar Creek, Missouri, was sentenced Tuesday in Aurora to 32 days in jail with credit for one day already served, fined $1,000, put on probation for two years and ordered to perform 100 hours of community service over the next year.

He’d pleaded no contest to misdemeanor vehicular homicide.

Authorities say the woman was a passenger in a vehicle that had broken down March 1 last year near Giltner in Hamilton County. She’s been identified as 26-year-old India Marie Simpson, who lived in Waxhaw, North Carolina.

Woman’s sentencing set for exposing unborn child to meth

Amanda Pourier

GERING, Neb. (AP) — A 34-year-old Scottsbluff woman is scheduled to be sentenced April 24 for exposing her unborn child to methamphetamine.

Scotts Bluff County Court records say Amanda Pourier pleaded no contest Monday to the misdemeanor.

The records say an officer was dispatched to Regional West Medical Center on Dec. 18 because a woman who’d just given birth was making suicidal comments. The child died shortly after being delivered after only 14 weeks of gestation.

The officer says Pourier reported that she’d used meth the day before giving birth. The officer also says Pourier seemed to be under the influence of meth during the hospital interview.

Authorities release name of Interstate 80 crash victim

GREENWOOD, Neb. (AP) — Authorities have released the name of a Lincoln resident who was killed when his car crashed on Interstate 80 in eastern Nebraska.

The Nebraska State Patrol identified him as 24-year-old Travis Egan.

The patrol says Egan was driving west Monday morning when his car crossed the median near the Greenwood exit and rolled. He was thrown from the car and struck by an eastbound sport utility vehicle.

Egan was pronounced dead at the scene. The patrol says the SUV driver wasn’t injured.

An 11-mile (17.7-kilometer) stretch of the interstate was closed for about four hours from the Waverly exit east to the Greenwood exit.

Man sentenced in Nebraska for hauling $1.5M worth of pot

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — One of two people accused of hauling more than a quarter ton of marijuana through eastern Nebraska on Interstate 80 has been imprisoned.

Federal prosecutors say 39-year-old Felice Michael Giorgetti, of Huntington Beach, California, was sentenced Tuesday to 37 months. Giorgetti had pleaded guilty to possession for sale. The other person charged, Robert Rahon, also pleaded guilty and is awaiting sentencing in April.

The two were in a truck headed east on Jan. 10 last year when a trooper pulled them over just east of the Beaver Crossing interchange for traffic and vehicle violations. One of its drug dogs alerted troopers to the presence of a controlled substance. The troopers say they found just over 526 pounds of marijuana in the truck.

The pot’s estimated street value: $1.5 million.

Driver gets jail, probation for motorcyclist’s crash death

COLUMBUS, Neb. (AP) – A 19-year-old driver has been given jail time and probation for the Platte County crash death of a motorcyclist.

Court records say Daisy Gonzalez, of Madison, was sentenced Tuesday to a year of probation. She also must serve five days in jail starting Aug. 2 and 15 more days starting Feb. 1 next year unless waived by a judge.

She’d pleaded no contest to misdemeanor vehicular homicide. Prosecutors dropped a related charge in return for her plea.

The records say the collision occurred Aug. 2 at the intersection of Nebraska Highway 91 and 490th Street. The records say her minivan collided with the motorcycle driven by 22-year-old Joshua Gasper, of Columbus. He died days later of his injuries.

Nebraska could raise registration fees on electric vehicles

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Motorists who register an electric car in Nebraska could end up paying higher fees under a bill presented to a legislative committee Tuesday as a way to compensate for lost gas tax revenue.

Supporters said the measure would help the state and local governments preserve Nebraska’s roads as electric vehicles grow increasingly popular.

The bill would gradually raise the registration fee for alternative-fuel vehicles from the current $75 to $125 by 2024. The extra revenue would go into the state Highway Trust Fund, which is used to maintain state, city and county roads.

The increase “is a fair way for everyone to fund the Department of Transportation and the roads we all drive on,” said Sen. Bruce Bostelman, of Brainard, who sponsored the bill. “As long as we continue to drive on our roads, we must continue to pay for the maintenance and upkeep of those roads going forward.”

Bostelman said the proposed increase was based on the average $150 in gas taxes that gas-vehicle drivers pay in Nebraska each year.

He said the increase would bring Nebraska into alignment with the rates many states already charge. Bostelman said 19 states, including Nebraska, charge an annual fee for alternative-fuel vehicles, and most of those charge between $100 and $150.

The bill wouldn’t apply to hybrid vehicles or those that run on diesel or compressed natural gas.

Nebraska will register an estimated 1,250 alternative fuel vehicles in 2020 and another 1,500 by 2021, according to the state Department of Motor Vehicles. The number of registered alternative fuel vehicles in Nebraska surged last year, from 405 in 2017 to 772 in 2018.

“Should alternative fuel vehicle use increase, the tax revenue generated from the motor vehicle fuel tax will decrease,” Bostelman said.

Nebraska has more than 100,000 miles of roads and 20,000 bridges, mostly owned by counties and cities. Roughly 10,000 miles of road and 3,500 bridges belong to the state.

Michael O’Hara, a lobbyist for the Sierra Club’s Nebraska chapter, said his group supports the increase “and if anything, it’s too low.”

Loy Todd, president of the Nebraska New Car and Truck Dealers Association, said the bill was an important way to capture state revenue as consumers gradually shift to electric vehicles.

“If we want good roads in the state, we’ve got to pay for them. No question about it,” he said.

No one testified against the bill. Members of the Transportation and Telecommunications Committee took no immediate action.

Bill to boost civics lessons in Nebraska schools advances

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska lawmakers have advanced a bill intended to boost civics lessons in classrooms.

The measure won first-round approval in the Legislature Tuesday on a 42-3 vote.

The bill by state Sen. Julie Slama, of Peru, gives school districts three options to teach students. One is to administer the naturalization test used by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services once before they complete eighth grade and again before they complete 12th grade.

Another option would require students to attend or participate in a government meeting and complete a project about what they learned.

The third option would require students to complete a project or paper and a class presentation on holidays such as Veterans Day, Constitution Day or Native American Heritage Day.

Schools would only have to choose one option.

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