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Public help sought in tracking monarch butterfly habitat

commons.wikimedia.org
commons.wikimedia.org

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — The Nebraska Game and Parks Commission is seeking the public’s help in tracking new and existing habitat for monarch butterflies.

The commission wants people who plant milkweed to record the information on Monarch Tracker, which is available on the Game and Parks website. That will help the department identify areas where milkweed and other pollinator-friendly flora can be planted, restored or enhanced in the next several years.

Monarch populations are declining, and experts say that’s mostly because of loss of milkweed and habitat. The monarch’s caterpillar stage feeds only on milkweed plants. As adults, they feed on a variety of flowering plants.

Go online at OutdoorNebraska.gov/MilkweedTracker for information about the Milkweed Tracker, to enter planted habitat or to find information about what to plant.

Former Omaha teacher pleads guilty in student sex case

Brian Robeson
Brian Robeson

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A former Omaha teacher accused of having a sexual relationship with a former student of his is scheduled to be sentenced next month for sex assault.

Online court records say 36-year-old Brian Robeson made a deal with prosecutors and pleaded guilty to sexual assault of a minor. Prosecutors had lowered the charge and dropped another in exchange for Robeson’s plea. His sentencing is set for Oct. 11.

Robeson was a math teacher at Davis Middle School. Authorities say the relationship began when the girl was 13.

Man killed tractor accident, Gage County authorities say

gage-county-sheriffBEATRICE, Neb. (AP) — Authorities in Gage County say a man has been killed in a tractor accident.

Officers and medics were dispatched around 7:45 p.m. Thursday to the scene seven miles east-northeast of Beatrice. Authorities say the tractor had rolled over and pinned the man. He was pronounced at the scene.

The man’s name hasn’t been released.

Remains of WWII Marine returning for Chadron burial

soldierCHADRON, Neb. (AP) — Federal authorities say the remains of a U.S. Marine killed during a World War II battle in the Pacific are being returned to his Nebraska Panhandle hometown for burial.

The Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency said in a news release Thursday that the remains of Sgt. Fae Moore will be buried next week in Chadron.

The agency says Moore’s division encountered stiff Japanese resistance when it landed on the island of Betio in the Tarawa Atoll of the Gilbert Islands. The agency says Moore died on Nov. 20, 1943.

The remains of Moore and several other Marines were discovered on Betio in what was called the “Lost Cemetery” and were turned over to the agency in July 2015. The agency says scientists used DNA and dental records to identify Moore’s remains.

Program aims to help Nebraska inmates become professionals

prisonLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A new program is teaching Nebraska convicts how to become entrepreneurs and wage-earners upon their release from prison.

The Defy Ventures program currently trains about 1,600 inmates in California and New York.

Ken Stinson, chairman emeritus of Peter Kiewit Sons’ Inc., says charitable foundations will cover the $2.5 million cost of the program’s three-year trial run in Nebraska.

Nearly 80 Nebraska State Penitentiary inmates participated in the program Thursday. It was led by 40 volunteers, including business executives and charitable foundation representatives, a state senator and a former speaker of the Nebraska Legislature.

Defy Ventures founder and CEO Catherine Hoke says the program has kept 95 percent of its graduates out of prison for at least three years after their release. About 30 percent of convicts return to prison within the same period in Nebraska.

Nebraska coach cited for grabbing 10-year-old player, prosecutor says

footballOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Authorities say the coach of an Omaha youth football team was ticketed after the coach grabbed a 10-year-old player from a team that had just overwhelmed the coach’s team.

Boyd Waldmann was cited for assault. Prosecutor Matt Kuhse says Waldmann also might be cited for disorderly conduct. Waldmann didn’t immediately return a call Friday from The Associated Press. Court records don’t list an attorney for him.

Witnesses told officers the teams were exchanging high-fives after the lopsided flag football game Saturday when Waldmann grabbed an opposing player by the shirt and lifted him nearly off his feet. Waldmann later said he was angry because the boy slapped his hand too hard.

A league official says the coach has been banned from league events.

Gender bias award to woman against MUD upheld

ne-supreme-courtLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — The Nebraska Supreme Court has upheld the jury award of more than $100,000 to a woman who successfully argued that Omaha’s Metropolitan Utilities District discriminated against her.

The opinion Friday came in the case of Kristina Hartley, who successfully sued the gas and water utility for gender discrimination. The jury last year agreed with Hartley that MUD wrongly passed her over for promotion to give the job to a less-qualified man.

MUD appealed, arguing that the evidence was insufficient to support the jury’s verdict and that the trial court should have allowed post-promotional performance evaluations of Hartley. It also said attorney fees of nearly $57,000 awarded to Hartley were excessive.

But the state’s high court dismissed those arguments Friday, adding that Hartley presented lots of evidence the jury found compelling.

Nebraska prisons head optimistic despite persistent crowding

Scott Frakes
Scott Frakes

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska’s corrections director says he’s optimistic the state prisons will become less crowded even though a series of reforms haven’t reduced the inmate population as expected.

Scott Frakes told a legislative committee Friday that the prison system has custody of 5,306 inmates, a decrease of 77 since he became director in February 2015.

Nebraska’s prison population grew 20 percent between fiscal year 2003 and 2013, prompting lawmakers to approve an overhaul package that expanded treatment programs.

Frakes acknowledges the current inmate population fails to meet projections made by the Council of State Governments Justice Center, which predicted it would be closer to 4,800 by now.

Frakes says the department has taken longer than expected to implement some changes, but he believes the department will meet its goal by 2020.

Omaha Police: Teen tossed baby from window after giving birth

omaha-policeOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Omaha police investigating the death of an infant say the baby girl was tossed from a second-story apartment window immediately after her teen mother gave birth to her.

Police say they were called to the eastern Omaha apartment shortly after 4 a.m. Friday, where they found a woman administering CPR to the infant. The baby and 16-year-old were taken to a hospital, where the baby was pronounced dead.

Investigators say the teen was alone in her bedroom when she went into labor and gave birth to the premature baby. Police say she then threw the infant out the window and told her mother.

The woman ran outside, found the baby in the grass and called 911.

Police say autopsy results are expected in several days, and that charges are pending.

Grants available in Nebraska to promote fishing by Hispanics

Nebraska_game_and_parksLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — The Nebraska Game and Parks Commission is seeking grant proposals from Nebraska nonprofit organizations to promote fishing by Hispanics.

The Recreational Boating and Fishing Foundation’s Vamos A Pescar program aims to educate Hispanic families about fishing through programs, classes and activities in 2017.

Programs to be considered introduce fishing to youths and families, provide hands-on skills development, teach and reinforce water and boat safety and provide conservation and aquatic stewardship activities.

Organizations must contact Larry Pape at Nebraska Game and Parks by Wednesday. Grant submissions are due to Game and Parks by Oct. 31. Email larry.pape@nebraska.gov or call 402-471-5447.

Detailed grant information and applications are available on line at OutdoorNebraska.org/VamosAPescar.

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