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Spalding man claims prize in Lucky for Life lottery game

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) – A central Nebraska man has claimed his Lucky for Life lottery prize.

The Nebraska Lottery says Troy Kleffner took the lump sum of $390,000 on Tuesday instead of the annuity that would have paid him $25,000 a year for life. He bought the ticket at Peoples Service of Spalding in the Greeley County community of Spalding, where he lives. The ticket matched the numbers on five white balls in Monday’s drawing but didn’t match the Lucky Ball number. If it had, the ticket would have been worth $1,000 a day for life.

Kleffner says he’s planning on using some of the prize money for his kids’ college fund.

NP resident finds old explosive device in coffee can

The Nebraska State Patrol (NSP) is reminding anyone who may find a suspected explosive device to immediately report it to authorities.

On Wednesday, troopers with the Nebraska State Patrol Bomb Squad were called-in to examine a suspected explosive found inside an antique coffee jar. The jar was found by a citizen in a box purchased at an auction.

Upon finding the suspicious device, the citizen notified the North Platte Police Department, who brought it to the attention of the NSP Bomb Squad. A NSP Hazardous Device Technician examined the jar with x-ray technology and determined that the jar contained an old M-series explosive. The device has been safely stored and will be disposed of at a later date.

“Anyone who comes across something they suspect could be an explosive device should stop immediately and call the authorities,” said Lt. Dain Hicks, Commander of the NSP Bomb Squad. “Any explosive device can be extremely dangerous and should be handled by trained experts.”

The NSP Bomb Squad is available to assist law enforcement agencies throughout the state in any situation such as this.

Food benefits offered to low-income Nebraska flood victims

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Low-income Nebraskans recovering from this month’s massive flooding could now be eligible for federal food benefits.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture announced Thursday that it has approved “Disaster SNAP” benefits for qualified residents of the state. SNAP refers to the federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, commonly known as food stamps.

The USDA says households that may not qualify for regular SNAP benefits could qualify for Disaster SNAP if they have eligible disaster-related expenses and meet disaster income limits.

The USDA is also granting school lunch and breakfast meal flexibility to schools through April 26.

Nebraska sets new requirements for civics lessons in schools 

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) – Nebraska has set new requirements for teaching American civics in schools.

Gov. Pete Ricketts signed the measure into law on Wednesday after it won approval from state lawmakers.

The law by Sen. Julie Slama, of Peru, gives school districts three options to teach students. Schools would only have to choose one option.

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.

Nebraska to increase notices for delinquent property taxes 

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) – Landowners whose property taxes are delinquent will get additional notifications that they need to pay under a new Nebraska state law.

The governor’s office said Thursday that Gov. Pete Ricketts has signed it into law.

The measure was introduced following a Nebraska Supreme Court case involving an elderly widow who lost her family’s longtime farm because of unpaid taxes.

An investment company acquired the $1.1 million property after paying $50,000 in back taxes and interest, even though the widow’s doctor testified she was in cognitive decline. Family members say she had the money to pay the taxes but wasn’t aware she owed it.

Lawmakers say they’ve heard from constituents who fell into similar situations in different parts of the state.

Warren Buffett’s real estate company now largest in nation

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The real estate firm owned by Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway conglomerate is now the nation’s largest.

HomeServices of America said Wednesday that it ranked first last year after its associates helped close 346,629 residential real estate transactions. The ranking comes from the Real Trends 500 industry trade report.

HomeServices’ Executive Chairman Ron Peltier says being the biggest company in the market helps it lower costs by developing tools and software centrally for its real estate professionals to use.

The Minneapolis-based company has grown both by attracting more agents and by acquiring other firms. The company includes Berkshire Hathaway Home Services, Real Living Real Estate and a number of other brands.

Home Services is part of Berkshire Hathaway, which is based in Omaha, Neb. Berkshire owns more than 90 businesses.

Bill to allow SNAP for certain convicted drug users stalls

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A bill that would have allowed some convicted drug users to qualify for federal food assistance has stalled in the Nebraska Legislature.

Supporters fell short Wednesday of the support needed to overcome a legislative filibuster. The vote was 28-16, but 33 “yes” votes were needed.

The bill by state Sen. Megan Hunt, of Omaha, would have allowed the benefit for people convicted of felony drug possession or drug use if they’ve completed their sentences or are still serving on parole, probation or post-release supervision.

Potential recipients would remain ineligible if they have three or more felony drug use convictions or were convicted of felony drug selling or distribution.

Supporters say allowing Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits would help rehabilitate offenders. Opponents say drug users shouldn’t get government handouts.

EPA: No toxic releases at Superfund sites in flooded Midwest

MEAD, Neb. (AP) — Flooding in the Midwest temporarily cut off a Superfund site in Nebraska that stores radioactive waste and explosives, inundated another one storing toxic chemical waste in Missouri, and limited access to others, federal regulators said Wednesday.

The Environmental Protection Agency reported no releases of hazardous contaminants at any of eight toxic waste sites in flooded parts of Missouri, Nebraska and Iowa. It has not issued any public health advisories or alerts, nor has it tested any of the soil and water at those sites.

The EPA identified the Nebraska Ordnance Plant in Mead, Nebraska, and the Conservation Chemical Corporation site in Kansas City, Missouri, as heavily flooded Superfund sites that required the agency to take immediate action to prevent the spread of contaminated groundwater.

Two Iowa sites — Railroad Avenue Groundwater Contamination Site that is part of Des Moines Water Treatment Plant, and the Mid-America Tanning Company site near Sergeant Bluff — had some minor flooding on the property but did not require the agency to immediately do anything. It plans to reassess once the flood waters recede.

The remaining four toxic waste sites were not affected by floodwaters, but road closures limited access, the agency said.

Larry Poell, 62, who lives on top of the Superfund site in Mead, said federal officials have always maintained that the contaminated plumes are stable, but he wonders if the floodwater caused them to shift.

“I’m concerned about it. I think everybody’s concerned about it,” he said in an interview inside a local flood relief shelter in Ashland, Nebraska.

Poell said officials test the water near his home quarterly and hold community meetings twice a year. He said the meetings are usually sparsely attended.

The Mead site operated as a munitions plant from 1942 to 1956 and its disposal of radioactive waste and other chemicals led to groundwater contamination.

Maureen Hunt, 50, who farms on land less than a mile from the Nebraska Ordnance Plant, said all of the surrounding roads were inaccessible at the flood’s peak. On Wednesday, many surrounding cornfields still held large ponds of floodwater.

“Imagine water everywhere you look,” she said between cleanup chores. “I’ve never in my life seen anything like it.”

To contain the underground plume from expanding at sites where the groundwater is contaminated, the EPA normally pumps up the contaminated water, treats it to clean up contaminants and then discharges the water.

But because the Mead area was already heavily flooded, the Nebraska Ordnance Plant temporarily shut down the pumps and treatment plant on March 13 for a couple of days rather than exacerbate the situation by discharging treated water, EPA said.

At the Conservation Chemical Company site, a 6-acre area in Kansas City, Missouri, chemical storage and disposal operations from the 1960s to the 1980s led to contamination of groundwater and soils. During the latest flood, the site owner increased the pumping rate to suck up more water and increase pressure to keep its underground plume of contaminated water from expanding, the EPA said.

The remaining sites that the EPA says are not currently affected by floodwaters, but where road closures are limiting field work, are the former landfill called Lawrence Todz Farm in Camanche, Iowa, the Iowa-Nebraska Light & Power Co. site in Norfolk, Nebraska; a site identified only as Old Highway 275 and 288th Street in the town of Valley in Nebraska; and the closed St. Joseph City Landfill, north of Kansas City, Missouri.

Valerie Wilder, the Superfund section chief for the Missouri Department of Natural Resources, said in an email that the EPA contacted the state agency’s project manager for the Conservation Chemical Company site to keep her informed of its flooding status, but that there has been no EPA request for a state response at this time.

Aerial photos taken Friday of Missouri’s closed St. Joseph landfill, which is not a Superfund site, showed that roughly half of the closed landfill had water on top of asphalt at that time. EPA said it is no longer flooded.

At many Superfund sites, contaminated soils are capped with additional soil layers or other materials as a temporary measure until cleanups are finished. Floods can wash away those covers, releasing toxic pollution into the waters. That happened at the San Jacinto River Waste Pits near Houston when floodwaters from Hurricane Harvey damaged a concrete cap meant to contain pollutants, releasing dioxins into the river.

“That’s a risk for cleanup crews and families that have returned to their homes, as well as fish, wildlife and waterways down the road,” said Kara Cook-Schultz, toxics director for the U.S. Public Interest Research Group.

It’s important for EPA to inform first responders, cleanup workers and residents about the types of contaminants at each flooded Superfund site and precautions they should take to limit exposure, Cook-Schultz said.

“In the long term, we’d like to see more money going to Superfund sites,” she said. “A lot of them have been around 40 or 50 years and have not been cleaned up. We’d like to see them completely remediated so we don’t have to worry that they will be flooded and the floodwaters contaminated.”

More rainbow trout stockings scheduled for March 30

Seven more lakes and ponds are scheduled to be stocked with rainbow trout March 30, according to the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.

The Rock Creek State Fish Hatchery will stock 10-inch trout in the following locations, with quantities and approximate times (give or take 30 minutes): Oxford City Lake, 150, 11 a.m.; Plum Creek Park Pond, Lexington, 750, noon; and Lake Helen, Gothenburg, 2,000, 12:45 p.m.

The Calamus State Fish Hatchery stocking schedule, with deliveries from separate trucks, is: Neligh Park Pond, West Point, 900, 11:30 a.m.; and Holmes Lake, Lincoln, 4,000, 11:30 a.m.

The Grove Trout Rearing Station, which has not been operational since recent flooding, will deliver trout from Calamus as follows: TaHaZouka Park Lake, Norfolk, 1,500, 10 a.m.; and Pawnee Park West Lake, Columbus, 1,500, 11:15 a.m.

Scheduled trout stockings across Nebraska may be delayed because of inclement weather and widespread flooding, which impacted roads and hatcheries. An updated scheduled will be provided when conditions improve. Visit outdoornebraska.gov/fishstockingreports for more information.

Scientists to deploy drones in thunderstorm study

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Drones will be among the tools scientists and students will use later this year and next to study supercell thunderstorms that can spawn tornadoes in Nebraska and other Plains states.

The study is scheduled to begin field work May 15 and cover the Great Plains, from North Dakota south to Texas, and Iowa west to Wyoming and Colorado.

More than 50 scientists and students will use four drones, a manned aircraft, eight trucks equipped with meteorological instruments, several mobile radar systems, and sophisticated weather balloons to collect data on supercell thunderstorms. Participants hope the data gathered will improve the detection of tornadoes and reduce the number of false-alarm warnings.

The four universities involved: University of Nebraska-Lincoln, University of Colorado, University of Oklahoma and Texas Tech University.

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