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Nebraska retailers told to destroy alcohol touched by flood

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska retailers who were hoping to salvage alcohol that was touched by floodwaters are out of luck.

The Nebraska Liquor Control Commission announced Monday that stores must destroy any alcohol in containers that came into physical contact with floodwater. Stores are forbidden from selling such products and can only claim losses through their insurance carrier.

The commission says it made the announcement after receiving numerous inquiries from retailers about what to do with their alcohol.

Wholesalers are also barred from picking up the product or reimbursing stores for their loss.

Senators vote to require training for resource officers

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Police officers working in Nebraska schools would have to undergo at least 20 hours of special training under a bill advanced by lawmakers.

Lawmakers gave first-round approval Monday to a measure that would require coursework on student rights, understanding special needs students, teenage brain development and other relevant issues.

Administrators would need to undergo similar training in schools with a school resource officer.

The bill would also prohibit officers from becoming involved in school disciplinary matters.

Sen. Patty Pansing Brooks, of Lincoln, says she introduced the bill out of concern that officers in some school had involved themselves in disciplinary matters.

The bill advanced 38-0 through the first of three required votes.

Nuke plant no longer reporting low-level flood situation

BROWNVILLE, Neb. (AP) — Officials say the swollen Missouri River’s water level has dropped far enough that a Nebraska nuclear power plant no longer is reporting a low-level flood situation.

The Nebraska Public Power District declared a “notification of unusual event” March 15 at its Cooper Nuclear Station near Brownville, about 59 miles (95.5 kilometers) south of Omaha. The notification is the lowest and least serious of four emergency classifications established by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission for nuclear power plants. The district says it means simply that: Conditions are not ordinary.

The district’s Mark Becker said Monday that the plant never stopped generating power, because the rising river water stopped 4 inches (10 centimeters) short of the level at which the reactor had to be shut down as a safety precaution.

The river’s rapid rise was fueled by snowmelt and storm runoff from a late-winter weather system.

Nebraska could raise legal age for e-cigarettes to 21

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — An apparent surge in vaping among Nebraska teenagers is prompting a new push from lawmakers to raise the state’s age limit on e-cigarettes from 18 to 21 and ban their use in bars, restaurants and workplaces.

School officials say the crackdown would help them fight the growing use of e-cigarettes among students, who can easily hide them.

“It’s a problem for every school,” said Lisa Albers, a Grand Island Public Schools board member who is pushing for the bill. “Nobody really knew about this (until recently). It was flying under the radar.”

Albers said she’s concerned about the high concentrations of nicotine in some solutions used in e-cigarettes, as well as the fruity flavors that appeal to young people. The vaping industry touts the product as a safer alternative to cigarettes, although health advocates say they’re still harmful and can lead to lifelong addictions.

E-cigarettes are battery-powered devices that turn liquid often containing nicotine into an inhalable vapor. They’re generally considered a less dangerous alternative to regular cigarettes, but health officials have warned nicotine is harmful to developing brains. U.S. Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Scott Gottlieb announced new policies in November to limit sales of many flavored vaping products to brick-and-mortar outlets that have either age-restricted entry or areas that aren’t accessible to people younger than 18.

Albers said students have told her that classmates sneak e-cigarettes into schools and smoke them in bathrooms. The devices are small and are easily mistaken for computer flash drives. Grand Island school officials have even caught elementary school children with them, she said.

Administrators at Scottsbluff High School have seen a similar increase in vaping products this year, with at least 50 incidents in which a student was caught, said Assistant Principal Matt Huck.

“It just seems like it’s exploded this year,” Huck said.

Huck said the school confiscates vaping devices and imposes a three-day, in-school suspension for a student’s first offense. Those caught more than once can face longer suspensions. Huck said raising the age could help address the problem.

The bill’s sponsor, Sen. Dan Quick, a Democrat from Grand Island, said he has received support from senators of both parties in the ostensibly nonpartisan Legislature.

“It’s hit so fast, and not just in Nebraska,” he said. “You could have kids vaping in their homes or in secret, and the parents wouldn’t know it.”

Quick said he’ll likely have to lower the proposed age limit from 21 to 19 to overcome opposition in the Legislature’s General Affairs Committee, where the bill is sitting. But he said he will try to persuade lawmakers to raise it back to 21 when it’s debated in the full Legislature.

“I really want the best bill I can get that I can pass on the floor to get these nicotine products away from kids in school,” he said. “If I can’t get it to 21, I’ll vote for 19, because we have to have something.”

Last year, Grand Island Central Catholic High School restricted flash drives in part to make it harder for students to bring vaping devices to school. Students who want to use a flash drive must have it checked by school officials.

Principal Jordan Engle said school officials haven’t caught any student with a vaping device, but he has heard rumblings that they’re being used.

“You can call pretty much any school administrator in the state, and they’re going to tell you the same thing: that it’s widespread,” he said.

Advocates for vaping devices said they support restrictions to keep the product away from minors but argue that raising the age limit could drive more young people to use cigarettes, which would still be limited to people 18 or older. They also argue that vaping devices don’t emit the same odors or pose the same health risks as secondhand smoke in public places.

“Any bill that that sets a different age limit for tobacco products and vapor products is going to be bad for public health,” said Gregory Conley, president of the American Vaping Association. “It will incentivize teens who want to use nicotine to get their nicotine in a more hazardous form — smoking.”

DOJ: Trump campaign did not coordinate with Russia in 2016

Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Michael Vadon)

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Justice Department said Sunday that special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation did not find evidence that President Donald Trump’s campaign “conspired or coordinated” with Russia to influence the 2016 presidential election. Mueller also investigated whether Trump obstructed justice but did not come to a definitive answer.

In a four-page letter to Congress, Attorney General William Barr said Mueller’s report “does not exonerate” the president on obstruction and instead “sets out evidence on both sides of the question.”

Barr released his four-page summary of Mueller’s report Sunday afternoon. Mueller wrapped up his investigation on Friday with no new indictments, bringing to a close a probe that has shadowed Trump for nearly two years.

Democrats vowed to press on with their own investigations, while the White House claimed vindication.

“The findings of the Department of Justice are a total and complete exoneration of the President of the United States,” White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said.

In reality, Mueller’s investigation left open the question of whether Trump obstructed justice by firing FBI Director James Comey and drafting an incomplete explanation about his son’s meeting with a Russian lawyer during the campaign. That left it to the attorney general to decide. After consulting with DOJ officials, Barr said he and his deputy, Rod Rosenstein, determined the evidence “is not sufficient to establish that the president committed an obstruction of justice offense.”

Barr, nominated to his job by Trump last fall, said their decision was based on the evidence uncovered by Mueller and not based on whether a sitting president can be indicted.

Barr’s chief of staff called White House counsel Emmet Flood at 3 p.m. Sunday to brief him on the report to Congress.

Mueller’s investigation ensnared nearly three dozen people, senior Trump campaign operatives among them. The probe illuminated Russia’s assault on the American political system, painted the Trump campaign as eager to exploit the release of hacked Democratic emails to hurt Democrat Hillary Clinton and exposed lies by Trump aides aimed at covering up their Russia-related contacts.

Mueller submitted his report to Barr instead of directly to Congress and the public because, unlike independent counsels such as Ken Starr in the case of President Bill Clinton, his investigation operated under the close supervision of the Justice Department, which appointed him.

Mueller was assigned to the job in May 2017 by Rosenstein, who oversaw much of his work. Barr and Rosenstein analyzed Mueller’s report on Saturday, laboring to condense it into a summary letter of main conclusions.

Barr said that Mueller “thoroughly” investigated the question of whether the Trump campaign coordinated with Russia’s election interference, issuing more than 2,800 subpoenas, obtaining nearly 500 search warrants and interviewing 500 witnesses.

Experts warn Midwest flood risk may persist for months

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Even as floodwaters receded in hard-hit places in the Midwest, experts warned Saturday that with plenty of snow still left to melt in northern states, the relief may only be temporary.Rainfall and some snowmelt spurred flooding in recent weeks that’s blamed in three deaths so far, with two men in Nebraska missing for more than a week. Thousands were forced from their homes in Nebraska, Iowa, and Missouri, as water broke through or poured over levees in the region. The damage is estimated at $3 billion, and that figure is expected to rise.

As temperatures start to warm, snowmelt in the Dakotas and Minnesota will escalate, sending more water down the Missouri and Mississippi rivers and their tributaries.

Lt. Col. James Startzell, deputy commander of the Corps of Engineers’ Omaha, Nebraska, district, said even warmer temperatures are possible into next week. He urged people living near rivers to be watchful.

Bill Brinton, emergency management director for hard-hit Buchanan County, Missouri, which includes St. Joseph’s 76,000 residents, said his counties and surrounding ones have already been ravaged by flooding.

“There’s a sense from the National Weather Service that we should expect it to continue to happen into May,” Brinton said. “With our levee breaches in Atchison and Holt and Buchanan counties, it’s kind of scary really.”

A precautionary evacuation involving hundreds of homes in the St. Joseph area was lifted as the Missouri River began a swift decline after unofficially rising to a new all-time high, inches above the 1993 record. St. Joseph was largely spared, but Brinton said 250 homes were flooded in the southern part of Buchanan County. It wasn’t clear when residents would be able to get back.

When they do, officials say they need to be careful. Contaminants that escaped from flooded farm fields, industrial operations, and sewage plants are part of the murky water now saturating homes.

In Fremont County, Iowa, homes remain underwater, so it will be some time before residents can return, said county Supervisor Randy Hickey.

“We don’t want them in that water, anyway,” Hickey said.

Experts also warn that sharp objects — broken glass, pieces of metal, pointy sticks and rocks — could lurk in muddy debris. Downed or broken power lines also may pose electrocution hazards.

On Saturday, Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds said President Donald Trump granted her request for an expedited disaster declaration for 56 counties with flooding damage. The move makes assistance available to homeowners, renters, businesses, public entities, and some nonprofit organizations.

Another risk is posed by wildlife. Brinton said two people in Buchanan County were bitten by snakes after returning home following flooding in 2011.

The Missouri River had yet to crest further downstream in Missouri, but the flooding impact in those areas was expected to be far less severe.

In South Dakota, Gov. Kristi Noem activated 13 members of the Army National Guard to help distribute water on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation after floodwaters washed out a county water line. The guardsmen will provide drinkable water to people in the communities of Red Shirt, Pine Ridge, Porcupine, Evergreen and Wounded Knee. The Guard will set up from a central location in each community until the waterline is fixed.

Even the lower Mississippi River was impacted. The U.S. Coast Guard on Friday rescued two boaters from a disabled vessel near New Orleans. Coast Guard officials said the flooding means more debris in the river, and the currents can pull a boat into danger.

Nebraska Extension compiles flood recovery resources

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska Extension has compiled information from a number of resources to aid people with flood recovery.

The Extension has compiled a list of the state’s certified public health environmental laboratories where homeowners can obtain a water test kit. This information is available on Nebraska Extension’s flood resources website.

Food safety tips also are on the flood resources website. This includes guidelines to help people decide when to throw out food and how to disinfect food that can be saved.

The Extension is also a resource for those wanting to help flood victims. The Eastern Nebraska Research and Extension Center near Mead and Haskell Ag Lab near Concord are serving as donation locations for hay and fencing materials. Those wishing to obtain the donated materials should contact the Nebraska Department of Agriculture.

Department says staffer stabbed, kicked at Tecumseh prison

TECUMSEH, Neb. (AP) – The Nebraska Correctional Services Department says a staffer was stabbed and kicked at the Tecumseh prison in southeast Nebraska.

The attack occurred a little after 6:30 p.m. Thursday when the staffer was escorting a prisoner back to a cell. The department said in a news release Friday that a wrong door was opened and a second inmate was able to use a homemade weapon to stab the staffer. The first inmate kicked the staffer in the head.

The department says three prison workers responded to stop the assault. The injured staff member was taken to Johnson County Hospital. He received stitches there and was released.

The department didn’t provide the names of those involved.

Nebraska jobless rate remained 2.8 percent in February

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) – Officials say Nebraska’s unemployment rate remained unchanged in February at 2.8 percent – the seventh month in a row at that figure.

The Nebraska Labor Department said in a news release Friday that the preliminary February rate was a tenth of a point under the year-ago figure of 2.9 percent. It also was well below the new national figure of 3.8 percent, which is down two-tenths of a point from 4 percent in January.

The preliminary nonfarm employment figure last month was 1.01 million, up nearly 3,800 over the year and up nearly 1,000 over the month.

Missing 17-year-old is home safe

A 17-year-old girl who had been missing since March 17 is home safe with family members.

Hannah Widener had been in North Platte visiting her father and had planned on returning to Norton, Kansas when she went missing, leaving behind her cell phone, vehicle, and clothing.

According to a post on the family’s Facebook page on Friday afternoon, Hannah is home with family and safe.

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