We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Abortion-rights supporters to rally at Nebraska Capitol 

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) – Supporters of abortion rights are set to rally at the Nebraska Capitol as part of a national campaign responding to states that have passed new abortion restrictions.

The free public event is set for noon Tuesday at the Nebraska Capitol and will include representatives of the American Civil Liberties Union of Nebraska and Planned Parenthood as well as state lawmakers. It’s sponsored by those groups and the Women’s Fund of Omaha.

The rally will take place beneath the Nebraska Capitol rotunda on the building’s second floor if it rains.

Organizers ask that participants be respectful and observe the Capitol’s rules for such events. Participants aren’t allowed to block entrances to the building, and signs must be handheld and are not allowed inside the Capitol.

Nebraska lawmaker warns of Offutt Air Force Base’s gear loss 

OFFUTT AIR FORCE BASE, Neb. (AP) – A Nebraska congressman is pushing the Air Force’s emergency request for $234 million to replace equipment and crew training simulators damaged by floodwaters that inundated the Offutt Air Force Base this spring.

The Omaha World-Herald reports Rep. Don Bacon recently brought attention to the funding request in a letter to a House subcommittee.

Bacon warned of the loss of defense capabilities that commanders are already experiencing in the field after the severe flooding in March.

The request comes in addition to the $420 million Air Force officials are seeking to repair and rebuild at the base.

The House passed a disaster assistance bill earlier this month. The Senate hasn’t taken action.

Air Force Secretary Heather Wilson says the base’s recovery work will stop July 1 if emergency funds aren’t issued.

Authorities ID 4-month-old killed in crash as Scottsbluff girl

GRETNA, Neb. (AP) – Authorities have released the name of a 4-month-old who was fatally injured in a collision along Interstate 80 in eastern Nebraska.

The crash occurred Saturday afternoon near the exit south of Gretna. The Sarpy County Sheriff’s Office identified the girl Sunday as Amila Johnson, who lived in Scottsbluff.

The sheriff’s office says the baby was in an eastbound vehicle driven by 19-year-old Adriana Rodriguez, also of Scottsbluff. The sheriff’s office says Rodriguez’s vehicle crossed the median into the westbound lanes, where it collided with a minivan driven by 73-year-old Mary Lynch, of Omaha.

The sheriff’s office says Rodriguez and the three passengers in her vehicle and Lynch and the one passenger in her minivan were taken to local hospitals for treatment.

2 17-year-olds charged with assaulting center staffer

KEARNEY, Neb. (AP) – Two 17-year-old boys have been charged with assaulting a female staff member before escaping the state’s Youth Rehabilitation and Treatment Center in Kearney.

Both boys are charged with assault, robbery and escape. One also is charged with strangulation resulting in serious injury. Their next court hearing is scheduled for June 24. The Associated Press generally doesn’t name juveniles accused of crimes.

The assault and escapes occurred early in the morning on Feb. 24.

The staffer who was attacked was treated at a hospital and released.

Lincoln County Marriage Licenses

  • Dakota Grey Yost, 24, Sutherland NE and Maggie Lynn Morris, 20, Sutherland NE

 

  • Johnathan Ryan Navarete 28, North Platte NE and Ashley Marie Hornelas, 28, North Platte NE

 

  • Ryan Eugene Walsh, 36, North Platte NE and Rachel Sue Rickley, 34, North Platte NE

 

  • Vern Dale Boone, 57, North Platte NE and Christine Marie Eyten, 59, North Platte NE

 

  • Zachary Bryce Fuller, 35, North Platte NE and Halsey Lynn Roberts, 35, North Platte NE

 

  • Saul Amado Roman Castillo, 55, North Platte NE and Noeli Lidia Ramirez, 59, North Platte NE

Nebraska lawmakers grumble at likelihood of puny tax cut

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Farmers, ranchers, and homeowners throughout Nebraska are likely to get more state money next year to offset their property tax bills, but it won’t make a big difference for many people and that’s leaving some lawmakers exasperated as this year’s legislative session nears its end.The new state budget awaiting a final vote in the Legislature provides a major boost to the Nebraska property tax credit, which helps reduce the total tax bill sent to property owners.For many property owners, the tax savings will be relatively small or even non-existent, given rising property values and local governments eager to make use of the tax dollars while holding their levies flat. An unknown amount of the tax credit would go to out-of-state landowners.”It doesn’t even keep pace with inflation,” said Omaha Sen. Lou Ann Linehan, chairwoman of the Revenue Committee. “It’s better than getting nothing, but it’s not enough.”

If the budget passes as expected, owners of a $150,000 home would get a $106 discount on their property tax bill — about $29 more than what they currently receive.

At the same time, the credit has been consuming an ever-larger chunk of the state budget, drawing criticism from progressive lawmakers who want more money for education, health care, child welfare services, and other priorities.

The spending plan calls for a $51 million annual boost to the tax credit, for a total of $275 million a year — roughly 5 percent of the state’s annual general-fund budget and nearly double the amount distributed to taxpayers in 2015.

“The idea that we are not prioritizing property tax relief is completely false,” said Sen. Adam Morfeld, of Lincoln. “What some people fail to acknowledge is there are other priorities in this state.”

Morfeld said lawmakers are “barely able to cover the priorities we already have,” including long-term care services for the elderly, K-12 public schools and the state universities and colleges. Morfeld, who represents a large number of University of Nebraska-Lincoln students, said he rarely hears constituent complaints about high taxes.

“We could defund everything else in the state and probably still not make everybody happy when it comes to property tax relief, and we’d still be having this debate,” he said. “It’s a race to the bottom.”

Lawmakers will try again this week to approve a larger property tax package, but they may have to scale it back to win enough support, Linehan said. It’s unclear whether lawmakers can reach a compromise before the session ends on May 31, frustrating many rural senators.

“This is my third session as a state senator and we have adjourned every single year without addressing the property tax crisis,” Sen. Tom Brewer, of Gordon, wrote Friday in his weekly newsletter to constituents. “This has been going on for decades and it makes me sick.”

One major package championed by Linehan and others was criticized by Gov. Pete Ricketts, a fellow Republican. The proposal sought to lower property taxes by increasing a variety of sales taxes and the state cigarette tax while boosting state aid to K-12 public schools.

The latest plan touted by some senators doesn’t touch the sales tax rate, the cigarette tax or K-12 school funding but would eliminate sales tax exemptions on dozens of goods and services, including pop, candy, bottled water, haircuts, tattoos, lawn care, and dating services.

Ricketts criticized that plan as a “tax swap” and urged lawmakers to reject it.

“Senators continue to pursue the failed policy of raising taxes on working families and pitting Nebraskans against each other,” he said.

___

Follow Grant Schulte on Twitter at https://twitter.com/GrantSchulte

Nebraska boat ramps unavailable south of Interstate 80

LINCOLN, Neb. – No boat ramps are useable in Nebraska along the Missouri River from Interstate 80 to the Kansas border.

The river is running high and flood warnings remain in effect for portions of the Missouri from Burt County to the southern border.

Nebraska Game and Parks Commission crews recently assessed most of the river boat access. Their findings:

From Fort Randall Dam (South Dakota) to Lewis and Clark Lake, Sunshine Bottoms, Verdel Landing WMA, Running Water, and Santee are useable boat ramps. Only the Nebraska tailwaters ramp is known to be open from Gavins Point Dam to Ponca State Park. Between the park and Interstate 80 in Omaha, all ramps are open except NP Dodge Memorial Park in Omaha. Every ramp south of the interstate is closed to access. In many cases, those boat ramps are under water. Some areas have access roads and parking lots under water.

Boaters should be cautious on high-running rivers and in areas that flooded. Underwater debris and other obstacles can create hazards. Debris also may have built up along and under bridges.

For more on boating in Nebraska, visit outdoornebraska.gov/boating/.

Nebraska utility warns about recent scam calls

COLUMBUS, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska’s largest utility is warning about a recent increase in scam calls.

The Nebraska Public Power District says the scammers are posing as representatives of the utility and demanding money. But NPPD doesn’t do that.

The utility won’t call customers and ask for a credit card number, and it won’t ask for payment with a prepaid card.

NPPD’s Tim Arlt says anyone who receives such a call should contact police and the utility to report it.

Weather service: Tornadoes hit rural central Nebraska

HASTINGS, Neb. (AP) — The National Weather Service says tornadoes touched down Friday night in rural parts of Nebraska, tearing up trees, powerlines, farm buildings and damaging some homes, but no serious injuries were reported.

Meteorologist Jordan Thies in Hastings says the service received more than a dozen credible reports of tornado sightings from around south-central Nebraska, but says some of those were likely of the same tornado. Thies says the weather service is in the process of trying to determine how many tornadoes touched down, but he said it was likely at least a few.

One tornado near McCook damaged a farmhouse. Station KLKN in Lincoln reports that an elderly couple was in the home at the time, but suffered only some scratches and bruises.

Thies says the area can expect some rain and thunderstorms Saturday, but extreme weather is not expected.

Ricketts signs law that could prompt wind-energy court cases

Photo: Wikipedia
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Groups that want to install wind-energy transmission lines on private property could face new obstacles from Nebraska landowners under a newly signed state law.

Gov. Pete Ricketts approved a measure Friday that gives landowners a better opportunity to challenge such projects in court if a Nebraska public power organization tries to use eminent domain to clear the way for a privately developed renewable energy project.

The bill was introduced by Sen. Tom Brewer, of Gordon, whose district includes Nebraska’s scenic Sandhills. Some residents there are trying to derail a transmission line project designed to relieve congestion in the current electric system and support new wind-energy projects.

The original proposal would have barred Nebraska’s public power organizations from using eminent domain from such projects.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File