LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) – A proposed state plan to help low-income Nebraskans with their energy costs will receive a hearing next month.
The Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services has scheduled the hearing for Aug. 4 in the Nebraska State Office Building in Lincoln. It is scheduled to begin at 10 a.m. The hearing will allow department officials to collect input on
the proposed Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program that is submitted to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services each year. The plan describes Nebraska’s program and defines its eligibility requirements and benefit guidelines.
Copies of the plan proposal can be obtained by calling the department’s energy assistance office at 402-471-9450.
Category: News
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Woman bites off mans ear – gets prison term
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) – A Lincoln woman who claimed self-defense
for biting off a part of a man’s ear has been given 5-to-12 years
in prison.
Court records say 22-year-old Anna Godfrey had been convicted in
June of felony assault. She was sentenced on Monday.
Lincoln police say Godfrey was at a party in April 2010 and got
into an argument with a group of people and had attacked the man
because he’d said she was fat.
At trial, Godfrey admitted running across the street toward the
group, but she said she wanted to fight with one of the man’s
friends who had insulted her. She says the man tackled her and had
her in a choke hold, so she bit him in self-defense before she
passed out.
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Soldier who died in Afghanistan buried in Nebraska
MAXWELL, Neb. (AP) – A Nebraska Army National Guard sergeant who died in Afghanistan has been buried. A service was held Tuesday at Fort McPherson National Cemetery in Maxwell for 28-year-old Omar Jones, of Maywood. The Nebraska National Guard says Jones died of a noncombat
injury on July 18 at a base in Balkh Province. His death is under investigation. The North Platte Telegraph reports that Maj. Steve Collins was Jones’ commander during a deployment in Iraq. Collins says Jones “had the biggest heart of any soldier I knew.” Jones was an electrician assigned to the 623rd Engineer Company in Wahoo. The guard says Jones was born in Jackson, Miss. After active duty in the Army, he joined the Nebraska National Guard in 2005. Jones is survived by his wife, Ava, and two children.
California man sent to prison in Neb. drug bust
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) – A Nebraska judge has sentenced a California
man to prison for a stash of marijuana and heroin found in a rental
truck during a traffic stop on Interstate 80.
Luis Vargas Trujillo, of Dinuba, Calif., was one of three men arrested in October near the Utica exit.
Trujillo pleaded no contest to a drug charge. The Lincoln Journal Star says a Seward County judge sentenced him on Monday to 20 months to five years in prison. A Nebraska State Patrol trooper stopped Trujillo for failing to signal a lane change. The patrol say a search turned up 200 pounds of pot and 50 grams of heroin inside some mattresses.
The other men were previously sentenced to prison.
90 Neb. postal outlets to be studied for closure
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) – Post offices in Nebraska cities large and small have been added to the list of offices, branches and stations being studied for possible closing.
The U.S. Postal Service said Tuesday that it is considering
closing 90 Nebraska facilities among the nearly 3,700 being considered nationwide.
The service says many of the offices could be replaced by
so-called village post offices. Those are locations offering
limited postal services in local stores, libraries or government
offices.
On the list of 90 Nebraska outlets to be studied for closure are
two in Omaha. The rest are in villages and small cities that
usually have just one post office. The towns include Lakeside in
western Nebraska’s Panhandle, Newport in north-central Nebraska’s
Rock County and Douglas in southeast Nebraska’s Otoe County.
Kawasaki shows off new rail car facility in Nebraska
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) – Kawasaki is showing off its new rail car
testing center at its production plant in Lincoln.
The Lincoln Journal Star says the plant’s 1,500 employees were
on hand for the unveiling on Tuesday, which also included company
executives and dignitaries, including Gov. Dave Heineman and Lincoln Mayor Chris Beutler. The $40 million facility includes a 36,000-square-foot test
building and a 2,000-foot-long track. Plant manager Mike Boyle says
it’s the only plant tin North America with the ability to build
rail cars from the ground up and test them on-site.
Since beginning rail car production in Lincoln in 2001, Kawasaki
has nearly doubled the size of its rail car plant and grown the
workforce fivefold.
Nebraska patrol blames blown tire in fatal crash (Update)
Authorities say a blown tire led to a
rollover crash on Interstate 80 that killed two people in south-central Nebraska. The Nebraska State Patrol says the accident occurred a little after 1:30 p.m. Tuesday near Overton. The patrol says an eastbound car went out of control after a rear tire blew out. The car rolled twice in the median and landed in the westbound lanes. The driver and one passenger were killed. North Platte television station KNOP says they were identified as 43-year-old Darren Willis and 39-year-old Trena Talley. The patrol says Willis was driving and that Willis and Talley lived in Lexington. Another passenger, 41-year-old Michelle Fellezs, of Lexington, was sent to a Kearney hospital for treatment.