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Grand Island approves fire station sale; will build new one

GRAND ISLAND, Neb. (AP) — The Grand Island City Council has approved the sale of a fire station in anticipation of building a new one.

Council members voted 8-0, with two members absent, on Tuesday to approve an ordinance for the sale of the current Fire Station No. 4 property to home improvement company Menard’s.

The agreement calls for $103,015 to be paid to the city for the current the station. City Attorney Jerry Janulewicz has said that amount would be for the current property, and that Menard’s will pay the additional cost to construct a new Fire Station No. 4 building at 13th Street and North Road.

Janulewicz says the closing date will depend on the city and Menard’s agreeing to plans and specifications for the new fire station.

Nebraska utility works to increase renewable energy sources

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — The Omaha Public Power District says it plans to use renewable sources to provide half the energy it sells to retails customers by 2020.

The utility announced the plan Monday during the annual Nebraska Wind and Solar Conference in Lincoln.

President and CEO Tim Burke says the utility is working on a request for proposals to add up to 300 megawatts of wind energy. The company also plans to build a 160 megawatt wind farm in Wayne County that’s expected to open in 2019.

Less than 20 percent of the utility’s 2016 retail sales came from renewable energy sources, such as wind turbines, natural gas extracted from a landfill and hydropower from dams.

The utility serves Omaha and surrounding areas.

Winnebago Tribe makes move to take over troubled hospital

WINNEBAGO, Neb. (AP) — The Winnebago Tribal Council has taken steps to take over management of a hospital on a Native American reservation in northeastern Nebraska.

The council voted last week to initiate the process of taking control of the Omaha Winnebago Hospital.

The tribe hopes to assume operation of the hospital by July 1.

Self-governance allows Native American tribes to assume administration of federal programs. A steering committee has been formed to help the Winnebago Tribal Council prepare for the negotiations and eventual management of the hospital.

The move comes more than two years after the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services terminated the hospital’s Medicare contract after the Indian Health Service and hospital officials failed to correct serious quality-of-care deficiencies the agency had found.

Workers find hydrogen leak at Cooper Nuclear power plant

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Workers are repairing a hydrogen leak at Cooper Nuclear power plant in southeast Nebraska after the problem was discovered in one of the turbines during maintenance.

Nebraska Public Power District spokesman Mark Becker says the small hydrogen leak isn’t in the power plant’s nuclear systems, and it doesn’t represent a safety threat.

The plant near Brownville, Nebraska, continued operating after the leak was found Tuesday morning.

Becker said the utility is working to repair the leak by the end of Tuesday. The hydrogen is used to help cool the turbine.

The utility notified regulators about the problem, and issued what the Nuclear Regulatory Commission calls a notice of unusual event.

NRC spokesman Joey Leford said the agency’s inspectors are monitoring the repairs.

Woman critically injured in Saturday crash in Omaha dies

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Police say an Omaha woman has died days after suffering critical injuries in a crash.

Police say 67-year-old Laura Hogan died Monday at an Omaha hospital, where she was taken after the Saturday morning crash.

Police say a pickup truck hauling a dump-truck box stalled in a northbound lane of Interstate 480 around 8:30 a.m. Saturday. Investigators say Hogan tried to drive around the truck, but struck the rear bumper. She was taken to a hospital with a critical head injury.

The 26-year-old driver of the truck, who was outside of the vehicle, suffered minor injuries. He declined medical treatment.

Man who fled police in eastern Nebraska dies in crash

FORT CALHOUN, Neb. (AP) — Authorities say a 19-year-old Fort Calhoun man has died in a crash that occurred after he fled a police stop.

Washington County sheriff’s deputies Friday night stopped Jackson Potadle for speeding near Fort Calhoun High School.

Washington County Sheriff Mike Robinson says deputies were preparing to search the vehicle when Potadle sped off. Robinson says Potadle lost control on a curve and drove into a ditch, where the vehicle hit a tree.

Potadle was pronounced dead at the scene.

Northeastern Nebraska man killed in 1-vehicle crash

LAUREL, Neb. (AP) — Authorities in the northeastern corner of Nebraska say a man has died in a one-vehicle crash.

The Cedar County Sheriff’s Office says the Friday afternoon crash killed 66-year-old Dennis Brodersen, of Coleridge. Deputies say the crash happened shortly after 4 p.m. when the pickup truck Brodersen was driving crossed the center line, left the road and hit a farm field entrance, flipping the truck.

Brodersen, who was wearing his seat belt, was pronounced dead at the scene.

Officials continue to investigate the cause of the crash.

Ex-Lincoln officer denies sex assault charges against him

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A former Lincoln police officer who left the force last month amid a sex assault investigation denies the charges against him.

An attorney for 54-year-old Gregory Cody said Thursday at a bond hearing for his client that Cody “strongly disputes” the allegations. Cody, who is charged with first-degree sexual assault, was released Thursday after posting $15,000 bond.

Investigators say Cody used his position of authority to coerce and force a 30-year-old mentally ill woman into sex dozens of times for more than a year.

The woman told investigators most of the assaults occurred while Cody was on duty and that they began last year after Cody released her rather than take her into emergency protective custody. She told investigators that Cody told her she would “owe him.”

Fire destroys huge home in southwestern Omaha

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Omaha firefighters are trying to determine what caused an inferno that consumed a large home in southwestern Omaha.

Fire crews were called to the residence just before 1 a.m. Friday and found the 10,000 square-foot (929.02 sq. meter) home fully engulfed in flames. No one was home at the time of the fire, and no injuries were reported.

Omaha firefighters called for help from Waterloo, Gretna and Boys Town fire departments to battle the massive fire, which took more than two hours to contain.

Fire crews managed to keep the fire from spreading to an occupied horse barn on the property.

Fire officials say the more than $1 million home was a total loss.

Omaha Salvation Army holiday collection campaign has begun

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The Salvation Army in Omaha has kicked off its annual Tree of Light holiday charity campaign.

The public turned out Friday at midtown Omaha’s American National Bank for the lighting ceremony of the giant Christmas tree. A day earlier, the Salvation Army held another tree-lighting ceremony at American National Bank in Council Bluffs, Iowa.

The ceremonies kicked off the Salvation Army’s red kettle driver, when bell ringers man the red collection kettles outside businesses in Omaha and Council Bluffs.

The campaign continues through Dec. 23.

The money collected during the six-week campaign supports Salvation Army programs and services throughout the year, including food pantries, housing, utility assistance, behavioral health services and education. All money raised through the Red Kettle Drive stays in the community where the funds are collected.

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