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  • State's truancy laws under fire from parents, advocacy groups

    Caitlin Sievers|Jul 30, 2013

    A Sidney family called to court because of their son's absences from school contends that Nebraska's attendance law is unreasonable. Under the initial version of this law, every child who missed more than 20 days whether excused or unexcused, would be reported to his or her county attorney who would then file a petition with the court regarding the absences. There was quite a bit of parental backlash after children with cancer and other diseases were reported to their county for excused absences. Brenda Vosik, of the Nebraska Family Forum, an... Full story

  • Cheyenne County Rodeo

    Floyd Brandt|Jul 30, 2013

  • Brothers praised by Eagle Scout court of honor

    Caitlin Sievers|Jul 27, 2013

    Zach and Jeff Deal, both Eagle Scouts, know the importance of community service as well as the value of having a good time. Although the Deals finally achieved the rank of Eagle Scout in December of last year, they received praise from scout leaders in a court of honor for their accomplishments at the end of last month. "To become an Eagle Scout there's several requirements and one of them is to plan, develop and give leadership to others in a service project helpful to any religious... Full story

  • Cabela's announces plans for four new stores

    Caitlin Sievers|Jul 27, 2013

    Cabela's continues to grow at an exponential rate. On Thursday, the Sidney based corporation announced plans for four additional new stores in 2014. Cabela's is scheduled to open two new stores in Georgia, one in Montana and one in Ontario, Canada. The Acworth, Ga. location will span 100,000 square feet and will employ around 200 people. The store in Augusta, Ga. will be 42,000 square feet and will employ around 90 people. "We are thrilled to bring Cabela's to a state with such a great outdoor tradition," said Cabela's CEO Tommy Millner in a... Full story

  • Sidney police, WING arrest four in separate drug cases

    Caitlin Sievers|Jul 27, 2013

    The Sidney Police Department, in conjunction with WING/HIDTA Drug Task Force made quite a few drug related arrests Thursday.Trevor Franklin, 19, of Sidney was arrested for deliver of a controlled substance within 1000 feet of a school which is a Class Id felony.Cordell Relerford, 18, of Sidney was arrested for delivery of Marijuana, a class III felony.Joshua Pilger, 23, of Sidney was arrested for delivery or distribution of hydromorphone, which is a class III felony. He was also charged with delivery or distribution of fentanyl, a class III... Full story

  • Across the fence: Union Pacific robbery at Big Springs

    M. Timothy Nolting|Jul 27, 2013

    On the day before his 27th birthday Sam Bass, along with several of his gang, walked intothe general store in Round Rock, Texas for a fresh pouch of Bull Durham. The local Deputy Sheriff A. W. Grimes recognized the group and approached them, demanding their surrender. In response, Deputy Grimes was shot and killed. As the gang attempted their escape, Texas Rangers George Herold and Richard Ware shot and fatally wounded young Sam Bass. Although he escaped, Bass was later found in a nearby...

  • Stuck accelerator blamed for van's encounter with restaurant wall

    Caitlin Sievers|Jul 26, 2013

    At 9:20 Thursday morning, Nella Tucker of Lodgepole pulled into the Sidney Perkins parking lot. As she did so, the accelerator reportedly stuck on her 2008 Kia Sedona mini van, sending her vehicle hard into the restaurant's wall, according to Police Chief Joe Aikens. The incident resulted in a sizable dent in the side of the building, causing insulation to spill out into the interior of the restaurant. Approximately $6000 worth of damage was done to the building. The vehicle received about... Full story

  • City balks at new energy conservation rules until its sees more information

    Caitlin Sievers|Jul 26, 2013

    An update to the city's energy conservation code was cause for debate at Tuesday's city council meeting. Troubled by an incomplete understanding of its requirements, the body looked for more information—and time—before making a decision. Sidney's Chief Building Inspector, Brad Rowan, introduced Ordinance 1700, adopting the 2012 edition of the International Energy Conservation Code. This code would regulate and govern energy efficient building practices and the installation of energy efficient mechanical lighting in the City of Sidney and in... Full story

  • Three area farmers find success the natural way

    Floyd Brandt|Jul 26, 2013

    Between the federal government and international bodes, the organic farmer faces a unique set of regulations. South of Sidney along the Colorado border, however, three families are navigating the challenges with success. Fresh Wind Farms on County Road 8 has found a market for organic eggs, selling them to a small but growing number of people in the Sidney community. To meet the requirements, their chickens must receive organic feed—an often expensive prospect. Fortunately, a neighboring farm s...

  • Two Pennsylvanians held in Nebraska marijuana case

    Jul 26, 2013

    Authorities say two Pennsylvania men have been arrested and 127 pounds of marijuana has been seized along Interstate 80 in the Nebraska Panhandle. The Nebraska State Patrol says the two were taken into custody just off the Sidney exit on Thursday evening. The patrol says a trooper reported smelling marijuana when he was checking on a sport utility vehicle that had stopped. The patrol says the pot, a pound of hashish and a small amount of cocaine were found during a search of the SUV. Troopers arrested 23-year-old Kenneth Turner, of Pittsburgh,...

  • Downtown stores stay open later on Thursdays

    Jul 25, 2013

    Many people who work 9 to 5 have trouble racing downtown in time, when most shops close their doors at or shortly after 5:00 p.m. Starting last week, however, some of Sidney's downtown stores joined together, staying open until 7 p.m. on Thursday nights. The city is helping to promote these idea with advertising in print, radio spots and social media. Community Development Director Megan McGown said, "We want to create a buzz as well as help generate traffic downtown,” observed Sidney's C... Full story

  • City pleased with progress on new hospital

    Caitlin Sievers|Jul 25, 2013

    Plans for the new hospital are going so smoothly that city officials consider it something to brag about. "I just think you need to be out there tooting your horn a little bit," Sidney Mayor Wendall Gaston told hospital CEO Jason Petik during Tuesday night's City Council meeting. "This is a pretty impressive looking facility." Still, while the initial design process for the medical center is already complete, architects and hospital officials are ironing out some kinks and are open to changes. "I know we are still working on some concepts and s... Full story

  • Council angry after unsatisfactory bid for golf course improvements

    Caitlin Sievers|Jul 24, 2013

    The city found itself in a difficult lie on Wednesday and the long planned golf course project appeared to stall. After lengthy planning with city officials and Project One, Staples Golf Design only received one contractor bid for municipal course improvements, set to start this fall. Both Staples Golf and the city council deemed this bid unsatisfactory. The city contracted Staples Golf to design, plan and coordinate the irrigation project at Hillside Golf Course. This project includes an... Full story

  • Elevators work, and wait, as weather tampers with harvest

    Floyd Brandt|Jul 24, 2013

    Harvest is in full swing and at the Scoular elevator trucks have been rolling in steadily. But this season has a distinct character. “It's been a different type of year with the late rains that we had,” reported Scoular Merchandiser Logan Snyder. “There is a lot of wet stuff out there right now.” As every farmer knows, weather is a big factor in determining when to harvest, as well as the quality of a crop. While trucks loaded with grain arrive at Scoular's elevator day and night, Snyder...

  • Robertson sentenced in meth case

    Floyd Brandt|Jul 24, 2013

    Cuffed at the hands and ankles, Dale Robertson was escorted into the Cheyenne County District Court by a deputy. Dressed in orange he sat quietly at the table, waiting for Judge Derek Weimer to enter the room. His lawyer, William Madelung, said in an aside that Robertson's life had been “tainted with drug abuse.” Judge Wiemer sentenced the defendant to two to four years in jail, with a possible chance for probation after one year. This sentence runs consecutively with a term of one year in the county jail. Robertson was charged with sel... Full story

  • Sawfly infestation threatens some panhandle wheat fields

    Caitlin Sievers|Jul 23, 2013

    Nebraska farmers who've been dealing with drought for the past few years now have a new pest new pest to worry about. Wheat stem sawfly is a small wasp that lays eggs in the growing plant. The sawfly's feeding reduces crop yield, but the real damage is done when the larva scores a line in the stem. When this happens, wind can easily knock flatten damaged crop, an event called lodging. Once the wheat is knocked over, combines generally skim over the grain, without picking it up. "It's been a growing problem in the last three years," said Jeff... Full story

  • School board calls special meeting

    Jul 23, 2013

    A state bill's affect on budgets and a last minute hire were cause for a special school board meeting on Monday. Nebraska Legislative Bill 407, the major school finance bill in front of the Unicameral this year, restricts the amount that public school districts can increase their budgets on an annual basis. "This is really the reason for the special budget meeting," said Sidney Schools Superintendent Jay Ehler. School board member Tom Von Seggern and Ehler learned about a helpful provision in this bill at a Nebraska Association of School...

  • Court sentences Blake to probation in controlled substance case

    Floyd Brandt|Jul 23, 2013

    On Monday, the Cheyenne County Court sentenced Leland Blake to intensive probation for 60 months for distribution of a controlled substance. As part of the decision, he must testify in a case against Larry Martinez. In August Blake witnessed Martinez shoot and kill Mandy Kerschman, age 30 of Sidney, according to court documents. The incident took place at Blake's home. Kerschman was reportedly a friend of Blake. Charges against Blake step from a WING Task Force investigation that culminated in his arrest. On June 29, 2012, WING officer Justin L... Full story

  • For harvest crews, a long and unpredictable summer

    Floyd Brandt|Jul 23, 2013

    Harvest crews travels hundreds, perhaps thousands of miles over the course of a summer. Their journey often begins in the south, where crops mature with the early warmth. They eventually make their way to Nebraska. Minnesota native Reed Lundy and his crew of five started cutting in June, somewhere in Oklahoma. Before reaching the panhandle, they worked fields in Kansas. The end of their road will come in North Dakota, up near the Canadian border. Theirs is a life of hotel rooms, wide open spaces...

  • Police say Dum Dums led to arrest of alleged sweet tooth bandit

    Caitlin Sievers|Jul 20, 2013

    James Russell of Sidney was caught with some sweet evidence after allegedly stealing candy from the Legion Park concession stand. Sergeant Joe Rieken of Sidney Police was called to Legion Park on the morning of July 16 after a burglary was reported at the concession stand, the second in as many months. Bonita Dickinson told police that someone apparently climbed in the window and took candy and soda, according to the arrest affidavit. Rieken deduced from evidence found at the scene that the burglars pried open metal plates around the concession... Full story

  • Road construction crews battle delays, weather

    Caitlin Sievers|Jul 20, 2013

    The Illinois Street construction project recently hit a few snags. "It's progressing," Sidney Public Services Director John Hehnke assured. "There have been a few twists along the way." The construction crew discovered some underground utilities that weren't in their expected location. These extra shallow gas mains have to be placed more deeply underground so the road can be properly installed. So far, the crew has the curb and gutter in place on Illinois and have replaced the storm drain. They... Full story

  • Police preparing to auction unclaimed rides

    Floyd Brandt|Jul 19, 2013

    Every year a hundred or more abandoned bicycles are found by city and law enforcement officials. On any summer day, the Sidney Police Department stores 50 to 75 bicycles in their bike rack, outside of the station. The majority—90 percent—go unclaimed. “We get bikes that are left leaning against the swimming pool fence, just laying out in the open,” interim Chief of Police Joseph Aikens reported. “We chain them up where we find them.” Some of these may have been left behind after an unreported th... Full story

  • Rabies reports spread from Colo. into the panhandle

    Caitlin Sievers|Jul 19, 2013

    After reports of rabies in northeastern Colorado over the past few weeks, the virus has now been confirmed in the panhandle of Nebraska As of July 15, 25 Nebraska animals have tested positive for rabies, according to officials at the Panhandle Public Health District. This number includes seven skunks. Across the entire state, the virus has been discovered in bats, cattle, cats, one llama, one horse, and a dog. In Nebraska, skunks and bats most commonly carry and spread the disease, according to the health district. "Some humans in the... Full story

  • County probation officers in need of office space as services increase

    Caitlin Sievers|Jul 19, 2013

    Probation officers working out of Cheyenne County are revving up services and trying to find more space. The state government passed Legislative Bill 561 in June, a new juvenile probation plan being piloted in Omaha and Nebraska probation districts 11 and 12. This law will expand the organization's current juvenile services. "We'll need more employees," said Linda Buehler, chief probation officer for district 12. Probation district 12 encompasses all of the counties in the panhandle. At this point, Buehler is trying to put together...

  • A long walk in the country

    Floyd Brandt|Jul 18, 2013

    Step after step, mile after mile brings Rolla Joyce closer to Washington D.C. His zeal pushes closer to his destination, day after day. Joyce, from Richland, Wash., passed through Sidney Thursday afternoon on a near cross country walk. Earlier this summer he felt a calling to leave his family, catch a ride to Salt Lake City, Utah and begin his trek across the heartland for the sake, he says, of his country. As Joyce sees it, Americans are in a state of isolation. The thought of individuals helpi... Full story

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