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  • "Emergency" in Name Only: The Second Round of the Federal Emergency Rental Assistance Program

    Pete Ricketts, Nebraska Governor|Mar 16, 2022

    As Nebraskans, we value resourcefulness and self-reliance. We also care for our neighbors. We recognize that extraordinary times—like a natural disaster or a global pandemic—warrant extra assistance. During the height of the coronavirus pandemic, Nebraskans stepped up to help those in need. At the federal and state level, we did the same. The State has received and distributed an unprecedented amount of federal funding to help Nebraskans weather the storm over these past two years. But at a cer...

  • Irish Wit

    William H. Benson, Columnist|Mar 16, 2022

    The Irish have their own way of seeing the world. The American poet Marianne Moore said as much in six words. “I'm troubled. I'm dissatisfied. I'm Irish.” Frank McCourt said the same, but in more words, on the first page of his memoir, Angela's Ashes. “It was, of course, a miserable childhood: the happy childhood is hardly worth your while. Worse than the ordinary miserable childhood is the miserable Irish childhood, and worse yet is the miserable Irish Catholic childhood. “People everywh...

  • Straight Talk from Steve: PBMs

    Steve Erdman, District 47|Mar 16, 2022

    One of the issues which has concerned me ever since I sat on the Legislature’s HHS Committee is what to do about price benefit managers, otherwise known as PBMs. Price benefit managers are the middlemen who provide our pharmacies with prescription drugs. PBMs negotiate with drug manufacturers on behalf of government health plans, private health plans, and employer-based health insurance plans. The deals they strike with pharmaceutical companies determine the availability of drugs as well as t...

  • Delta Dawn When The Light Comes On

    Ivy Joy Johnson, The Joy Mission|Mar 16, 2022

    Humility is designed to bring order out of chaos. A good character trait, humility simply says what God says and does what God does. And, humility is the root word for ‘humor’. Proverbs 20:24: “A man’s (woman’s, too) steps are of the Lord. How, then, can a man understand (comprehend, decipher) his own way?” Betty is an amazing pianist, also playing vibra-harp, cow bells and crystal goblets. She currently stages one-woman dramas based on women of the Bible and other Christian figures. Ov...

  • President's Op-Ed: Thanks to partnerships, University's impact goes well beyond the numbers

    Ted Carter, President, University of Nebraska System|Mar 16, 2022

    Many of us know intuitively that our lives are touched in some way by the University of Nebraska. Maybe you’ve received care at our world-renowned medical center. Maybe you’re a farmer or rancher who’s benefited from the expertise of Nebraska Extension. You’ve probably been to a football game and felt the common bond of cheering for the Huskers with your fellow Nebraskans. The University of Nebraska is part of the very fabric of our state. It’s been that way throughout almost all of Nebraska’s history. Whether through our teaching, health care...

  • An Energetic Response to Russia

    Pete Ricketts, Nebraska Governor|Mar 9, 2022

    Russia’s attack on Ukraine is an assault on freedom everywhere. As leader of the free world, the United States must issue a strong response that will isolate Russia – and the world must follow suit. Direct oil and gas sanctions make it clear that the world will not tolerate global aggressors. The Biden Administration can strengthen energy sanctions against Russia by revitalizing our domestic energy production to supply America and our allies. Oil and gas exports are a key driver of Rus...

  • What Can Be Done?

    Dan Carlson, Prairie Ponderings|Mar 9, 2022

    You need not be a meteorologist to see the storm clouds gathering on the horizon. I speak metaphorically, but just as you know it’s time to seek shelter when the sky looks ominous and warning sirens blare, so too you sense what I do about what’s coming our way politically and economically and want an action plan. I’m not a politician, nor am I an economist. I do have quite a bit of experience in disaster preparedness and helping to manage crisis. My ability to predict the future is pretty good,...

  • Who Is Your Friend?

    Mike Sunderland, Thoughts from a Grey-Haired Point of View|Mar 9, 2022

    The other day I sat down to write another article and my mind went blank! Go figure. So I loaded up the CD player with music by an old favorite of mine… C.W. McCall. I doubt many youngsters (anyone under 40) will recognize the name. He produced and sang Long Lonesome Road, Night Rider, Ratchet Jaw, Rubber Duck, among many more trucking tunes. Dorothy and I lived in Winnemucca, NV when he hit the top of the charts hit after hit, during the early 1970s. We installed a mobile CB in our car and a...

  • Managing Fear

    Forrest Hershberger, View from the Handlebars|Mar 9, 2022

    Almost two years ago, the normal television feeds of news, sitcoms and game shows was interrupted by Breaking News. A deadly virus was identified in China. We can fill in our own story line based on the news sources each of us subscribes to, and we might be right, or we might be part of the flock. Since then we’ve seen restrictions, social guidelines, varying mask and vaccine requirements, variants and a generally higher level of fear. The political cartoonists are not wrong to point out just as...

  • Delta Dawn When The Light Comes On

    Ivy Joy Johnson, The Joy Mission|Mar 9, 2022

    God gave us children to bring us hope and assure the future. “Behold, children are a heritage from the Lord; the fruit of the womb, a reward like arrows in the hand of a warrior, so are the children of one’s youth, …they shall not be ashamed but shall overcome their enemies during judgement.” Psalm 127:3-5 Momma sought the Lord, daily, where her wedding vows and the spiritual growth of her two beautiful, young girls conflicted. Papa, a local chef, worked Sundays, making use of the family...

  • Killing Innocent Children

    David Bryan, Guest Columnist|Mar 9, 2022

    In the first century A.D. a baby was born; His name was Jesus. It was prophesied that He would become the King of the Jews. At the time of His birth a king ruled over Judah by the name of Herod. Herod, like many kings, was notoriously known for his cruelty to anyone who was a threat to his throne. W hen he heard of the birth of Jesus, he immediately devised a plan to kill this innocent baby. He sent wise men to find the baby and told them to come back and tell him where the baby was so he could...

  • Straight Talk From Steve

    Steve Erdman, 47th District|Mar 9, 2022

    I serve on the Legislature’s Appropriations Committee. The Appropriations Committee is charged with the task of putting together the State’s budget. In other words, we decide how the State spends its money, and this year we have a lot of extra money to spend. Last Thursday the Legislature’s Appropriations Committee finished hearings on 123 bills. That is the highest number of bills ever to be assigned to the Appropriations Committee. The reason we had so many bills this year had to do with...

  • Ukraine Crisis Demands We Reevaluate Our Approach to Dealing with Putin

    Deb Fischer, U.S. Senator|Mar 9, 2022

    On Thursday, February 24, the world awoke to news that Russia had invaded Ukraine. Vladimir Putin launched attacks from land, air, and sea. By the next day, Russian forces had reached the outskirts of the capital city of Kyiv, where fierce fighting and heroic Ukrainian resistance continues against all odds. The scenes coming out of Ukraine are terrifying: newborn babies in need of intensive care moved to makeshift bomb shelters, a Ukrainian kindergarten under attack, and indiscriminate shelling...

  • In Support of 'Right to Repair'

    Larry Bolinger, Guest Columnist|Mar 9, 2022

    The Right to Repair policy would allow consumers, maintenance people, computer experts, and mechanics the right to repair equipment. The importance of this policy is to reestablish support for consumer rights. To allow consumers the right to work on their property or give them the right to allow a qualified person to do the work. Several policies were put in place to safeguard Consumer rights and some policies were created to undermined consumer Rights such as the “Digital Millennium C...

  • Put An End to War

    David Bryan, Guest Columnist|Mar 2, 2022

    In 1971, John Denver wrote a peace poem and sang a song that began like this: "Last night, I had the strangest dream I never dreamed before. I dreamed the world had all agreed to put an end to war..." If he was still living today, this song would hopefully be his number one hit. Among other vocal artists back then, John was a strong advocate for peace. We need more men and women today like John Denver. We need to put an end to wars like the one that is now going on in Ukraine. No nation should...

  • Dangerous Times

    Dan Carlson, Prairie Ponderings|Mar 2, 2022

    It’s amazing how quickly changes in the global landscape occur. Canada went from a representative parliament government to tyranny in a matter of days. Vaccine and mask mandates were supposedly settled science a few weeks ago, but are now dropping like flies sprayed with insecticide. And a peaceful, but tense relationship between Russian and its neighbors turned into the biggest war in Europe since 1945 overnight. The result is a world losing faith in institutions and a high degree of u...

  • North Pacific

    Mike Sunderland, Thoughts from a Grey-Haired Point of View|Mar 2, 2022

    Written by Calvin K. Sunderland My dad was not a braggart. It was rare he would talk or write about his time in the WWII Navy on board the heavy cruiser USS Portland. What follows is one he wrote a few years before he died. I can only try to emulate the bravery it must have taken to weather events such as he experienced during the war. – Michael K. Sunderland “One of the most frightful episodes while I was aboard came late in our North Pacific excursion. A storm at sea is one of nature’s more...

  • Freeze-Up in Ottawa

    William H. Benson, Columnist|Mar 2, 2022

    Kathrene and Robert Pinkerton married in 1911. He worked at a newspaper in a big city: long hours, deadlines, and stress. A doctor advised him him to “get out of newspaper offices and out of cities,” if he wanted to preserve his health. He decided he would write fiction — short stories — and sell them. When single, Robert had worked as a logger and fur trader in Ottawa’s woods, that vast wilderness that stretched between Lake Superior and Hudson Bay. He and Kathrene decided that they would build...

  • Delta Dawn When The Light Comes On

    Ivy Joy Johnson, The Joy Mission|Mar 2, 2022

    A PRAYER: Father God, I thank You and praise You for bringing us through recent, harsh February weather. Come! Heal and restore where our farmers, ranchers, and rural families have suffered loss during this event. Leave no physical, financial or emotional scar, Lord. Challenging weather can yet come. Therefore, Father, allow a Blood Line around every home, especially with school bound children, every calving field, farrowing barn, kidding barn, dog and chicken house, in Jesus’ Name. Should a...

  • Making a Difference

    Forrest Hershberger, View from the Handlebars|Mar 2, 2022

    On a trip to Central America several years ago, the group I was with was encouraged to be careful giving money to panhandlers and beggars. A little background. For as dysfunctional as American society is becoming, there are places we are still as a Shangri-la. I remember leaving the airport terminal and being greeted, almost accosted, by children trying to sell what looked like origami from nearby plants. “Only a dollar,” still rings in my memory. One of our group shooed them away like stray dog...

  • Leaving Will Be Hard

    Dan Carlson, Prairie Ponderings|Feb 23, 2022

    Change, even good chance, can be hard. That’s what Karen and I are learning as we prepare to leave Cheyenne County for our new home in Belle Fourche, SD. This reality has been driven home as good friends we’ve made here share the impact we’ve had in their lives over the years, often impact we may not have known about until it was shared. I arrived in Sidney in October of 2004 as I transitioned from a 25-year career in TV and radio to a new position as a writer for Cabela’s. Karen and the kid...

  • Scared? Who? Me!

    Mike Sunderland, Thoughts from a Grey-haired Point of View|Feb 23, 2022

    Warning! This is a true story of a Navy boot camp experience. The language has been toned down to protect the guilty. I stood looking Fear in the face. Fear with a capitol F–E–A-R, complete with a body and personality all it’s horrible own. The name of that particular fear is Water. Looking at it makes me want to run under a hot shower and stay there for the rest of my life. That tower at the deep end of the pool – how high did they say it is? 50 feet? 50 infinite feet above 18 deadly feet of...

  • This Journey Not Traveled Alone

    Forrest Hershberger, View from the Handlebars|Feb 23, 2022

    My wife and I recently had dinner with a collection of people; most we knew, some more than others. There were the conversations like old friends meeting again, and of newcomers gently entering the conversation.. One common thread went through the room: each person has had to confront loss through death. Death is an unfortunate fact of life. Biblically, biologically, and just the random roll of the dice living on this planet -- we all will face it at some point, on our own and when someone...

  • Delta Dawn When The Light Comes On

    Ivy Joy Johnson, The Joy Mission|Feb 23, 2022

    Parables and stories cause us to remember valuable life lessons. Jesus’ Disciples asked, “Why do you speak to them in parables?”. Jesus answered, “… Because seeing they do not see, and hearing they do not hear, nor do they understand. [For if] they understood with their hearts and turned [from wicked ways], I would heal them.” Matthew 13:11-17. All parables are about God the Father, Jesus the Son, the Kingdom of righteousness and you. Stories like my husband, Frank, driving school children in...

  • Straight Talk From Steve

    Steve Erdman, District 47|Feb 23, 2022

    Whenever a bill in the Nebraska State Legislature receives no opposition testimony at its public hearing and the committee members all support the bill, it becomes eligible for the consent calendar. The Speaker of the Legislature is the keeper of the consent calendar. Once the Speaker of the Legislature decides to place a bill on the consent calendar, it gets only 15 minutes of debate on the floor of the Legislature. Today I would like to tell you about four bills of mine that I have requested...

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