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Agricultural, education senators push back on some of Gov. Jim Pillen’s property tax reforms • Nebraska Examiner

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Agricultural, education senators push back on some of Gov. Jim Pillen’s property tax reforms • Nebraska Examiner


LINCOLN — Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen is facing pushback for some of his property tax reform ideas from some of his closest agricultural allies in the Legislature. He may need their support to pass reforms during a special session expected this month.

Pillen has signaled he will bring lawmakers back to Lincoln beginning July 25 to enact property tax reforms. Among his ideas is the suggestion to remove sales tax exemptions currently in place for agricultural and manufacturing inputs like seeds, fertilizer, chemicals or other materials used in producing final, taxable products. He has discussed taxing both at lower sales tax rates than other goods at 2 cents per dollar purchase, for example, rather than a broader rate of 5.5 cents per dollar on most goods or services.

Farm Bureau President Mark McHargue announces the group’s endorsement Tuesday of then-University of Nebraska Regent Jim Pillen’s 2022 campaign for governor. (Aaron Sanderford/Nebraska Examiner)

He’s said doing so could save producers money if the state does as he has also suggested and takes on a majority of local K-12 funding, which could reduce some property tax bills by up to 60%.

But some farmers in the Legislature who supported Pillen’s property tax relief proposals during the spring legislative session said they are opposed to removing sales tax exemptions on ag inputs.

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Other senators Pillen could need to get to 33 votes for his property tax ideas have also questioned his “living and breathing” plan for not being finalized or released in writing. Some lawmakers have openly said they’ll craft their own proposals.

Together, the fracturing of Nebraska’s legislative branch could complicate, if not jeopardize, Pillen’s path to find enough support to overcome a likely filibuster from opponents.

A potential ‘double whammy’

One of Pillen’s closest allies, the Nebraska Farm Bureau, is one such force seeking to influence lawmakers with a new email campaign before a special session begins. The email argues that taxing inputs could harm farm families and increase prices for producers and consumers.

The Farm Bureau’s support of Pillen’s 2022 campaign for governor helped propel the veterinarian and hog farmer into the governor’s office.

“Taxing inputs would only put Nebraska farmers at a major competitive disadvantage compared to other states that don’t,” the email states.

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State Sen. Teresa Ibach of Sumner. March 3, 2023. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska News Service)

State Sen. Teresa Ibach, a farmer and rancher from Sumner, expressed similar concerns that eliminating the exemptions on inputs, even at a lower rate, could raise taxes over time. She said she has been meeting closely with the Farm Bureau to be on the same page of protecting agriculture.

“I think the one thing we all agree on is that property taxes are a burden, and the challenge is going to be finding 33 of us who can agree on a path forward,” Ibach said.

After putting a pencil to how input taxes would impact her operation, Ibach said, she found she’d pay about the same amount of taxes, if not more, in sales taxes instead.

Ibach said all Nebraskans must be considered and benefit when lawmakers consider eventual property tax relief proposals. She pointed to young farmers and ranchers renting farmland who might not benefit from the reductions.

“Once we start taxing inputs and rent doesn’t come down, then they’ve got a double whammy and we’re just discouraging young folks from even returning to the farming operation,” Ibach said.

Rented farmland and border bleed

State Sens. Tom Brandt of Plymouth and Myron Dorn of Adams, from left. April 20, 2023. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska News Service)

State Sens. Tom Brandt and Myron Dorn, farmers from Plymouth and Adams, respectively, said the “double whammy” is because most Nebraska farmers, particularly beginning farmers, work on rented ground. Unless savings are passed on, they said, producers might pay more in taxes.

“The father will probably pass it on to the son, but if I’m renting to my neighbor, will I pass that on? Especially if I’m an out-of-state property owner, will I pass that on? That’s a good question,” Dorn said as examples.

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“That plan would work very well for older farmers like myself. … That’s the fallacy in that one unique, particular argument,” Brandt said.

Brandt cautioned that some Nebraska consumers might choose to spend their tax dollars in one of Nebraska’s six neighboring states, including taxpayers in his district, which borders Kansas.

Farmers, for example, might choose to travel south to purchase needed but cheaper supplies, like net wrap, the plastic wrap used in baling hay, Brandt said. If exemptions are removed, he argued it should be “meaningful” ones not as easily affected by border crossings. He said that includes memberships or admissions to local nationally accredited zoos, like Omaha’s Henry Doorly Zoo and Aquarium, which currently aren’t taxed.

“What are you going to do?” he asked. “Go across to Council Bluffs?”

State Sen. Julie Slama of Dunbar on April 18, 2024. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska Examiner)

Agricultural and manufacturing inputs make up the majority of tax revenue not collected because of sales tax exemptions. In 2022, the Nebraska Department of Revenue estimated the exemptions saved taxpayers about $1.7 billion that would have otherwise been taxed for manufacturing components and another $2.1 billion for a variety of agricultural exemptions. 

In contrast, taxpayers saved about $1.5 million in zoo memberships and admissions in 2022.

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State Sen. Julie Slama of Dunbar, who represents southeast Nebraska, said she is also opposed to taxing inputs and passed the 2022 legislation to exempt net wrap from sales taxes.

Local control of K-12 schools

State Sen. Dave Murman, a farmer from Glenvil, said he is “definitely opposed” to taxing “true inputs,” such as seeds, chemicals and fertilizers, but said it’s different for physical property like machinery and equipment.

“It’s something to at least consider,” Murman said.

State Sen. Dave Murman of Glenvil, right, speaks with State Sen. Kathleen Kauth of Omaha on Dec. 7, 2023. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska Examiner)

Murman said his understanding of Pillen’s K-12 funding proposal is that the state would assume spending of operational expenses, which are the majority of local school property taxes. He said school boards would retain taxing authority for bonds or other special tax rates.

“As long as the local school districts can still tax for those things, I think it’s something to at least look into,” Murman, a former school board member himself, said. “I am a big believer in local control, but with those things still remaining there, there’s still a lot of local control in that way.”

But should Pillen move ahead with the state taking on the entire property-tax funded portion of K-12 funding, as he has said at some events, it could cost him a key moderate vote from State Sen. Lynne Walz of Fremont, a former teacher and past Education Committee chair.

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“I am not a fan,” Walz said, suggesting it could erode local control.

Walz supported the Pillen-backed tax proposal in the spring but said Pillen should look toward a longer term plan, such as over three to five years. She said the limitations of the governor’s funding idea could prevent districts from creating opportunities their communities want.

State Sen. Lynne Walz of Fremont on April 5, 2024. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska Examiner)

As an example, Fremont Public Schools will soon open a career and technical education center, which Walz said likely wouldn’t have been funded by the state.

“I see more of a cookie-cutter type of school system if we go to the government funding our schools and just no opportunity for local control and the ability to allow communities to grow their schools,” Walz said.

‘The math has to math to me’

Walz and State Sens. Danielle Conrad of Lincoln and Justin Wayne of Omaha, members of the Education Committee, said the “how” of Pillen’s school funding idea is hard to imagine.

The state has 244 school districts, as well as the Learning Community of Douglas and Sarpy Counties, for example, which could require school officials to ask the Legislature’s 49 members each year if they need more state revenue.

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“It’s going to be a mess,” Walz said. “I can’t imagine having to figure that out on the floor.”

State Sen. Jana Hughes of Seward, a former school board member, has said finding sustainable funds seems like a big task, but she’s hoping for some progress.

“If we can find an extra $1 billion this special session I will be very pleased,” Hughes said.

Conrad, has the second longest tenure in the Legislature and previously served eight years on the Appropriations Committee. In times of hardship, she noted, the state cut aid to municipalities and counties, so it’s hard to say what would happen to schools under Pillen’s idea.

State Sen. Terrell McKinney of Omaha on July 31, 2023. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska Examiner)

State Sen. Terrell McKinney of Omaha, a former Education Committee member, said Pillen’s funding idea is interesting, but he also asked what would happen in times of financial crisis.

Wayne, a former school board member, said some rural senators already question how much education funding goes to schools in Omaha and Lincoln, and Pillen’s idea would include sending more state dollars to districts in those cities.

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He noted some school districts are also in high poverty and require more resources as a result.

“The math has to math to me, and right now, it doesn’t,” Wayne said. “I’ve been working on this for seven years and still haven’t got the math to work the way it needs to.”

Contingent support

Wayne and McKinney said they will be looking at new revenue streams this summer, including legalizing and taxing recreational and medical marijuana.

McKinney said he’ll look at the state’s criminal justice system, which he argued is leading to negative returns, while Wayne suggested allowing punitive damages in lawsuits could increase school funding. Wayne said he will also look at how the state might be able to again fund county jails.

“There’s things that he could do, but it takes courage and political will, and he’s got to be willing to step up,” Wayne said of Pillen.

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State Sen. Justin Wayne of Omaha on Feb. 22, 2024. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska Examiner)

But for Wayne “to even come close to consider a property tax plan,” he reiterated that Pillen would need to expand the scope of the special session to allow legislation to permit lawsuits against political subdivisions for negligence in certain cases of child abuse or child sexual assault. Pillen vetoed such a proposal in April.

“I think if we’re going to look out for taxpayers, we also got to look out for the taxpayers who are victims of our government’s negligence, particularly child sexual assault,” Wayne continued.

‘Unserious at best and dangerous at worst’

Conrad said she is deeply concerned that Pillen has employed a strategy that could undercut the likelihood of a productive and successful special session. She said it’s “bewildering” to suggest lawmakers can rewrite the state’s tax code and school funding formula in less than a month with no clear plan or coalition.

Pillen has been meeting with a group of nearly 20 lawmakers regularly through the summer, which includes Murman and Ibach. The governor will ultimately decide the scope of a special session, but that hasn’t stopped groups of lawmakers from beginning to draft their own proposals ahead of a special session.

“At one time I was under the perception that, ‘Oh, hey, we’re going to have a bill from the governor and let’s go vote on that and see,’” Dorn said. “No, we’re going to have a lot of proposals.”

State Sen. Danielle Conrad of Lincoln questions State Sen. Dave Murman of Glenvil during an Education Committee hearing on July 31, 2023. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska Examiner)

Slama has targeted Pillen’s lack of a concrete plan and said she’ll be drafting her own.

“I’m unapologetically a fiscal conservative,” Slama wrote Friday on X, formerly Twitter. “That’s why I oppose Pillen’s plan to raise taxes on middle-class Nebraskans without real state spending cuts. … I’m going to stand up for what’s right — somebody’s got to.”

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Among other ideas for offsetting property taxes, which Pillen has said he’s open to, are to increase taxes on vaping products, from Hughes, and remove many unfunded mandates on local governments, from State Sen. Carol Blood of Bellevue and more.

Conrad said the Legislature marches toward a possibly “perilous” special session, which will come after Pillen used his town halls to “barn storm the state and trumpet his political failures,” while also belittling the Legislature.

“At this juncture, my assessment of the governor’s political strategy is that this is unserious at best and dangerous at worst,” Conrad said. “It is unrealistic and wrong to promise a significant tax cut without a plan.”



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Cyclospora outbreak reaches Nebraska as health officials investigate source

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Cyclospora outbreak reaches Nebraska as health officials investigate source


A nationwide outbreak of the parasite Cyclospora has reached Nebraska, according to health experts at CHI Health.

While only a handful of cases have been identified in the state, doctors say the true number of infections may be higher because many people recover at home without being tested.

Cyclospora is a microscopic parasite that can contaminate food and cause gastrointestinal illness. Health officials are still investigating the source of the current outbreak and have not identified a specific food item responsible.

Previous Cyclospora outbreaks have been linked to fresh produce, including pre-cut salad mixes, cilantro, basil, raspberries, snow peas and green onions.

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Dr. Renuga Vivekanandan with CHI Health says the parasite can be difficult to remove because it can survive in small, porous areas of some produce.

“Even though you’re washing it, they can remain there,” Vivekanandan said. “Ideally, if you buy produce whole, you can wash it thoroughly yourself.”

Symptoms of Cyclospora typically appear about seven days after exposure but can take up to two weeks, making it difficult for investigators to determine where someone was infected.

Symptoms can include prolonged diarrhea, fatigue, dehydration, muscle weakness and stomach discomfort.

Doctors say most people recover without hospitalization, but young children, older adults and people with weakened immune systems face a higher risk of complications.

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Unlike some stomach illnesses, Cyclospora can be treated with antibiotics. Health experts say the most common treatment is trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, also known as Bactrim.

Doctors recommend contacting a healthcare provider if symptoms do not improve and say staying hydrated is especially important.

Health experts say Cyclospora typically does not spread easily from person to person.

“If somebody else in your household has this, you’re not necessarily going to get it,” said Dr. Dave Quinby, an infectious disease physician with CHI Health. “Handwashing is always good, but this tends not to go person to person well at all.”

Until investigators identify the source of the outbreak, doctors recommend buying whole produce when possible, washing fruits and vegetables thoroughly and cooking foods when appropriate.

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According to the CDC, more than 843 confirmed cases and approximately 1,500 probable cases have been reported nationwide. Eighty-six people have been hospitalized, and no deaths have been reported.



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Nebraska Commit Trae Taylor Becomes Consensus No. 1 Quarterback in the 2027 Class

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Nebraska Commit Trae Taylor Becomes Consensus No. 1 Quarterback in the 2027 Class


The recruiting industry has spoken, and Nebraska quarterback commit Trae Taylor has officially become the consensus No. 1 signal-caller in the 2027 recruiting class.

On Monday, Rivals updated its national rankings, elevating Taylor from a high four-star prospect ranked No. 71 nationally to a five-star recruit ranked No. 17 overall, a jump of 54 spots. The rise comes after an impressive stretch for the Chicago native, who is set to quarterback Millard South (NE) this fall.

Here’s what Taylor’s five-star status means for the Big Red, including what he did to reach this point.

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Becoming a Five-Star

Taylor first earned a five-star rating from 247Sports shortly after being named the Elite 11 MVP following an impressive performance at the prestigious quarterback competition in May. Competing against 20 of the nation’s top signal-callers, Nebraska’s verbal pledge proved to be the best of the group.

According to 247Sports, Taylor is the nation’s No. 8 overall prospect and the No. 1 quarterback in the 2027 class. By earning MVP honors, he joined an impressive list of QBs that includes former Heisman Trophy winner Caleb Williams, 2025 Heisman finalist Julian Sayin, and several other top quarterbacks who have won the award over the years.

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2027 four-star quarterback Trae Taylor with Nebraska football coach Matt Rhule before the 2024 Rutgers game. | @Qb6Trae on X

Taylor’s Recruitment

Taylor committed to Nebraska on May 1, 2025, and his stock has only continued to rise since then. At the time, he was regarded as a four-star prospect, but the Huskers believed they had secured a commitment from one of the nation’s top quarterbacks.

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To his credit, he became just that. He followed that decision with a junior season in which he totaled more than 4,200 all-purpose yards and 50 touchdowns, cementing himself as one of the country’s most electrifying recruits heading into his senior year.

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Despite interest from several of the nation’s top programs, Taylor has remained committed to NU. He reinforced that commitment by moving to the state ahead of his senior season, and his leadership has played a significant role in helping the Huskers assemble one of the top 2027 recruiting classes in the country.

Nebraska’s 2027 Recruiting Class

Nebraska’s 2027 recruiting class currently ranks No. 18 nationally and sixth in the Big Ten according to Rivals. Per 247Sports, however, the Huskers sit at No. 16 nationally, trailing only Ohio State and Oregon within the conference.

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NU also holds commitments from four top-100 overall prospects in the cycle, its most since the 2005 recruiting class. Taylor is joined by four-star safety Tory Pittman III, four-star interior offensive lineman Jordan Agbanoma, and four-star wide receiver Khalil Taylor in that group.

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Currently, the Big Red hold commitments from 22 prospects in the 2027 class. While Taylor is the only five-star recruit, nine of Nebraska’s commits are currently regarded as blue-chip prospects.

Nebraska Commits in 2027 Cycle:

  1. Trae Taylor- Quarterback (★★★★★) 
  2. Tory Pittman III- Safety ★★★★)
  3. Jordan Agbanoma- Interior Offensive Line (★★★★)
  4. Corey Hadley Jr.- Safety (★★★★)
  5. Timi Aliu- Offensive Tackle (★★★★)
  6. Bryce Williams- Cornerback (★★★★)
  7. Nehemiah Ombati- Defensive Line (★★★★)
  8. Jailen Hill- Cornerback (★★★★)
  9. Amir Brown- Running Back (★★★★)
  10. Matt Erickson- Offensive Tackle (★★★)
  11. Barrett Kitrell- Interior Offensive Line (★★★)
  12. Jayden Travers- Defensive Line (★★★)
  13. KD Jones- Interior Offensive Line (★★★)
  14. Antayvious Ellis- Wide Receiver (★★★)
  15. Brennan Drummond- Safety (★★★)
  16. Joey Hunter- Tight End (★★★)
  17. Eli Harris- Linebacker (★★★)
  18. Caleb Green- Linebacker (★★★)
  19. Errol Demontagnac- Defensive Line (★★★)
  20. Ma’atoe Moe- EDGE (★★★)
  21. Justyn Lindsay- Wide Receiver (★★★)

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Kenny Larabee, KLIN

What Taylor’s Bump Means for the Huskers

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By now, every program in the country knows who Taylor is and what he could eventually become. For Nebraska, the task now shifts from recruiting him to proving it can develop him into an NFL quarterback over the next several years. For now, Taylor remains locked in, but signing day is still months away.

The 2026 season means significantly more that getting to a certain number of wins. For Matt Rhule’s staff, though, the pressure should be viewed as a privilege. They’ll need to prove they can develop the talent they already have while also winning football games. It’s as simple as that.

NU’s current staff already had one opportunity with a five-star QB, but that partnership ended after just two years. Taylor represents an opportunity to flip the script. This time, the Huskers will need to maximize it by keeping him in Lincoln, developing him into an NFL-caliber signal-caller, and seeing him finish what he starts, all while wearing the scarlet and cream.

Plenty of quarterbacks have found success while playing football for the Big Red. Plain and simple, Taylor needs to become the next one. Rhule’s staff seems set on seeing that become true. Now, fans will have the opportunity to watch it unfold.

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Stay up to date on all things Huskers by bookmarking Nebraska Cornhuskers On SI, subscribing to HuskerMax on YouTube, and visiting HuskerMax.com daily.

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Shawn Eichorst’s Nebraska tenure shows his Badgers return is disastrous for Luke Fickell

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Shawn Eichorst’s Nebraska tenure shows his Badgers return is disastrous for Luke Fickell


While Nebraska football fans mostly laughed at Wisconsin hiring Shawn Eichorst as their new AD, Badgers fans seem to be quite happy with the move. However, if the new athletic director’s tenure in Wisconsin echoes at least his early run in Lincoln, then Luke Fickell should know that he’s about to be shown the door, no matter what the 2026 season looks like.

One of the first things Eichorst did when he took over the program at NU was boot then-Husker head coach Bo Pelini. He did that despite the fact that Pelini was winning 9 or 10 games a season and was putting together campaigns better than any that have come since his firing.

The former Nebraska AD fired Pelini after he led his team to an emotional win over the Iowa Hawkeyes, with most of the coaches and players celebrating and seemingly poised to carry the momentum into bowl season and then the 2015 season. Eichorst had other ideas, essentially saying that beating the Hawkeyes simply wasn’t that impressive.

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“In the final analysis,” he said at the time, “I had to evaluate where Iowa was.”

Shawn Eichorst’s Nebraska football tenure should worry Luke Fickell

Those words have stung Nebraska plenty since he uttered them, since Kirk Ferentz’s program has been inarguably better than the Huskers under Mike Riley, Scott Frost and Matt Rhule.

Certainly, Wisconsin fans should take that as a cautionary tale, not just because the AD overestimated where the Nebraska program would go, but also because he wasn’t very good at analyzing how to get them where he wanted them. But it’s even more a cautionary tale for Badgers’ head coach Luke Fickell.

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Shawn Eichorst was essentially brought in as a clean-sweep artist in football. When he was hired, it’s clear that Pelini’s career in Lincoln was about to come to an end, unless he took the Cornhuskers on a miracle run.

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The 37-34 overtime win over Iowa meant that the Huskers once again went 9-3. Two of the three losses were by five points or less. The only blowout loss of Pelini’s final season was to Wisconsin, 59-24. And yet, he was canned just two days after he finished another objectively successful season.

If Eichorst was willing (and some would say eager) to fire Pelini in that situation, is there any doubt he’s exactly as willing (and eager) to fire Luke Fickell after the 2026 season, unless he has a miracle run?

Fickell hasn’t been nearly as successful at Wisconsin as Pelini was at Nebraska. Back-to-back losing seasons put him at 17-21 in his career. He’d have to go on a 50-6 run to equal Pelini’s time in Lincoln.

Of course, it’s possible that Wisconsin fans are salivating at the idea of their new AD firing their rather mediocre head coach. The company line is they like that a former lieutenant to the longtime athletic director under Barry Alvarez is back and ready to bring the program back to glory days.

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But is part of that march back to glory days expected to include a new head coach for the 2027 season? Put it this way, it wouldn’t be out of line for Luke Fickell to start putting out feelers to G6 programs this fall in case he has to update his resume quickly come December.

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