Nebraska
Bingham’s global work promotes food security, health protections
Can a lady residing in a rural village develop up to make use of science to advertise international progress in well being, economics and agriculture? Georgina Bingham’s life story exhibits that the reply is sure.
Bingham, a analysis affiliate professor with the College of Nebraska–Lincoln’s Division of Entomology, grew up in a rural English village of solely 90 individuals. However she developed a worldwide sensibility at a younger age, inspired by her want to journey and by the instance of her father, a horticulturalist who traveled extensively to share concepts with different farmers.
As an undergraduate, she developed an agricultural-environmental analysis mission that took her to rural Kenya. The mission, by which she labored with Masaai pastoralists, launched a tutorial profession that over the previous 15 years has concerned collaborative scientific initiatives in Central America, Africa and Southeast Asia.
Bingham has used her experience in insect science, insecticide resistance and meals safety to work on worldwide initiatives with authorities businesses, nonprofits, universities and personal business. One mission has boosted meals storage functionality in Africa — and therefore households’ financial livelihoods and stability — via using hermetic, insect-resistant storage baggage referred to as ZeroFly Airtight baggage. Every modified-atmosphere ZeroFly bag can be utilized for as much as two years and holds about 220 kilos.
Bingham led the event of the luggage, which gained the Good Design Gold Award in 2015, whereas working for the Swiss firm Vestergaard. Vestergaard was a associate group with the Feed the Future initiative, a multi-campus analysis partnership specializing in international meals safety and funded by the U.S. Company for Worldwide Growth. The College of Nebraska–Lincoln is among the initiative’s analysis companions. USAID just lately accredited funding for the mission’s ninth 12 months of operation, enlisting Bingham as its scaling skilled.
Whereas working at Vestergaard, Bingham additionally helped developed small, simply managed, insecticide-treated targets, referred to as Tiny Targets, which have strengthened the battle towards tsetse flies that trigger sleeping illness. That debilitating sickness yearly strikes individuals and animals over giant areas of Africa.
A peer-reviewed examine printed in 2020 concluded that, in a set of African nations, Tiny Targets “contributed to a pointy lower in illness incidence and performed a crucial function in combatting an upsurge in (sleeping illness) instances” from 2016-2017.
“Dr. Bingham joined UNL in 2020 after a powerful profession working internationally for a worldwide humanitarian group, Vestergaard,” mentioned John Ruberson, head of the Division of Entomology at Nebraska. “She was entrusted with multimillion-dollar budgets and produced nice outcomes together with her management and work at Vestergaard, whereas caring deeply for struggling populations. She has introduced those self same expertise to UNL.”
Academic outreach to Nebraska highschool college students can be a spotlight for Bingham. She is among the many Institute of Agriculture and Pure Sources college who assist Lincoln Public Faculties college students find out about meals, power, water and societal techniques via the LPS–CASNR Early STEM Program, which includes these ideas into the curriculum at Lincoln Northeast Excessive College.
Nebraska-focused insect research, together with analysis on secure flies affecting livestock, is one other of Bingham’s scientific pursuits. Working as an entomologist in Nebraska “offers me a beautiful alternative,” she mentioned, “as a result of Nebraska is certainly a frontier for brand spanking new and rising arthropod species and arthropod-borne illness, on account of modifications in local weather.”
Bingham’s “intensive international and human experiences, distinctive disciplinary and mental depth, communication expertise and deep emotional intelligence have added significantly to a wide range of analysis and instructing efforts,” Ruberson mentioned. “She is ready to seize the larger international image with out dropping sight of her personal group and the wants of people.”
By drawing on her intensive experiences and communication expertise, Ruberson mentioned, Bingham “enriches everybody with whom she interacts and catalyzes concepts with knowledgeable and important evaluation.”
In mild of Bingham’s scientific work across the globe, CASNR’s World Engagement program included her as an skilled for its inaugural Sustainable Growth Students collection. Bingham’s webinar presentation, on methods to deal with international starvation and promote sustainable agriculture in creating nations, is on the market on-line.
A key issue spurring international starvation, Bingham mentioned, is the intensive lack of crops and meals on account of bugs, pathogens and weeds — a loss that yearly eliminates a 3rd of world meals manufacturing. Fixing these issues would offer sufficient meals for two billion individuals.
The ZeroFly baggage assist by enabling smallholder famers to keep away from dropping grain that in any other case can be saved within the open and susceptible to bugs and fungal infestation. A specialised formulation of insecticide is utilized to the ZeroFly bag and is launched slowly onto the bag’s floor. A airtight inside liner lies between the insecticide and the saved meals.
Airtight storage baggage normally have meant main positive factors for small-scale producers. In Ghana, producers “have famous (that) not solely did they’ve better-quality grain, however their eggs and broiler chickens did significantly higher on grain that’s stored protected,” Bingham mentioned.
The Feed the Future mission just lately cited the instance of a Ghanian family that started utilizing airtight storage baggage. Over 5 years, the family was in a position to enhance its rooster numbers from 1,000 birds to 50,000.
“It’s at all times fascinating to me to see that smallholder farmers — 500 million of them — are supporting 2 billion individuals,” Bingham mentioned. “That’s sort of unimaginable once you see the situations they’ve, the dearth of inputs they’ve. There’s a lot risk in creating nations to enhance and enhance manufacturing.”
An instance from Kenya illustrates a promising technique to assist small-scale producers, she mentioned. Vestergaard and Saving Grains, a World Meals Program spinout firm, assist smallholders use cellphones to attach with native entrepreneurs who purchase grain from them and retailer it in airtight baggage.
Beforehand, Bingham mentioned, the farmers had no efficient storage functionality and needed to promote their harvest early at low costs. Then, when their very own meals shares have been depleted, they basically had to purchase again their grain at double the worth. Now, the smallholders use the ZeroFly baggage to carry onto their grain for an prolonged interval and make gross sales when the market is favorable.
Bingham’s years of worldwide scientific work on these and different initiatives stem from how her research at Wageningen College within the Netherlands early this century launched her to the a number of challenges smallholder farmers face in creating nations. A family’s possession of a single animal, she discovered, “was the insurance coverage for the household. I couldn’t instantly wrap my head round that as a European with no expertise in creating nations apart from what I noticed on the TV. So this opened my eyes, and I made a decision that I wished to go and work in Africa.”
Bingham was solely 21 when she carried out her fieldwork amongst Masaai herders in Kenya. She mentioned the expertise modified her life fully.
Ever since, she has directed her work to “do one thing that has an influence on these much less lucky than myself. I at all times felt very lucky rising up on a farm and having the ability to go to check and being supported. So I actually simply need to give again.
“I simply need to use what I do know,” she mentioned, “to attempt to make the world a greater place.”
Nebraska
LIVE: Nebraska hospital leaders to highlight critical health care issues, call for policy action
LINCOLN, Neb. (KOLN) – The Nebraska Hospital Association (NHA) and the Nebraska Rural Health Association (NeRHA) will provide an overview of the 2025-26 Roadmap to Strong Rural Health Care during a press conference on Tuesday at 10:30 a.m.
The NHA and NeRHA will be joined by Nebraska hospital leaders and state senators to highlight state and federal issues important to the future of rural health care in the state.
You can watch the news conference when it begins in the video player above.
Rural hospitals make up about 35 percent of all hospitals nationally, and over 68 percent of hospitals in Nebraska, according to a joint press release from NHA and NeRHA. More than 41 percent of those are at risk of closure.
In addition, Nebraska has more rural residents living at least 25 minutes away from an ambulance than all but two other states. About 16 percent of Nebraska mothers must travel at least 30 minutes to find a maternal care provider, about twice the national rate, and more than half of Nebraska’s counties are considered maternity deserts.
NHA and NeRHA said 85 of Nebraska’s rural communities are considered medically underserved areas for primary care services alone. Projections show that Nebraska will experience a workforce shortage of over 5,000 nurses in 2025.
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Copyright 2025 KOLN. All rights reserved.
Nebraska
Lincoln area senators look ahead to 2025 Legislative Session
LINCOLN, Neb. (KOLN) – This Wednesday, Nebraska’s 49 lawmakers will flock to the Nebraska State Capitol to begin the 2025 Legislative Session.
It falls to them to build a biennial budget proposal for the next two years, but already, projections show a roughly $400 million deficit that they need to close.
“We are mandated to pass a balanced budget in the state of Nebraska by the Constitution,” State Sen. Tom Brandt said. “It is going to happen. Will there be pain and suffering? I’m sure, but it will happen on the part of the Legislature.”
Many lawmakers say that means it won’t be a year for bold spending ideas. Instead, they’ll be looking for places to tighten the belt.
“I think working together we’ll be able to mitigate deep cuts on critical human services and key priorities like education,” State Sen. Danielle Conrad said. “Hopefully, we’ll be able to also kind of chart a path together that keeps us on the right path and away from devolving into a divisive session.”
One big difference between this year and last year is time. 2024 was more of a sprint, just 60 days of legislative action. This year, it’s 90 days, dragging lawmakers to the beginning of June and giving them plenty of time to hammer out compromises—so long as there’s an appetite.
And more than a dozen new senators will be sworn in on Wednesday, which some more veteran lawmakers see as a boon.
“My last two years in the legislature have been marked by a lot of tumultuous fights, a lot of culture war issues, things like that,” State Sen. George Dungan, said. “With the new crop of people coming in, I think it gives us an opportunity to kind of hit that reset button and really have a conversation with each about why are we here.”
Every senator 10/11 NOW spoke with on Monday emphasized property taxes, though their approaches varied between targeted relief and more general cuts funded by sales taxes.
Many said they’re greeting the session with hopefulness.
“I think we’ve got an opportunity to make some big changes this year and really dive deep into some of those property tax issues that we spoke about this summer,” State Sen. Carolyn Bosn said.
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Copyright 2025 KOLN. All rights reserved.
Nebraska
Judge affirms former Nebraska State Patrol captain’s firing as another ex-captain files suit
LINCOLN, Neb. (KOLN) – A judge has affirmed the firing of a former captain with the Nebraska State Patrol after he filed suit last year.
Judge Andrew Jacobsen ruled last month that the Nebraska State Patrol had acted appropriately when firing then-Capt. Matthew Sutter on Nov. 11, 2022.
The firing came into legal contention after Sutter filed a lawsuit early last year alleging a toxic workplace and retaliation within the patrol.
In the lawsuit, Sutter’s attorneys list a range of investigations he oversaw following his promotion to captain in 2019. The investigations, which ranged among a reportedly inappropriate relationship, another captain’s alleged bigotry and accusations of misused funds in the Carrier Enforcement Division, largely resulted in critiques of upper management.
As Sutter pressed for action in each of the investigations, the lawsuit alleges management pressed back, eventually denying Sutter a pay raise and launching an investigation into his conduct. The investigation ended with a serious allegation and led to Sutter’s firing in late 2022.
The Nebraska State Patrol accused then-Capt. Sutter of leaking confidential information to the press on several occasions following his promotion. Sutter’s attorneys argued the information he shared had already been made public when he passed it along, and therefore could not be seen as confidential.
Judge Jacobsen, however, disagreed. Sutter was accused of sharing information related to presidential and vice-presidential visits, a barricaded suspect and the arrival of COVID-19 patients in Nebraska. The judge wrote that Sutter had shared the information with a former journalist with KMTV to “win her affections.”
He cited several text messages containing flirtatious language that were often sent alongside relevant information to the visits, barricaded suspect and COVID-19 patients. Judge Jacobsen wrote, “His actions were unprofessional, bad public relations, and very unbecoming of an officer.” He also found that Sutter had misused the state’s network to share inappropriate memes, look for a new job and play in a celebrity dead pool.
The judge concluded that the Nebraska State Patrol had proper reason to conduct an investigation into then-Capt. Sutter and provided him with due process in its disciplinary action. It’s unclear if Sutter plans to appeal the ruling.
Sutter’s lawsuit provides details into another lawsuit filed by Capt. Gerry Krolikowski which was settled late last year. Krolikowski alleged similar retaliation after raising the issue of allegedly misused funding in the Carrier Enforcement Division. Krolikowski, who has served with the Nebraska State Patrol since 1984, raised concerns about the division’s funding being used outside its statutory purview.
Krolikowski’s attorneys alleged his concerns went unheard and eventually resulted in the captain’s reassignment to the Process Improvements Division, a department generally viewed as a place to sideline employees who cross management to “shame” them.
A filing in October showed the State of Nebraska had entered into a settlement agreement with Krolikowski over the matter. The amount he’ll receive is unclear, but the settlement will need to be approved by the Nebraska Legislature in its 2025 session.
Additionally, another lawsuit against the Nebraska State Patrol was filed in late December by former captain Kurt Von Minden. His attorneys allege similar acts of retaliation from management after then-Capt. Von Minden investigated reports of troopers using anti-LGBTQ and racist slurs, sexually harassing and assaulting employees, and collaborating with drug dealers.
Von Minden, who’d been with the patrol since 1998 until his resignation in 2023, pushed management to put several disgraced troopers on the Brady Giglio List. The list organizes law enforcement members who’ve been accused of biased or dishonest conduct so attorneys can more easily examine their testimony in criminal convictions.
Two employees Von Minden investigated eventually resigned from the patrol and went on to new roles at other police stations, according to the lawsuit. His attorneys claim one former sergeant, who allegedly conducted business with a drug dealer, was later hired as the chief for a police department in Iowa.
The lawsuit claims Von Minden pushed for stronger accountability following these investigations and was eventually demoted to sergeant and reassigned to the Liquor Enforcement Division. Von Minden’s attorneys say the move was explicitly retaliatory as it dramatically reduced his oversight and meant he would report to a member of the patrol he had “promoted and mentored.”
Then-Capt. Von Minden resigned from the patrol a short time after his reassignment as he was “unable to tolerate the punitive and retaliatory post-demotion working conditions,” his attorneys wrote. A future court date for Von Minden’s lawsuit has yet to be set.
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Copyright 2025 KOLN. All rights reserved.
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