Connect with us

Nebraska

Blezek Awards Aim to Keep Agricultural Education Teachers in Nebraska

Published

on

Blezek Awards Aim to Keep Agricultural Education Teachers in Nebraska


RECOGNITION …

Twenty teachers received Nebraska Farm Bureau Foundation award

The Dr. Allen G. and Kay L. Blezek Teacher Retention Award recognizes agricultural education teachers’ service and supports their efforts. (Photo: Kateryna Hliznitsova, Unsplash)

LINCOLN, Neb.– The Nebraska Farm Bureau Foundation awarded 20 teachers with funds in support of agricultural education and FFA programs in Nebraska.

Advertisement

“The Dr. Allen G. and Kay L. Blezek Teacher Retention Award is an investment in the future of Nebraska agriculture,” said Megahn Schafer, executive director of the Nebraska Farm Bureau Foundation. “We are very proud to support these teachers as they get established in their classrooms and communities. The return on investment is clear as the number of schools that offer agricultural education and FFA grows, and alumni go on to contribute to Nebraska’s number one industry.”

Recipients are all agricultural education teachers in their first through fifth year of teaching. Teachers are eligible for increasing awards over time. As the teachers’ impact grows in the classroom, in their FFA chapters, and in their communities each year, the award recognizes their service and supports their efforts. A longtime program of the Nebraska Farm Bureau Foundation, the award was renamed in recognition of an estate gift from Dr. Allen Blezek. Dr. Blezek was an agricultural education teacher, the first director of the Nebraska LEAD program, and a founding member of the Nebraska Farm Bureau Foundation board of directors.

The 20 recipients of the scholarships are Nickolas Birdsley, Sarpy County; Danie Brandl, Platte County; Kaydie Brandl, Platte County; Kiley Codner, Hall County; Amanda Hafer, Madison County; Hunter Hill, Franklin County; Toriann Holly, Jefferson County; Cara Holtorf, Saline County; Karlee Johnson, Wayne County; Hallett Moomey, Buffalo County; Katie Nolles, Holt County; Jocelyn Pohl, Morrill County; Christy Schuler, Lancaster County; Kelsey Schulte, Nance County; Miranda Segner, Seward County; Kelsey Steinkraus, Chase County; Alex Stocker, Merrick County; Aurora Urwiler, Cedar County; and Payden Woodruff, Hall County.

The mission of the Nebraska Farm Bureau Foundation is to engage youth, educators, and the general public to promote an understanding of the vital importance of agriculture in the lives of all Nebraskans. The Nebraska Farm Bureau Foundation is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit. For more information about the Nebraska Farm Bureau Foundation, visit www.nefbfoundation.org.

— Nebraska Farm Bureau Foundation

Advertisement



Source link

Nebraska

Starting fires helped contain a Nebraska wildfire — and ignited another – Flatwater Free Press

Published

on

Starting fires helped contain a Nebraska wildfire — and ignited another – Flatwater Free Press


This story is made possible through a partnership between Flatwater Free Press and Grist, a nonprofit environmental media organization.

As the fast-moving blaze rolled toward Fire Chief Jason Schneider’s district in Cozad, he and his crew faced a literal uphill battle.

The Cottonwood Fire was tearing through the Loess Canyons, an area defined by steep slopes, narrow valleys, few roads and pockets of invasive eastern red cedar trees, which can throw embers and ash — and even explode — when they burn.

Advertisement

“You think you would have it put out, and you keep on moving north, and you’d look back south and it’s just going again behind you,” Schneider said.

But the situation started to improve when they connected with a prescribed burn group. They had equipment and showed Schneider and his volunteer crew how to use fire to contain the wildfire.

“It would have burned a lot more if they hadn’t showed up and helped us get it stopped where we did,” Schneider said.