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'Defender of Downtrodden' keeps voters guessing as deadline nears to file for 2024 election | Nebraska Examiner

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'Defender of Downtrodden' keeps voters guessing as deadline nears to file for 2024 election | Nebraska Examiner


LINCOLN — The self-proclaimed “Defender of the Downtrodden” is keeping voters guessing about whether he might seek to reclaim his North Omaha seat in the Nebraska Legislature.

In a recent interview with the Examiner, former State Sen. Ernie Chambers — the longest serving legislator in state history — said he’s “thinking about” running against incumbent Sen. Terrell McKinney.

‘Thinking’ different than ‘planning’

But Chambers, now 86, added that thinking about it is “different than planning or intending to.”

Former Nebraska State Sen. Ernie Chambers during a news conference in South Omaha on June 28, 2023. (CIndy Gonzalez/Nebraska Examiner)

The final deadline to file as a candidate for the Nebraska Legislature is March 1 at 5 p.m.

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The filing deadline for incumbents came and went on Thursday with one big surprise: State Sen. Julie Slama of Dunbar declined to seek another term, setting off a storm of speculation about who might seek her seat in southeast Nebraska.

Sixteen of the 25 seats up for election in 2024 are “open” seats — seats lacking an incumbent — and four other races feature appointees making their first run to retain their post. Appointees, as history has shown, aren’t a shoo-in for re-election.

Big turnover coming

So a big turnover is ahead for the 49-seat, nonpartisan Unicameral.

As of Friday, only one legislative district in the state lacked a candidate: Fremont’s District 15, where two-term Sen. Lynne Walz is barred from running again due to term limits.

One remaining mystery as the deadline looms is whether Chambers — who served 46 years in the Unicameral — might seek a return to the Legislature, where he often dominated floor debate and listed his occupation as “Defender of the Downtrodden.”

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Chambers has “returned” once before, reclaiming his seat in 2012 after being term-limited in 2008.

‘People won’t let me be’

After leaving office in 2021 — again, due to term limits — the veteran senator said he’d consider running again in 2024 if his health was good and his mind was “clear.”

Chambers said both of those boxes are checked, but “people won’t let me be.”

He said that those people believe he could block some of the “bad things” that have happened in recent sessions, and that he has a “magic wand” to do that.

“But there’s only so much one person can do,” Chambers said. “Even Jesus would end up on the cross.”

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Still, he described what’s been coming out of Lincoln as “crazy” and “pathetic.”

“It’s like a throwback to all those years ago when you had nutty people bringing backward stuff,” Chambers said.

Yet, the former senator said, it’s hard to imagine driving back and forth to Lincoln, amid the cold, snow and slush of winter, to serve again.

“To be completely honest, I’m thinking about it, but I can’t say really say if I’ll do it,” Chambers said.

Here are the candidates who have filed as of Friday. Incumbents noted with *:

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District 1

Mike Powers of Palmyra. A former school board member, he ran unsuccessfully for the Legislature in 2000, 2004 and in 2020.

District 3

Ben “Felix” Ungerman of Papillion. A retired Air Force colonel, he serves as deputy chief of staff for U.S. Rep. Don Bacon.

District 5

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Tim Benak of Omaha. A 10-year veteran of the Omaha Fire Department as well as an adjunct instructor at the University of Nebraska at Omaha. 

Flint Harkness of Omaha. He serves as a resource teacher for special education.

Margo Juarez of Omaha. A member of the Omaha School Board, she is a retired federal tax examiner. 

Gilbert Ayala of Omaha. He ran unsuccessfully for the seat in 2016 and 2020, and for Omaha City Council in 2021.

District 7

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Dunixi Guereca of Omaha. He is the executive director of Stand for Schools, which supports public schools and opposes school choice laws. 

Christopher Geary of Omaha. A martial arts instructor/studio owner and former Marine, he ran unsuccessfully for Omaha mayor in 2017 and the Nebraska Legislature in 2012.

District 9

*John Cavanaugh of Omaha. A lawyer and member of a widely known political family.

Julia Palzer of Omaha. Also a lawyer, she previously served as dean of admissions at Creighton University School of Law.

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District 11

* Terrell McKinney of Omaha. A law student at Creighton School of Law.

District 13

Tracy Hightower Henne of Omaha. A lawyer who serves as executive director of the Nebraska Innocence Project.

District 15

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None

District 17

Glen Meyer of Pender. Chairman of the Thurston County Board, he has farmed and worked as a sales manager for a seed company. 

District 19

*Rob Dover of Norfolk. Real estate manager/owner of a real estate firm. He was appointed to the Legislature in July 2022 by then-Gov. Pete Ricketts.

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 Jeanne Reigle of Madison. A farmer, she is a member of the governing board of the Northeast Community College. 

District 21

*Beau Ballard of Lincoln. A small-business owner, he was appointed to the Legislature in December 2022 by then-Gov. Ricketts.

Seth Derner of Lincoln. He is co-founder of a business that designs instructional programs, curriculum and online learning modules. 

District 23

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 Jacob Wolff of Colon. A Navy veteran who recently moved into the district after living in Omaha. 

Dennis Fujan of Prague. A farmer and a Navy veteran, he is a past president of the Nebraska Soybean Association.

Alan Zavodny of David City. A farmer and former David City mayor. 

Jared Storm of David City. A small-business owner and pilot.

Allie French of Prague. The co-owner of a bait shop and head of Nebraskans Against Government Overreach.

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District 25

*Carolyn Bosn of Lincoln. A former county prosecutor, she was appointed to the Legislature in April by Gov. Jim Pillen.

Nicki Behmer Popp of Lincoln. A small-business owner, Realtor and member of the Lincoln Airport Authority.

Maher Aurang Zeb of Lincoln. A small business owner, he ran unsuccessfully for the Lincoln City Council in 2021 and the Lincoln Airport Authority in 2019.

District 27

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Jason Prokop of Lincoln. The director of an early childhood care and education nonprofit, he once served as an adviser to then-U.S. Sen. Ben Nelson.

District 29

*Eliot Bostar of Lincoln. The executive director of the Nebraska Conservation Voters and Conservation Nebraska.

Phil Bruce of Lincoln. A cybersecurity analyst who launched a nonprofit that works on community building. 

District 31

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*Kathleen Kauth of Omaha. A professional mediator, she was appointed to the Legislature in June 2022 by then-Gov. Ricketts.

Mary Ann Folchert of Omaha. A former teacher. 

District 33

Michelle Smith of Hastings. A mental health practitioner.

Dan Lonowski of Hastings. An Army veteran and retired teacher, now a manager for a substance and alcohol abuse prevention program.

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Paul Hamelink of Hastings. A former member of the Hastings City Council and owner of a cigar lounge.

District 35

*Ray Aguilar of Grand Island. The retired owner of a janitorial service, he served in the Legislature from 1999 to 2008, then was re-elected to the post in 2020.

Dan Quick of Grand Island. A former state senator, who has served as president of a labor union, he was defeated for re-election in 2020 by Aguilar.

District 37

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 Stanley Clouse of Kearney. The mayor of Kearney, he is an account manager for Nebraska Public Power District.  

Lana Peister of Kearney. A nurse and small business partner. 

District 39

Tony Sorrentino of Omaha. A lawyer and certified public accountant, he is president/founder of a firm that helps health plans comply with federal law. Sorrentino ran unsuccessfully for the Legislature in 2006.

Allison Heimes of Omaha. A lawyer, she ran unsuccessfully for the Legislature in 2020. 

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District 41

Ethan Clark of Ord. He works in marketing for an agriculture implement company.

Nadine Diane Bane of Scotia. A retiree with experience in farming, nursing and trucking.

Daniel McKeon of Amherst. An Army National Guard veteran, he works as an agronomy consultant.

District 43

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Tanya Storer of Whitman. A rancher and former member of the Cherry County Board, she ran unsuccessfully for the Legislature in 2020. 

Tony Tangwall of Whitney. A rancher and senior pastor at his church.

District 45

*Rita Sanders of Bellevue. A former mayor of Bellevue and a commercial real estate developer.

Sarah Centineo of Bellevue. A nurse and attorney, she is a member of the Bellevue School Board.

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District 47

Paul Strommen of Sidney. A member of the Sidney City Council and the Nebraska Oil and Gas Commission, he is an executive with an ethanol plant. 

Larry Bolinger of Alliance. A property manager and Air Force veteran, he ran unsuccessfully for Nebraska attorney general in 2022 and for U.S. Congress in 2018 and 2020. 

District 49

*Jen Day of Omaha. A small-business owner and fitness coach.

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Caleb Muhs, Omaha. A financial consultant, he has degrees in law and finance.

Bob Anderson of Papillion. An Air Force veteran, he and his wife own child care businesses, and he formed a nonprofit geared toward defense-related research. 

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Prairie Corridor project moves forward with land purchase near Pioneers Park

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Prairie Corridor project moves forward with land purchase near Pioneers Park


With less than 1% of Nebraska’s native tallgrass prairie remaining, Lincoln officials say a newly acquired tract of land could help preserve a disappearing part of the state’s landscape while expanding outdoor recreation opportunities for future generations.

Mayor Leirion Gaylor Baird and city leaders announced the purchase of nearly 100 acres southwest of Pioneers Park for $924,630 through a partnership involving the City of Lincoln, the Lower Platte South Natural Resources District, and Solidago Conservancy.

The acquisition advances the Prairie Corridor on Haines Branch project, a long-term effort to establish a continuous conservation and recreation corridor stretching from Pioneers Park Nature Center in Lincoln to the Spring Creek Prairie Audubon Center near Denton.

Mayor Leirion Gaylor Baird said the project will provide additional opportunities for residents and visitors to experience Nebraska’s prairie landscape while protecting natural resources.

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“Advancing the Prairie Corridor, we create more opportunities for residents and visitors to hike, bike, explore nature, and experience the beautiful landscape that defines our region,” Gaylor Baird said. “We protect vital natural resources that improve water quality and help reduce flood risk downstream, and we preserve an important part of Nebraska’s natural heritage for future generations.”

The newly acquired Prairie Corridor Link property is intended to help connect Pioneers Park Nature Center and Spring Creek Prairie Audubon Center through a continuous protected prairie and trail system.

Plans for the Prairie Corridor include restoring over 5,000 acres of prairie lands (~2,000 acres of tallgrass prairie, and ~3,400 acres of native prairie) and constructing a 14.5-mile multiuse trail that will connect to Lincoln’s existing trail network.

“This property is a piece of a long-term vision to connect Pioneers Park Nature Center and Spring Creek Prairie Audubon Center through a continuous corridor, protected prairie, and trail,” Gaylor Baird said.

Parks and Recreation Director Maggie Stuckey-Ross said approximately over a majority of the Prairie Corridor Trail project has now been secured.

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“Once complete, the corridor will include a continuous 7,400-acre passage of tallgrass prairie and a 14.5-mile multiuse trail, and in just nine years, nearly 70% of the Prairie Corridor trail corridor has been secured,” Stuckey-Ross said.

Project leaders say the Prairie Corridor has the potential to become a destination for hikers, cyclists, students, and nature enthusiasts from across Nebraska while helping preserve one of the state’s rarest ecosystems for future generations.

More information about the Prairie Corridor on Haines Branch is available at PrairieCorridor.org.



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Underground Railroad site reopens after 7-year closure in Nebraska City

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Underground Railroad site reopens after 7-year closure in Nebraska City


NEBRASKA CITY, Neb. (KOLN) – A piece of Underground Railroad history is reopening on Juneteenth after severe flooding forced it to close seven years ago.

The Mayhew Cabin offered shelter to people escaping slavery before the Civil War. Visitors can now walk through the same doors they did.

Family history connects to cabin

Darryl Hogan, president of the Mayhew Cabin Foundation, shares how his family escaped slavery in 1859.

“There was a slaveholder who held my third great-grandmother and a few other of the escaped slaves who had passed away, and they were going to be sold as property,” Hogan said from Canada. “So it was almost, in either a death sentence or a worse imprisonment than they had already had.”

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The Mayhew family and abolitionist John Brown offered strangers a chance for freedom.

“En route, one of the enslaved people was pregnant and gave birth. So they are affectionately known as the 12 who passed through here,” said Doug Kreifels, board treasurer.

Cabin’s history dates to 1855

The Mayhew Cabin is one of Nebraska’s oldest structures, built in 1855 as the home of Allen B. Mayhew and his wife Barbara Ann. Barbara’s brother, John Kagi, lived there briefly as well.

Kagi helped abolitionist John Brown lead the enslaved people from Missouri to the cabin, as they escaped to Canada.

Flood damage closed site for seven years

Kreifels grew up learning about the cabin’s history.

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“I remember when I went through that cabin and that cave and what an impact it had on me,” he said.

A flood in 2019 closed the site for seven years.

“And not only did it reach… as high as this overfill. I mean, it came up over the bank and flooded into the museum as well and caused some damage there,” Kreifels said.

Community effort restores cabin

The Mayhew Cabin Foundation restructured its board and used community grants to recruit Butch Bovier, a historical craftsman.

“Collectively, I think we bring a lot of skill sets together and goodwill,” said Robert Nelson, vice president of the board.

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“They bring their dreams to me and I make them happen,” Bovier said.

Bovier helped restore the cabin.

“And that was kind of neat because what we did 20 years ago held up very well. In fact, it held up a lot better than we thought,” he said.

The team worked on the cottonwood logs.

“The logs are this wide, you don’t replace it because that much is bad. So we used a modern product to do some of that. In some cases, we just scraped it smooth,” Bovier said.

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The team partially restored John Brown’s Cave. The cabin was moved to its current location in the 1930s from its original site. The owner at the time dug a tunnel-like system that leads to the ravine.

“It’s a tool that we use to help educate everyone who might have an interest in understanding what it might have been like for an enslaved person seeking freedom,” Kreifels said.

Volunteers make reopening possible

The Mayhew Cabin and John Brown’s Cave would not be able to open without the hard work of volunteers. For months, volunteers cleaned up the site and helped Bovier fix the cabin logs, cave and roof. One of them is Jason Hein, who moved to Nebraska City from California. Hein was looking for an opportunity to volunteer in the community and stumbled upon a Facebook post asking for extra hands to help at the Mayhew Cabin. His workplace Burr Farms donated machinery and services toward the efforts.

“You know, we don’t want things falling off the map. We want it to be there for future generations,” Hein said.

“And since that weekend, I’ve been out here Saturdays and Sundays every week. If there isn’t a whole bunch of hands trying to get something done, it’s not going to get done,” he said.

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Volunteers have been preparing to reopen the site for more than three months.

“So, I mean, we’ve just literally been here, you know, cutting down trees or trimming trees and then people kind of walking by and seeing and asking, hey, what are you up to?” Nelson said.

The cabin will reopen on Juneteenth.

“And, it was just a matter of this is something that we need to do as a community. Let’s just do it and, make the world a little bit better place,” Hogan said.

Lane Trail and ‘Bloody Kansas’

The Mayhew Cabin was part of the Lane Trail on the Underground Railroad. At the time, the Kansas-Nebraska Act was formed and pro-slavery and abolitionists fought to sway the public toward their beliefs, giving it the nickname “Bloody Kansas.” Abolitionists in southeast Nebraska aided these efforts and helped slaves escape on the Lane Trail.

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“It’s an incredible building, but it’s kind of the launch. It was seen as the southern terminus of the Army of the North marching into Kansas, but then also kind of the beginning of the Underground Railroad,” Nelson said.

Nelson, a former Omaha World Herald journalist, researched the Lane Trail extensively. He grew up in Falls City, Nebraska and found out his family has a history of aiding abolitionists.

“The successful fight to stop (slavery), based in Nebraska, or by the people who are involved with this Underground Railroad, is the reason the South secedes. They can’t expand anymore. You know, putting up the wall of Kansas really is what starts the Civil War. So that idea that’s that that’s the Civil War before the Civil War, and Nebraska played a big part of it. I think is a story that’s lost,” Nelson said.

Work remains on the site. The nonprofit wants to repair the museum building and other historic buildings on the property.

Juneteenth event details

A Juneteenth event starts at 7 p.m. Friday at the Mayhew Cabin in Nebraska City. People will have the opportunity to hear speeches from Butch Bovier, Robert Nelson and Darryl Hogan. The event is open to the public and free. There is outdoor seating, but people are welcome to bring lawn chairs. Live music will be provided by West Street Wranglers.

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Refreshments will be served at the Hidden Falls Cave Event Center. The Mayhew Cabin is located at 2012 4th Corso in Nebraska City. Questions can be directed to Doug Kreifels at (402) 209-4060.

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Nebraska’s governor doesn’t carry a state-issued phone. Critics call it an abuse of state disclosure laws. – Flatwater Free Press

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Nebraska’s governor doesn’t carry a state-issued phone. Critics call it an abuse of state disclosure laws. – Flatwater Free Press


For more than two years, Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen did not make or take a single call on his cellphone while on the clock as the state’s chief executive — at least none that there is any record of, according to his office’s top attorney.

After the Flatwater Free Press filed a public records request for call logs from Pillen’s cellphone dating back to September 2023, the governor’s general counsel said no such records exist.

“Governor Pillen does not have a state-issued mobile phone,” the lawyer, Michael J. Donley, said in an email earlier this month — more than four months after Flatwater filed the request.

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The revelation marks Pillen’s latest step to shield his communications from public view. He broke with more than 30 years of gubernatorial practice by not releasing a public schedule in March 2023, just two months into his first term. And in August of that year, his office refused to release four of his emails in response to a public records request, citing “executive privilege” — a justification that does not exist in Nebraska’s public records laws.

“I don’t email, I don’t text,” the first-term Republican governor said in response to criticism from Democratic lawmakers over his refusal to release the emails. “Texting when it’s for anything other than logistics, I don’t do.”

His decision not to carry a state-owned cellphone makes him the first governor in at least 20 years not to do so — and, advocates say, amounts to an attempt to circumvent state law.