The forecast is showing a hot day in Omaha. It should reach a warm 82 degrees. Today’s forecasted low temperature is 63 degrees. Partly cloudy skies are in the forecast. Today’s UV index is high. Be careful outside, especially during late morning through mid-afternoon. If your shadow is shorter than you, seek shade and wear protective clothing and generously apply sunscreen on exposed skin. The Omaha area should see a light breeze, with forecast models showing only 9 mph wind conditions coming up from Southwest. This report is created automatically with weather data provided by TownNews.com. Keep an eye on omaha.com for forecast information and severe weather updates.
Nebraska
Here is today’s weather outlook for May. 13, 2023 in Omaha, NE
Nebraska
Senate passes bill to give back land to Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska
LINCOLN, Neb. (KLKN) – The U.S. Senate on Thursday unanimously passed the Winnebago Land Transfer Act.
The bill would transfer 1,600 acres of land that were seized in the 1970s by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
“The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers was wrong to seize this land through eminent domain in the 1970s,” Sen. Deb Fischer, who sponsored the bill, said in a press release. “It’s time to make this right and finally return this land to the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska. I want to thank my colleagues for their unanimous, bipartisan support, and I look forward to seeing this bill signed into law.”
The bill now heads to the president’s desk.
“The Army Corps of Engineers’ decision to condemn and seize land from the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska was a classic case of government overreach,” said Sen. Pete Ricketts, a co-sponsor of the bill. “I’m grateful the Senate passed our bill to correct this wrong and ensure the land is returned to the Winnebago people. I urge President Biden to sign it.”
An 1865 treaty established the Winnebago Reservation in northeast Nebraska along the Missouri River.
Due to shifts in the river, part of the reservation is now in Iowa.
In 1970, the Corps of Engineers condemned land on both the Nebraska and Iowa side of the river for a proposed recreation project.
The corps used eminent domain to acquire the land.
The Nebraska land was ultimately returned to the tribe, but the Iowa land remains under the corps’ jurisdiction.
But the corps has no objection to turning over control of the land, the press release said.
“This is a truly historic moment for the Winnebago Tribe as lands that were taken from us over 50 years ago will soon be restored to the Tribe,” Chairwoman Victoria Kitchevan said in the release. “Our ancestors, including the late Louis LaRose, fought tirelessly to secure and protect our homelands. The Tribal Council is honored to carry on their work and help send this bill to the President in their honor.”
Nebraska
National Feeding and Fueling the World workshop stops in Nebraska
Nebraska recently became one of the stops for the nationally based Feeding and Fueling the World workshop series.
Sponsored locally by the Nebraska Corn Board and the Nebraska Soybean Board, the workshop was designed for science teachers by science teachers to learn curriculum emphasizing modern agriculture that they can take back to their classrooms.
“We know that a lot of our students are not going to be directly working in production agriculture…” said Stacie Turnbull, secretary of agriculture education, “but they’re going to be heavily involved in the outside aspects providing the financial side of agriculture, the precision ag, food processing… as we continue to provide for this growing population.”
Science content with a focus on agriculture covers topics like biotechnology, soil health, renewable energy like biofuels, and other subjects to help advocate for the role American agriculture plays in feeding the growing world.
The Feeding and Fueling the World series is facilitated nationally by the Nourish the Future education initiative and will make stops in North Dakota, Wisconsin, and Iowa throughout the rest of the month of June.
For more information visit https://nourishthefuture.org/events.
Nebraska
Nebraska I-80 rest stop knife attack leaves Missouri man, 72, dead and his wife critically injured
A 72-year-old Missouri man has died, and his wife was critically injured after being stabbed during an attempted robbery at an Interstate 80 rest stop in Nebraska, police say.
James Thompson Jr., 22, of Elyria, Ohio, is now being held on numerous charges, including first-degree murder, following the incident that unfolded in Doniphan on Wednesday morning.
The Hall County Sheriff’s Department says around 7 a.m., deputies responded to a disturbance call at 4148 I-80 and found two victims who had “suffered wounds from an assault with a knife.”
“One victim, a 72-year-old male from Eureka, Missouri, suffered fatal injuries from the assault and was pronounced dead at Grand Island Regional Hospital,” the department added, identifying him as Gary Weaver.
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His 71-year-old wife, Mary Weaver, is reported to have suffered “life-threatening injuries” and, as of Wednesday night, remains in critical condition at the same hospital.
“At this time, it is believed this started as an attempted robbery,” the Hall County Sheriff’s Department said, noting that “the couple had been traveling through Nebraska in their mobile home when the incident occurred.”
The suspect fled the rest area in a vehicle before authorities arrived, but Grand Island Police Captain Dean Elliott told television station KSNB that officers were able to get a description.
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The Nebraska State Patrol tried to stop a vehicle matching that description near Wood River and chased it at speeds of up to 120 mph before that vehicle exited the interstate and turned south, according to The Associated Press.
Elliott said the vehicle eventually drove into the Platte River. State troopers used a police dog to find Thompson and arrest him about 30 minutes later.
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Jail records show Thompson is facing charges of first-degree murder, attempted murder, robbery, use of a deadly weapon to commit a felony and willful reckless driving.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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