Nebraska
Husker Bateman team wins national competition
For the primary time at school historical past, a College of Nebraska–Lincoln group has gained first place within the Public Relations Scholar Society of America’s Bateman Case Examine Competitors.
It’s the third time up to now six years that the group, primarily based within the School of Journalism and Mass Communications, has completed within the high three within the nation.
The Nebraska group was chosen as a finalist, out of 51 entries, together with groups from Brigham Younger College and the College of Florida. Florida positioned second, and Brigham Younger positioned third.
The 2022 Bateman Competitors shopper was the Lymphoma Analysis Basis. Nebraska’s group developed and executed an built-in communications marketing campaign referred to as “1 is Nonetheless 1” to lift consciousness of lymphoma and the challenges adolescents and younger adults can face when identified with the most cancers.
Nebraska’s group designed its marketing campaign to teach Husker college students about how college-aged college students are sometimes missed in nationwide most cancers analysis funding and to have interaction college students to advocate for each younger grownup with lymphoma and their very own well being.
“Working with this group has been unbelievable,” mentioned Delani Watkins, the marketing campaign’s neighborhood relations coordinator. “We confronted challenges that we needed to push by, and to see all that onerous work and dedication repay is superb.”
The group partnered with College students Collectively Towards Most cancers, a acknowledged scholar group at Nebraska, to launch a Change.org petition to convey gentle to the inequity of funding analysis for younger grownup lymphoma. The group additionally hosted three advocacy occasions on campus.
As a part of its ultimate presentation, the group put collectively a toolkit for universities to include into their curriculum. Whatever the end result of the competitors, Bateman group members knew they wished to share the toolkit with the College of Nebraska–Lincoln, College of Nebraska at Omaha and College of Nebraska at Kearney. The group’s subsequent purpose is to encourage each faculty within the Massive Ten Convention to make use of the toolkit on their campuses.
“The group has put a lot effort and time into growing and implementing this marketing campaign, so it’s a big accomplishment and affirmation for us to win this competitors,” group author Mai Vu mentioned. “This wouldn’t have been doable with out the strategic course from our advisers.”
The next is an inventory of Nebraska’s Bateman group members, listed by hometown, with main(s) and their yr in faculty:
Nebraska
- La Vista: Delani Watkins, senior, promoting and public relations
- Lincoln: Lindsay Elliott, senior, promoting and public relations; Spencer Swearingen, junior, promoting and public relations, and journalism
- Omaha: Ilana Lewis, promoting and public relations, senior; Morgan Zuerlein, promoting and public relations, senior
Elsewhere
- Haiphong, Vietnam: Mai Vu, promoting and public relations, junior
Dane Kiambi, affiliate professor of promoting and public relations, served as the school adviser. Sheri Sallee, a former faculty school member with practically 20 years of well being communications expertise, served because the skilled adviser.
Nebraska
The ‘GOAT’: Lawmakers unveil plan to update Nebraska regulations, cut red tape • Nebraska Examiner
LINCOLN — Nebraska lawmakers unveiled a multi-step plan Thursday to cut red tape, periodically review or update state rules and regulations and, ultimately, save taxpayers money.
The legislative package coined as “GOAT” — Government Oversight, Accountability, and Transparency — is similar to the advisory Department of Governmental Efficiency (DOGE) that President-elect Donald Trump has proposed to advise members of Congress on how to shrink the federal government and find efficiencies.
Several other states have set up similar advisory boards.
State Sens. Bob Andersen of Omaha, Danielle Conrad of Lincoln, Dan McKeon of Amherst, Dan Quick of Grand Island, Merv Riepe of Ralston and Tanya Storer of Whitman are leading the efforts with the Platte Institute, a nonprofit think tank, and Americans for Prosperity-Nebraska.
“The senators introducing legislation in this package have decided not to wait on an advisory body to make recommendations and instead are taking the ‘goat’ by the horns and starting the conversation in the elected body closest to the citizens: the Legislature,” said former State Sen. Laura Ebke, senior policy fellow at the Platte Institute.
‘Legislative eyes and ears’
Among a half-dozen proposals is Legislative Bill 29, from Conrad, to require executive agencies to review the necessity of existing regulations every three years.
The proposal mirrors a 2017 executive order from former Nebraska Gov. Pete Ricketts, now a U.S. senator, that paused all new rulemaking for about six months. Ricketts had said the pause would allow time to review more than 7.5 million words in the administrative code, with more than 100,000 regulatory restrictions on the books.
Among the questions that Ricketts required state agencies to review were:
- Is the regulation essential to the health, safety or welfare of Nebraskans?
- Do the costs of the regulation outweigh the benefits?
- Does a process exist to measure the effectiveness of the regulation?
- Has a less restrictive alternative been considered?
- Was the regulation solely created due to state law?
- Was the regulation created as a result of a federal mandate?
Conrad noted those efforts have, as of 2023, reduced nearly 25% of state regulations from 2017, which was “an excellent first start, but we can’t rest on those laurels.”
She said the proposals, if enacted, could save money and “fight back against the ever-growing administrative state that has really entangled into far too many aspects of our lives.”
“We will ensure that there will be legislative eyes and ears on every rule and regulation that emanates from the bureaucracy on a periodic basis,” Conrad said, checking for if something is outdated, antiquated or cost-prohibitive.
Millions, possibly billions in savings
Another of the proposals already introduced, LB 366, from Riepe and Conrad, would create the Legislative Economic Analysis Unit led by a chief economist for the Legislature.
It would require periodic review of major rules or regulations that could result in, or are likely to result in, an economic impact of more than $1 million over five years or that could have significant adverse effects on competition, employment, investment, productivity or innovation, including such effects on individual industries or regions.
Another proposal from McKeon would create an executive branch office to ensure cost-benefit analysis of regulations and to make progress toward streamlining existing rules.
Ebke said a new office “sounds scary,” but thanks to efforts in other states, such as Virginia, “an office of four people has saved many millions of dollars, maybe billions.”
Former State Sen. Nicole Fox, director of government relations for the Platte Institute, said staff from Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s staff joined the nonprofit at an event in December. She noted that in two years, Virginia realized more than $1 billion in savings, $300 million in housing alone.
Fox said regulations like updates to the electrical code can seem necessary from an efficiency perspective but do end up passing on costs to taxpayers.
Ebke said the effort is designed to create an atmosphere where regulatory agencies do economic analyses considering costs to Nebraskans, rather than just costs to the state.
The other proposals have yet to be introduced, but would include: an inventory and examination of nearly all federal funds the state receives (Andersen); a measure to allow businesses to challenge regulations in local courts rather than courts in Lincoln (Storer), a measure to prevent agencies from issuing “binding” regulatory advisories (Quick).
‘Cornerstone of decision-making’
State Sen. Rita Sanders of Bellevue, the chair of the Government, Military and Veterans Affairs Committee that would likely consider most parts of the regulatory package, said excessive rules can impede progress and hinder entrepreneurs or businesses from getting off the ground.
She said regulations should be crafted in the Legislature, “the cornerstone of decision-making.”
Speaker John Arch of La Vista, who endorsed the regulatory package, said the “good government bills” would lead to a better process and improve the function of government.
LB 346, introduced by Arch on behalf of Gov. Jim Pillen, would terminate or reassign the duties of more than 40 state boards, commissions, committees or councils. While it’s not part of the official Platte package, Arch said it helps accomplish the same goal.
Conrad said the combined efforts with Arch — “The Magnificent Seven” — will not eliminate every single rule or regulation, but she said they will ensure proper delegation of authority to stand up for Nebraskans, including consumer safety, public health and welfare.
“When we work together to remove the regulatory burden, it benefits all Nebraskans,” Conrad said. “It unleashes economic freedom and it ensures we have more opportunities for personal liberty.”
GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.
Nebraska
Young cancer patient who inspired millions with viral Nebraska football touchdown dies at 19
A young cancer patient who inspired millions of college football fans in 2013 with a 69-yard springtime sprint in Nebraska has died of the disease, officials said Wednesday.
Jack Hoffman, a freshman at the University of Nebraska at Kearney and an aspiring attorney, was 19.
“Jack may no longer be with us in person, but his legacy lives on in the work of the Team Jack Foundation, in the lives of the children and families we’ve helped, and in the hope he gave to so many,” said a statement from Team Jack, a foundation that raises money for cancer research in the young man’s honor. “Jack Hoffman, you will always be our hero.”
Hoffman was just 5 when he was diagnosed with brain cancer, and his treatment for the ultimately fatal disease took center stage in 2013 during the Nebraska Cornhuskers’ spring football game.
At the end of the extended practice, the Huskers ran Hoffman out on the field in full uniform. Longtime Nebraska quarterback Taylor Martinez took a shotgun snap, handed the ball to 7-year-old Jack and helped direct the boy to run downfield at Memorial Stadium.
The little boy sprinted 69 yards to the end zone, with an escort of Huskers joyously running alongside the young cancer patient.
His lead blocker, fullback C.J. Zimmerer, hoisted Jack in celebration as soon as they crossed the goal line.
Footage of the TD run has gained more than 9 million views on the athletic department’s YouTube channel since it first dropped nearly 12 years ago.
The University of Nebraska said it is “heartbroken by his loss” but forever inspired by the youngster’s “courage, fight, and inspiration.”
“Small in stature, but not in heart,” the university’s statement said. “Your legacy will live on forever Jack.”
The young man was preceded in death by his father, attorney Andy Hoffman, who died of brain cancer in 2021.
Nebraska
Podcast: Nebraska football’s transfer portal, special teams and Husker hoops
Our Amie Just and Luke Mullin are back to discuss Nebrask football’s special teams as they look ahead to this year’s offseason football. Plus, Nebraska wrestling coach Mark Manning got his 300th win with the program; women’s basketball player Allison Weidner is likely out for the season.
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