Whereas COVID circumstances proceed to tick up in Nebraska, fewer than 10% of adults within the state have obtained the most recent booster shot focusing on essentially the most prevalent variant pressure.
Whereas the variety of COVID-19 circumstances continues to tick up in Nebraska, fewer than 10% of adults within the state have obtained the most recent booster shot focusing on essentially the most prevalent variant pressure.
Weeks in the past, the White Home COVID-19 response coordinator inspired People to get the brand new bivalent booster by Halloween with the intention to have most safety for the upcoming holidays.
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Now that Halloween has handed, the booster numbers each right here and nationally are grim.
Solely 9.9% of individuals 18 and over in the USA have obtained the most recent booster, based on information from the federal Facilities for Illness Management and Prevention. Nebraska’s determine is 9.6%
And even for essentially the most weak 65-and-over inhabitants, lower than one-fourth each in Nebraska and nationally have obtained the shot.
Persons are additionally studying…
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Rupp
“That is a really discouraging and disappointing statistic,” stated Dr. Mark Rupp, chief of the infectious ailments division on the College of Nebraska Medical Middle. “I’d hope that the inhabitants would benefit from this latest bivalent booster to attempt to do all the things they’ll to maintain themselves wholesome and guarded as we go into the respiratory virus season.”
Relating to the most recent COVID booster, Nebraska’s vaccination charge amongst adults ranks thirty second highest among the many states. Iowa’s 13.4% charge ranks fifteenth highest. Amongst surrounding states, solely Missouri and Wyoming have decrease charges than Nebraska. Vermont leads the nation with a 21% charge.
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Nebraska posted 1,783 new virus circumstances final week, up from 1,383 the earlier week and the third straight weekly rise.
Instances are actually rising quicker in Nebraska than virtually any state within the nation, and per-capita circumstances additionally now barely prime the U.S. charge. Nebraska’s 29% case development for the week was the third highest among the many states, as was its two-week development of 58%.
However whereas Nebraska circumstances are rising, they continue to be under ranges seen as not too long ago as early September and are greater than 90% under the height seen throughout final winter’s omicron surge. It stays to be seen whether or not the state and nation will see circumstances spike the identical means they did in the course of the first two winters of the pandemic.
Nebraska added 12 new COVID deaths final week, bringing the toll for the pandemic to 4,562 confirmed or possible deaths. The state has seen 535,000 constructive COVID checks.
Nebraska hospitalizations as a result of COVID have been comparatively flat final week, with a each day common of 137 hospital beds occupied by COVID sufferers. A mixture of COVID, the flu and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) nationally have not too long ago strained pediatric hospital mattress capability.
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The CDC issued a well being alert Friday relating to the early improve in respiratory viruses, noting that the rise highlights the significance of “optimizing respiratory virus prevention and remedy measures.”
Given the rising variety of respiratory illness circumstances, Nebraskans ought to be doing all they’ll to guard themselves, their family members, others and the capability of the well being system, he stated. Meaning getting their flu pictures and COVID-19 vaccines and boosters, in addition to and taking some precautions in locations the place the viruses can unfold.
Accessible information suggests the vaccines proceed to supply good safety towards extreme sickness, hospitalization and demise, Rupp stated. Whereas safety towards an infection wanes after a number of months, the safety towards extra critical sickness continues.
Knowledge additionally means that vaccination protects towards lengthy COVID, he stated.
“Each time you get COVID-19, you type of roll the cube,” Rupp stated. “You can get extreme sickness or you might have these actually bothersome longer COVID lingering signs. And I do not assume individuals take that lengthy COVID syndrome into their evaluation of threat when deciding on vaccination.”
On the latest HuskerMax Today, Nick Handley and Kaleb Henry discuss what’s missing for Nebraska baseball to make a postseason run beyond regionals.
Below is a lightly edited transcript, and continue scrolling to watch the full segment.
Kaleb: Let me ask you this. Will Bolt has coached five full seasons now. This team has won a third of the Big Ten titles that have been handed out over that time. They’ve made three regionals.
For this program going forward, how far away or how close are they to… not even hosting a regional because you look at the super regionals and there are seven unseeded teams that advanced into the super regional round. There will be an unseeded team in Omaha because of the way the bracket laid out.
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Nebraska second baseman Cayden Brumbaugh launches a home run against Holy Cross in the Chapel Hill Regional. / Nebraska Athletics
You’ve got Murray State taking on Duke, both of those unseeded teams. And you’ve got Louisville and Miami. Those are power conference teams, Arizona. But you’ve also got a UTSA who advanced in there. The top two national seeds went down this past weekend.
So when you’re looking at, Nebraska, and you look at, hey, it’s working for these teams. Why is it working for these teams and the leagues that they play in and the resources Nebraska has compared to the resources they have, the resources Big Ten programs in general have, even if baseball is lower on the spending priority than some of the other sports compared to what the ACC does or the SEC does or even the Big 12?
What’s that thing that’s missing for Nebraska? Is it having a deeper bullpen? Is it having more guys that can hit 95 on the radar gun? Is it having – you look at some – like we saw last year when Nebraska was playing Florida, it seemed like every guy was cookie-cutter. They were all 6-6, 240 pounds, just up and down the lineup. What is that thing – if there is one – that’s missing for Nebraska from that step that hasn’t happened in twenty years?
Riley Silva makes a catch in center field to rob Florida of extra bases. / Amarillo Mullen
Nick: I come from a thought of strong and deep pitching is going to take you very, very far. Rotational, elite arms, for sure. I think Ty Horn is there. I think what you got between Jackson Brockett and Will Walsh was guys that utilize their stuff really good but didn’t have explosive fastballs.
And look, it’s not all about the velocity. You can have guys that throw 96, 97 miles an hour, but if they have no movement and they’re relying heavily on that, they become predictable. They haven’t developed that that complimentary breaking ball or change up well enough. You’re going to get hit just the same as anybody throwing 86, 87.
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But I think when you do have those types of players that – again, I’ll use the Ty Horn example of a guy that as he continued to find success in the second half of the year, you would watch him maybe in the third and the fourth inning, and all of a sudden that breaking ball – gained more depth. It became more devastating because then that fastball, even at 93 or 94, would come by and you’d have no shot catching up to it. So guys that have that type of stuff that can bring you a 93, 94-plus fastball, but are also coming right back with an explosive slider or a changeup that’s just dropping off the table. You know, those types of guys.
Ty Horn pumps his fist after a double play to end UCLA’s half of the inning. / Amarillo Mullen
Mason McConnaughey had all of that. And, you know, we don’t know what’s going to happen with Mason because of that injury and his draft stock and everything. I mean, there is a decision there. I don’t think Nebraska is necessarily counting on him coming back, but you never know. And I know they love him, and I know he loves this program.
This is the one thing that I looked at Oklahoma and I was really impressed with. Every guy that they ran out there was 95-plus. Mm hmm. We saw Crossland, the guy that – his numbers weren’t great. Now, mind you, he’s pitching in the SEC. But he was in control of that game. And, yeah, sure, it’s easy to throw a lot of strikes and challenge hitters when you have the type of cushion that he had. But his stuff was really good. They threw a freshman at the end of that game against North Carolina the previous night, and that kid was throwing 95, 96 miles an hour as well.
I think when you do have some of those power arms – because, look, the way we are in college baseball is – and you brought up UTSA. Perfect example. You’re watching their guy throw 97. Those those arms are out there.
Starting pitcher, Jackson Brockett, and starting catcher, Hogan Helligso, walk out from the bullpen. / Amarillo Mullen
And this is what I love that Nebraska has is you got Rob Childress. Give Rob Childress just even some raw ability, a kid with raw ability, and two years, Rob will have that guy refined, and have that guy effective. So I think it starts there. I think you want to see more of those Mason McConnaughey types. I’m not trying to make it sound like they’re easy to find, but they’re out there. And if they’re developed by Rob Childress, I’ll put my money on that all day.
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Kaleb: And it’s not that Nebraska hasn’t had those guys. Obviously, Mason McConnaughey isn’t what you were expecting coming into this year. But you had Brett Sears. You had the Big Ten Pitcher of the Year a year ago. You could go back, under Will Bolt, you had Cade Povich. You had Spencer Schwellenbach.
Nick: And look what those seasons led to. In 2021, Nebraska was in the regional conversation until Rutgers came into town. But they were a big part of the regional host conversation last year. If Nebraska wins a couple more midweeks, they’re in the regional host conversation. So you see the connection there. You mentioned two bona fide aces.
Brett Sears celebrates winning the tournament championship. / Amarillo Mullen
And then this year, Mason McConnaughey, we don’t get to see him go past Sam Houston third week of the season. Again, not trying to say Nebraska all of a sudden in the regional host, but there’s that connection of when you’ve got big-time arms, big-time guys, what it does to the rest of your staff and what it can do in series that, unfortunately, Nebraska wasn’t winning in March.
Kaleb: And that’s where I’m at when you look at this team and this program on the what’s missing. To me, it’s the second guy. Coming into this year, you were expecting to have Mason McConnaughey, but who is “Mason McConnaughey light”? Who is that 1a, 1b instead of here’s your number one and then here’s your number two?
That’s the part that Nebraska, if they can ever get that – last year, if you have Brett Sears and then you have an immediate second ace, not somebody who – I know Brockett threw a no-hitter. I know that. And you saw what guys were able to do with amazing performances in the Big Ten Tournament and a lot of one-off or kind of hit and miss on success. But that one guy that’s just – they’re expected to be a dude every single night out. A little bit of what you saw in the last two appearances from Ty Horn.
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Mason McConnaughey made his final home start of the season and struck out a season high ten batters. /
How can you get that type of consistency with that elite second arm? To me, that’s the part that’s been missing in that Nebraska has had that ace. And in those seasons, Nebraska has been in a really good position where that ace has been healthy for the bulk of the season. We didn’t get that with Mason this year. But where’s that second guy? How do you get that second guy in there?
You talked about Oklahoma. They have that second guy. Yeah, their ace got roughed up against North Carolina. But there’s a reason you can go into regional and say you don’t have to throw your number one guy because your number two guy is pretty freaking good.
Nick: What you were just saying there with Nebraska a year ago with Sears then to McConnaughey, those are the situations you like to have. I do wonder if the Ty Horn development happens even quicker if you do have a healthy Mason McConnaughey, where it’s not the last month of the season to where you saw a Ty going five innings plus, but where you’re maybe seeing that more in March because of having a bona fide starter, ace, Friday night guy, electric stuff, set the tone where you don’t feel the weight of the world when you’re towing the rubber on that Saturday.
Nebraska hoists the championship trophy for the second year in a row. / Amarillo Mullen
But I do think that Nebraska understands now with this sort of new look Big Ten, and this was maybe the blessing that came with that California road trip. You’re out there. You’re seeing what UCLA is about. We didn’t see Oregon up until the Big Ten Tournament, but you’re seeing what they’re about. You’re seeing that those are offensively – challenging teams.
That sophomore class that UCLA has, that was the number one ranked incoming freshman class from Perfect Game two years ago. And they’re all playing like that. So they got developed. Every major contributor of UCLA, they’re all sophomores. They haven’t been playing college baseball for that long, but there was a lot of talent there, but they got developed and they were able to come together.
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You look at what the Oregon team, the Washington team, the USC team, they don’t have to leave the state or at least that section of the country. But you see what Big Ten baseball, if you want to be there at the top, is going to demand you to do. And I don’t think it changes so much of what Nebraska knew they had to do before because when you want to host regionals, you’ve got to be able to do those things anyway.
Nebraska left fielder Gabe Swansen runs to first after one of his two hits against Oregon at the Big Ten Tournament. / Nebraska Athletics
I think now you have that in-conference example and that in-conference rivalry, if you will, where you’ve got these teams that you’re going to face most years, whether you go out there or they come here. And that style, it’s not your traditional West Coast style. We’re just going to small ball you to death and everything. No, they’re going to slug you. And then they’re going to bring in guys that are throwing 95-plus.
And the beauty of that is you can start broadening your recruiting base a little bit, too, because not all those guys in California are going to find themselves at USC and UCLA and other schools around there. They’re going to want to still play maybe in the Big Ten Conference and be able to have a chance to go out to the West Coast, play in front of family too. There’s advantages there.
But I think I like that Nebraska had a chance to see what those programs were about on their home turf and be able to, let’s say, dramatically change what they’re doing in Lincoln, but give you an idea of, okay, if we want to be at the top and we were in the tournament and we beat two of those teams, how do we be at the top in the regular season, and what do we construct to do that going forward?
Nebraska players celebrate with a dogpile after winning the 2025 Big Ten Baseball Tournament championship over UCLA. / Nebraska Athletics
Kaleb: I know that we’re in a time of transition on where a lot of money is going and what priorities are, but I’m hoping that the addition – and this was my hope a year ago as well – that with the addition of those West Coast teams, it spurs some development across the Big Ten.
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It makes some programs say, we want to take that next step in the same way that, let’s face it, a lot of us were hoping Nebraska was going to do to the league 15 years ago, that you were going to say, no, here’s the big dog swinging the big stick, and realistically, that took some time. Because Nebraska was still figuring stuff out post those College World Series runs. And now for this team and this program, it’s what is that next step?
Watch the full conversation below.
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LINCOLN, Neb. — Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen signed into law Wednesday a measure banning transgender students from girls’ sports, making the state the latest to keep transgender athletes from competing on women’s and girls’ teams.
Pillen signed the law flanked by dozens of lawmakers, women athletes and other advocates — including former collegiate swimmer Riley Gaines, who has made a name for herself as a vocal advocate of banning transgender athletes from women’s sports.
The measure passed by the Nebraska Legislature last week broke a filibuster by a single vote cast along party lines. It was pared down from its initial form, which also sought to bar transgender students from using bathrooms and locker rooms corresponding with their gender identity.
Sponsors agreed to drop the bathroom and locker room ban when one Republican — Omaha Sen. Merv Riepe — declared he would vote against it otherwise.
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The measure was first introduced in 2023 by then-freshman Sen. Kathleen Kauth, but failed to advance as lawmakers angrily argued over Kauth’s other bill that sought to bar gender-affirming care for transgender minors under the age of 19. An amended version that banned gender-affirming surgery — but not all gender-affirming care — for minors later passed and was enacted that year.
On Wednesday, Kauth promised to revive her bathroom and locker room ban next year, reiterating her rejection that people can determine their own gender.
“Men are men and women are women,” she said, and urged voters in Riepe’s district to pressure him to support it.
Republicans behind the sports ban say it protects women and girls and their ability to fairly compete in sports. Opponents say with so few transgender students seeking to participate in sports, the measure is a solution in search of a problem.
Fewer than 10 transgender students have participated in middle school and high school sports in the state over the past decade, according to the Nebraska School Activities Association.
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At least 24 other states have adopted similar bans. President Donald Trump also signed an executive order this year intended to dictate which sports competitions transgender athletes can enter and has battled in court with Maine over that state’s allowing transgender athletes in girls’ and women’s sports.
The American Civil Liberties Union of Nebraska denounced the measure.
ACLU Nebraska Executive Director Mindy Rush Chipman said the ban “slams the door shut” for some transgender students to fully participate in their school communities.
“This ban will only create problems, not solve any,” Rush Chipman said, adding that “the constant targeting of LGBTQ+ Nebraskans must stop.”
Video shows three problem homes near the area of East and Alexander street in Valley.
Neighbors say that decrepit properties near their homes have sat empty for years after being damaged by floods. They are hoping the problem homes could be turned into affordable housing.
BROADCAST TRANSCRIPT:
Its definitely not the sight you want to see first thing in the morning.
“I have my cup of coffee in the morning and I have to look out my front window at this every day and thats not good,” said Valley resident Donald Suster.
Across the street from Donald’s property are three decrepit homes.
After being damaged in the floods of 2019 they have sat empty, one is already condemned.
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He told me he has asked the city and the mayor to do something to fix it but in the 6 years since the flood, little has been done.
Donald’s neighbor Steve Peoples said the eyesore doesn’t match up with his spiking property valuations.
“My house evaluation last year was $140,700. This year its 180,700. Just imagine what the valuation would be if these two or three houses weren’t here,” said Peoples.
Steve said he knows that offers have been made to purchase the properties but the owner isn’t interested in selling.
“They wont do it. They would rather pay the taxes and let them sit,” said Peoples.
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Both Steve and Donald think the lots have the potential to be transformed into affordable housing, a big need in Valley.
Ryan Basye with On Deck housing, a non-profit who builds affordable homes in the metro area, has a separate development in Valley trying to meet that demand.
“We have three lots in Valley at this time under On Deck. That’s all we have going on right now but we are lined up to build three affordable homes out there,” said Basye.
I had a chance to speak with the mayor of Valley Cindy Grove who told me she couldn’t give specifics on these properties. But she did say these homes, along with every other nuisance property, have received notice from the city things need to be taken care of.
Donald hopes, those notices turn into something that could help Valley long term.
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“I think it would be great. It would be great for the city and if they could do affordable housing that would be great,” said Suster.