LINCOLN — A invoice that may supply tax credit for donations to scholarship funds for personal and faith-based faculties has now made it additional than all earlier makes an attempt within the Nebraska Legislature, gathering sufficient votes to cross the primary spherical of debate Wednesday.
Legislative Invoice 753 is the newest in a string of comparable payments launched by State Sen. Lou Ann Linehan of the Omaha space meant to supply extra faculty selection alternatives. The invoice overcame a three-day filibuster Wednesday earlier than advancing in a 31-12 vote.
As launched, LB 753 would make $25 million accessible for credit in 2024, with annual will increase in this system of as much as 25% attainable in future years. A committee modification that additionally was authorized Wednesday would maintain this system at $25 million for 2 years, then permit it to develop to a most of $100 million a yr.
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The modification additionally would cap credit at $100,000 yearly for people and companies and at $1 million for estates and trusts.
The Nebraska Legislature has thought of comparable measures in every of the final 5 years, however all have failed. Final yr’s proposal fell 5 votes brief on a filibuster-ending cloture movement.
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This time round, LB 753 narrowly overcame the first-round filibuster, reaching cloture by means of a 33-12 vote.
“I am thrilled we acquired cloture,” Linehan stated. “I am disenchanted we did not get everyone.”
Assist from a number of Democrats, together with Omaha Sens. Terrell McKinney, Justin Wayne and Mike McDonnell, proved to be difference-maker this yr. McKinney and Wayne repeatedly spoke out in help of LB 753, saying it might present households of their district extra choices for higher schooling.
“These households are bored with being informed to attend,” McKinney stated.
On the similar time, a handful of Republican lawmakers held off pledging their help for the invoice, with Sens. Tom Brandt of Plymouth, Myron Dorn of Adams and Jana Hughes of Seward being current not voting on the underlying invoice. On Tuesday, Brandt expressed reservations with LB 753, studying statements from an op-ed printed by former lawmaker Curt Friesen that doubted the invoice’s advantages to rural college students and taxpayers.
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Hughes stated she helps the general intent of LB 753 however has some issues. She declined to elaborate and stated she is working with Linehan to deal with them. Linehan stated she hopes to have 45 out of the Legislature’s 49 lawmakers supporting the invoice by the point it reaches its last votes.
“We’ll get to one thing that everybody can help,” Linehan stated.
One new modification Linehan stated she already plans to carry would make clear that the invoice would help college students throughout all of Nebraska, based mostly on issues that it might solely profit Omaha-area college students.
LB 753 is a component of a bigger schooling bundle proposed by Gov. Jim Pillen that may, amongst different issues, present an extra $1 billion to public schooling funding by means of a brand new element of the state’s normal fund. Linehan stated she believed as soon as the opposite schooling funding proposals are ironed out, her invoice will achieve help from lawmakers who have been involved that it might take away funding from underserved public faculties.
Some opponents additionally argued LB 753 would profit faculties that discriminate towards college students, and would quantity to a tax credit score for the rich. The Institute of Taxation and Financial Coverage (ITEP), a nationwide nonprofit, launched an announcement towards the invoice Tuesday. It stated in states which have handed comparable measures, the majority of the credit are being claimed by rich households.
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“These tax credit are among the many most important instruments eroding the general public schooling system and propping up non-public faculties,” the assertion learn.
In the meantime, supporters contend that LB 753 is crucial to supply low-income college students the means to entry higher schooling. They argue that many public faculties are decrease high quality than non-public faculties, which opponents disputed.
“That is the best way we get youngsters out of poverty,” stated Sen. Christy Armendariz of Omaha.
Pictures: 2023 Nebraska legislative session
ebamer@owh.com Twitter @ErinBamer
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An SEC defensive back is headed to Lincoln via the transfer portal.
Former Georgia DB Justyn Rhett has committed to Nebraska. He has three years of eligibility remaining.
Rhett appeared in four games over two seasons for the powerhouse Bulldogs. He finishes his Georgia career with three tackles.
The 6-1, 200-pound DB got to Athens from the football factory out of Las Vegas, Bishop Gorman. A four-star prospect out of high school, Rhett was selected to play in Under Armour All-America Game and picked Georgia over Alabama, Michigan, Florida State, LSU, Tennessee, Oregon, Notre Dame, Oregon, and more.
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LOUISVILLE, Kentucky — One match left: Louisville, which knocked out Pittsburgh, plays Penn State, which ousted Nebraska with a five-set reverse sweep.
ESPN and Big Ten Network analyst Emily Ehman and VolleyballMag editor Lee Feinswog look back on an incredible Thursday night at the NCAA Division I Volleyball Championship:
Dana Holgorsen, John Butler talk bowl prep and being “light on your feet”
In today’s college football, coaches must have their head on a swivel.
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That’s true during the season of course, but it’s now a way of life once the transfer portal opens in December and rosters start moving and shaking. And things get even more wild if you’re at a program that’s playing in a bowl game, or even the College Football Playoff.
It’s a balancing act that all staffs are going through right now. Nebraska’s included.
“You’ve got to be light on your feet, man,” Nebraska defensive coordinator John Butler said during a press conference over Zoom on Thursday. “I mean, you’re maybe in the middle of a game-plan meeting and all of a sudden you got to jump out and you’re having a 30-minute meeting with a prospect that’s in on a visit, or you’re jumping on a Zoom doing it. Or you’re watching 15 minutes of tape to make sure that, hey, this guy just jumped in and he wants to visit us. So I think you got to be a fast thinker and mover and a shaker, quite frankly.”
This whole process has taught Butler, who spent the 2024 season as the defensive backs coach under now-departed DC Tony White, that these traits are as important as ever: Being decisive. Being organized. Following a road map to achieve a goal and not deviating from it when there’s chaos all over.
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“You’ve got to have a plan and a vision for what you’re looking for, because everything happens so fast,” Butler said. “You have a guy get in and get out, get in and get signed. And at the same time, you also got to keep an eye on your roster constantly, because there’s people reaching out. There’s people reaching out to your players, whether it’s direct or it’s people reaching out through a third party. And it’s unfortunate in this environment.
“People said, ‘Hey, it’s like NFL free agency.’ No, it’s not. NFL free agency is regulated.”
As Husker fans have come to learn, just because a player says he’s going to enter the transfer portal doesn’t mean he actually will. And sometimes when a player actually enters his name in the portal, there’s always a chance they could withdraw their name and return to their program if each side wants.
Nebraska saw that happen with defensive lineman Keona Davis, who briefly entered the portal before withdrawing and staying at NU for 2025. There was also running back Emmett Johnson — he announced he would enter the portal but never made it there.
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Holgorsen played a key role in convincing Johnson to stay at Nebraska.
“We had some long talks after the season, and I got to know him better as a person,” Holgorsen said of his relationship with Johnson. “I did that with a bunch of them, but him in particular was probably about the first one that came in and was excited about what we did, but there was some buts. So we had some long talks. I think he’s a great kid and he’s going to be a special player here. Excited to coach him.”
On Holgorsen’s side of the ball, he’ll have to adjust his game plan now that he’ll be without a handful of players he was able to use during the regular season.
Running back Dante Dowdell transferred to Kentucky on Friday. A tight end Holgorsen really liked, Nate Boerkircher, transferred to Texas A&M. Receiver Isaiah Neyor has chosen to opt out of the Pinstripe Bowl to focus on his NFL aspirations. Offensive lineman Micah Mazzccua, who began the year as the starting right guard but finished the season rotating with Gunnar Gottula at left tackle, won’t play in the bowl because he’s getting surgery to fix a torn labrum he played through during the season.
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There will be holes to fill on Holgorsen’s offense in the bowl game and beyond in 2025. But Holgorsen brushes all of this chaos off. He’s a go-with-the-flow guy. He doesn’t pretend to have answers to fix college football. What he does have, though, is a plan.
“There’s been a lot of talk out there about something needs to happen. That’s above my pay grade,” Holgorsen said. “So, the few kids who decided to do that (leave), we wish them well, and you just go replace them. It’s as simple as that.”
Part of that replacement process needs to happen for the bowl game with current members of the roster. Behind Emmett Johnson, expect Rahmir Johnson — he’s native of the Bronx and will have several family members and friends at Yankee Stadium — to play often as it’ll be his final game in a Husker uniform.
But with Dowdell and Gabe Ervin Jr. gone from the team, perhaps this Pinstripe Bowl will feature another big back on Nebraska’s roster who’s seldom been used: redshirt freshman Kwinten Ives, a 6-3, 210-pounder.
“You know, 23 (Dowdell) isn’t playing in the bowl game but 28 (Ives) is gonna go in there and he’s gonna play his tail off because he’s had nine spectacular practices,” Holgorsen said. “I think that’s how you got to look at it. You don’t worry about the ones that aren’t playing. You worry about the ones that are playing, and you coach them and you try to develop them, put them in position to hopefully be successful.”
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