Nebraska
Nebraska retracts 287% spirits tax hike plan – The Spirits Business
A proposed spirits tax increase of 287% in Nebraska will not go ahead after more than 1,500 letters were sent to lawmakers.
Nebraska governor Jim Pillen was considering providing property tax relief by increasing excise taxes on a list of 100 everyday goods and services, including a triple-digit hike on spirits.
Pillen was planning to raise the current excise tax rate for spirits from US$3.75 per gallon to US$14.50 per gallon.
However, the tax increase is no longer being considered following a grassroots activation by trade group the Distilled Spirits Council of the US (Discus) and coordination with local distillers and wholesale partners.
More than 1,500 letters were sent to legislators through Discus’ Spirits United campaign, which called on consumers and industry members to write to their senator to oppose the tax increases.
“Defeating this tax threat is a huge win for consumers, distillers and the hospitality industry,” said Adam Smith, vice president of state government relations at Discus.
“We’ve seen in other states how high taxes send consumers across the border as they search for better prices. However well-intentioned, this hospitality tax would have harmed local businesses and Nebraska consumers. We are grateful to the legislature for removing this increase from consideration.”
If the tax hike had proceeded, Discus said approximately 1,350 people would lose their jobs because of a more than US$110 million decline in retail alcohol sales, based on analysis by the trade body.
Furthermore, the new rate would have established Nebraska as the second-highest spirits tax rate among licensed US states.
The state already pays a high rate of tax on spirits. On a typical bottle purchased in the state, more than 44% of the retail cost already goes to pay a tax or fee of some kind.
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Nebraska
Omaha hospice nurse speaks out after Nebraska AG disciplinary action
OMAHA, Neb. (WOWT) – A part-owner of Endless Journey Hospice is speaking out after the Nebraska Attorney General issued a 14-page petition of disciplinary action against her and another nurse at the company.
Melanie Costlow, who has been a part owner of Endless Journey Hospice since the company opened in 2016, said she is working to show the positives of the organization following allegations from the state.
Allegations and investigation
In April of last year, the state opened an investigation into Endless Journey Hospice following a self-reported incident. Attorney General Mike Hilgers issued the disciplinary petition against two nurses at the company.
Allegations against Costlow included failing to report misdemeanors on nurse renewal applications, transporting medications from a deceased patient, and allowing staff to sign medical reports as a physician.
The second nurse was accused of mishandling medications in an unlocked cabinet and signing patient records as a physician. That nurse has since been terminated.
Costlow’s response
Costlow said she was unaware the employee was keeping medications from a deceased patient, and that an automated computer system unknowingly marked employees as physicians in patient records.
“None of that happened knowingly. None of that was done with ill intent,” Costlow said.
She said the charting system issue was identified and steps were taken to correct it before the state investigated.
“I will tell you that we had a system. All hospices had a system that they chart and we changed our system,” Costlow said.
Regarding the failure to report prior misdemeanors, Costlow said she had an attorney at the time and was unaware she was required to report them to the state board of nursing.
“That was not done maliciously. That is not me trying to hide from the state board of nursing that I was caught driving without a driver’s license,” Costlow said.
Outcome
There is no longer an active investigation. Costlow will serve a 90-day suspension and pay a $10,000 fine. Endless Journey Hospice will remain open.
Costlow said her suspension had not yet begun but was expected to start in the coming days.
“I don’t want Endless Journey to suffer for something that we already been through, that we already handled, that we already took care of,” Costlow said.
Copyright 2026 WOWT. All rights reserved.
Nebraska
Roanoke County teen heads to national rodeo finals in Nebraska
ROANOKE COUNTY, Va. (WDBJ) – A Bent Mountain teenager will compete at the National High School Rodeo Finals in Lincoln, Neb., later this month after qualifying with the Virginia High School Rodeo Association.
Kellen Hamm, a dual-enrolled homeschooled Roanoke County senior, graduated this May with a 4.2 GPA. She will compete at the national finals July 18–25 in four events: breakaway roping, team roping, barrel racing and pole bending.
Seventh state title in pole bending
Hamm recently claimed her seventh consecutive Virginia state championship in pole bending, riding her horse Tucker. Winning seven straight state titles in the same event on the same horse is considered a rare accomplishment in high school rodeo competition.
College plans
Hamm has been accepted to Murray State University in Kentucky, where she plans to enroll this fall. She will pursue a degree in elementary education and compete on Murray State’s collegiate rodeo team.
To follow Hamm’s progress at the National High School Rodeo Finals, visit the event’s official website online.
Copyright 2026 WDBJ. All rights reserved.
Nebraska
Nebraska wants data centers to come clean about water usage
Often seen as a black box of information, data centers in Nebraska will be forced to reveal more about their operations, like their annual water use and power demand, to the state, following the recent passing of a new law by the Nebraska Legislature. Jesse Bradley, director of the Department of Water, Energy, and Environment said the state agency will then see what information gaps remain, but that the legislation is a “great start” and will help with future planning.
In addition to electricity production, water has emerged as a point of contention as companies look to build more data centers in Nebraska. Local residents, researchers, and regulators worry that new data centers could bring about water shortages in a state where water availability can vary widely and where wide swaths of this agricultural state are suffering through extreme drought. For now, the best available information about how much water data centers use comes directly from the data center companies themselves — if they choose to be transparent.
For instance, in Nebraska, there isn’t even an official count of how many data centers there are in the state. Of the ones that have reported their water usage, the amounts vary. Google’s Nebraska data centers consumed about 732 million gallons of water in 2025, according to the company. Google, a subsidiary of Alphabet, expects its water consumption from data centers to grow. From 2020 to 2024, Meta’s four million square-foot Sarpy County data center withdrew anywhere from 26.7 million gallons to 37.5 million gallons from the local water supply, depending on the year.
Data centers use water to cool the buildings and the computer servers inside. Keeping everything at optimal temperatures ensures the equipment doesn’t malfunction. Some cooling methods, like evaporative cooling systems, typically use large amounts of water. Air-cooled chiller systems, however, deploy a “closed loop” containing water, a chemical coolant, or sometimes both and can operate without needing to be replenished for years. While closed loop systems use less water, they tend to use more electricity — the production of which can also require water.
“What’s best?” said Eric Masanet, a University of California, Santa Barbara engineering professor. “It depends on the data center, its design, the local climate, if you have enough water, if you have enough power, what people want, what they’re willing to devote their resources to.”
Google decides which cooling system to use depending on how much water is available in a given location, according to Ben Townsend, the company’s head of infrastructure and sustainability. The company assesses local watersheds before and after building a data center. Meta’s Sarpy County data center uses a combination of evaporative and closed loop cooling.
While data centers have typically been built in urban areas, developments have started to move further out to suburbs and rural areas as fiber optic cables and infrastructure has improved, said Dan Diorio, vice president of state policy at the Data Center Coalition. This expansion raises concerns for areas of Nebraska that either don’t have enough water already or whose water supply is already fully allocated. Most of the state’s water is used for irrigation to support the agriculture-based economy.
With water use expected to rise due to droughts and higher temperatures from climate change, water policy and allocation are top of mind, said Crystal Powers, water extension educator at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.
“From a logical, common sense perspective, we really need to stop putting industry in areas where they can’t be supported,” by natural resources like water, said John Winkler, general manager of the Papio-Missouri River Natural Resource District. “It doesn’t make sense to put a data center in an area that’s very water insecure to begin with.”
Masanet and fellow researcher Jonathan Koomey said the pressure is being put on the data center industry to be more efficient and transparent.
“I work with a lot of people in the tech industry. They’re pouring trillions into this industry,” Masanet said. “We should hold them to account and make them install the very best technologies that minimize energy and water.”
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