Nebraska
New bill pushes to give tenants more rights in Nebraska
/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/gray/6YAVXBEADBEYTNRQWYXD5OYROI.jpg)
OMAHA, Neb. (WOWT) – It’s referred to as the Residential Tenant Clear Slate Act and it’s designed to present renters extra rights so their previous doesn’t drag them down.
LB-175 stipulates that should you meet sure necessities, the state of Nebraska would seal your information on the subject of earlier evictions. State Sen. George Dungan, a former public defender, launched it.
In Omaha, Lawyer Dave Pantos volunteers in eviction court docket not less than as soon as every week. He represents renters in courtroom 20 of the Omaha/Douglas Civic Heart.
Pantos says the present look-back interval of a tenant’s historical past is seven years. This invoice would scale back that to 3 years.
“You possibly can have a state of affairs the place a landlord recordsdata for an eviction, that’s a part of a public court docket file and so a future landlord does a fast search of an applicant’s file, they see the submitting and so they transfer on to the subsequent particular person,” Pantos stated. “They are saying I’m not going to lease to that particular person, someone filed towards them even when it was dismissed.”
Pantos, who usually posts on social media how he did every week in eviction court docket, says not all landlords are unhealthy. Nevertheless, he believes the COVID-19 pandemic modified the owner and tenant dynamic with so many individuals shedding their earnings or getting laid off by no fault of their very own.
He needs to see new protections for individuals so that they don’t get kicked out.
“If of us lose earnings due to sickness, a variety of of us don’t have protections like paid sick go away, they shouldn’t be compelled to not have a spot to remain,” Pantos stated.
Invoice sponsor Dungan says previous evictions shouldn’t hang-out tenants and maintain them in a cycle of hardship.
He’s hoping the invoice will get a good shot at a debate and vote within the Unicameral, not tied up in committee.
Copyright 2023 WOWT. All rights reserved.

Nebraska
Peterson: I’m Done Trusting Nebraska Football

As I watched Nebraska go down to Iowa on Black Friday of 2024, I told myself something:
“No matter what happens this offseason, don’t forget how you feel about this program at this exact moment.”
Nebraska had just blown a dominant performance against the Iowa Hawkeyes in the 13-10 loss. You know the stats. A 20-5 edge in first downs. Outgaining Iowa 334-164, with 75 of those Hawkeye yards coming on a single play. Iowa rushed for 49 yards on 26 attempts. 1.9-per!
And the Hawkeyes still won.
“Sit in this exact moment, and don’t a single piece of news over the course of the next nine months sway you,” I told myself. “They need to prove themselves.”
And so, that’s what I did.
When they added new offensive linemen, I remained skeptical. Even additions of a couple of impressive wide receivers made me wonder why they hadn’t also improved the running back room. The defense lost experienced bigs in the interior; why were they going to improve again? The hire of Mike Ekeler as special teams coordinator was a genuinely inspired move, but why did they settle at defensive coordinator after Tony White went to Florida State?
January turned to March, which turned to summer and Big Ten Media Days. I wasn’t budging. I still had enough doubts. The Groin Kick Chronicles project was a great window into the last decade of Husker football. If anything, it was a reminder that Matt Rhule has been as responsible for some of the worst losses for the program as Scott Frost or Mike Riley were. And the ways in which Nebraska lost games in 2023 and 2024 – poor in-game decisions by the head coach, in particular – weren’t just going to fix themselves overnight.
As excited as I was about the potential “Year Three” bounce for Matt Rhule, there were enough reasons to doubt it could happen at this version of Nebraska in this version of college football. By the time we arrived at game week against Cincinnati, I hadn’t changed my tune. 7-5, with losses against Michigan and Minnesota in the first two months, followed by UCLA, Penn State, and Iowa late.
“Until they prove me wrong, I’m going to expect this to happen.”
And then the season kicked off.
A hard-fought win over Cincinnati was some of the proof I was looking for. Blowout wins over Akron and Houston Christian – the type of wins we hadn’t seen in recent years – had me believing that, at the very least, they were better.
I went against my pre-season priors and picked them to win against Michigan.
I was wrong; they lost. But look at the bright side! They repeatedly answered back when Michigan went up by double digits. I was grading them on a curve, even while incredibly disappointed with the defensive showing, but the offense got back up after being shoved in the dirt.
I liked them against Michigan State and Maryland. They responded to the adversity of each game, putting together 24 points across their final five drives against the Spartans. So what that the second and third quarters were absolutely terrible; in the end, they didn’t blink. Down 31-24 in the fourth quarter at Maryland, the defense got stops on three straight drives, while the offense scored ten points across their final two drives, including a touchdown with 1:08 remaining to win the game.
They were winning games they wouldn’t have in previous years and even with issues continuing to pop up, the schedule surely wouldn’t feature a team that could expose them, at least not until USC came into town.
It looked like the season’s floor had risen to 8-4. The ceiling, 10-2. Maybe even 11-1 if you could squint really hard.
Not only did I think they’d go into Minneapolis and pick up a win, I thought they’d do so in dominating fashion.
And then the game kicked off.
Nebraska was pushed around – bullied, in fact – against the Golden Gophers. Despite the score sitting at 7-6* Minnesota for over a quarter, it felt like the Gophers had extended their lead even though they hadn’t. The sacks piled up. The opportunities Nebraska missed on offense were getting worse by the play, culminating with Dylan Raiola’s overthrown pass to Dane Key on the first drive of the third quarter.
*Nebraska’s field goal that cut Minnesota’s lead to 7-6 came with 4:25 left in the first half. The touchdown pass from Drake Lindsey to Le’Meke Brockington that made it 14-6 came with 2:36 left in the third.
Archie Wilson punted the ball down to the 2-yard line and within nine plays, Minnesota had already crossed midfield. To make matters worse, they only needed to pick up one third-down conversion across those nine plays. It was death by a thousand paper cuts early in the drive; the Gophers never had a gain of fewer than three yards and no more than 12.
Matt Rhule’s defense had now been on the field for almost seven minutes. With 4:24 remaining in the third quarter, Nebraska took a timeout because they were tired and needed a rest.
Five plays later, the Gophers were in the end zone after a 20-yard touchdown pass capped off the 14-play, 98-yard drive that took 8:43 off the clock. The score was 14-6, but Minnesota might as well have been up by three scores. The game felt like it was over, even if all Nebraska needed was a touchdown and a two-point conversion to tie it up.
On their ensuing drive, Nebraska went three-and-out before Minnesota scored a touchdown to make it 21-6. A drive later, Nebraska ran six more plays and faced another fourth down. With 9:37 left in the game, trailing by 15 points, Matt Rhule chose to give the ball right back to the team that had scored touchdowns on their previous two drives. An eight-play, 62-yard drive ensued, another 4:23 ticking off the clock, before Minnesota knocked in a field goal. It’s not like I would have trusted the offense to pick up any points, but to punt down two scores that late in the game? Really?
Nebraska’s penultimate drive of the game finished on downs in Minnesota territory and the game ended on one final sack* for the road, the ninth of the game for the Gophers. Thus ended the most disheartening loss of the Matt Rhule era. Minnesota won by a final score of 24-6. Nebraska dropped to 5-2.
*The first half ended on a sack, as well. In fact, the final offensive play of all three quarters for Nebraska ended in sacks. This coming off the Maryland game, in which the final play of the first half for Nebraska’s offense ended with Dylan Raiola being sacked. All told, three of the past four halves have ended with Dylan Raiola on the ground.
And so, we’ve reached an interesting spot:
Do you believe in Nebraska?
Do you believe in Nebraska’s ability to find a way to mask their weaknesses against a schedule that features multiple teams that have been headaches* for the program?
*Understandable if you’re annoyed by using the word “headache” to describe what Iowa has been for Nebraska. Horror show is probably a more apt description.
Do you believe in the offensive line to protect the quarterback better? Hell, do you believe in the quarterback that took nine sacks across 54 offensive plays on Friday night to find better pocket awareness than he has across his 20 career starts? Do you believe in the offensive coordinator to lean on his running back that is (was?) putting together the finest season by a Nebraska back in over a decade?
On defense, do you believe in the pass rush to get to the quarterback when it’s third and medium, and the opposition has already picked up two first downs on the drive? Do you believe in their ability to avoid a penalty on third or fourth down? Do you believe in their ability to make a tackle or will they get shoved around, a one-yard run turning into four or five? Do you believe in the defense getting a stop when they need to?
Do you believe?
I’m done. Nebraska football has lost all benefit of the doubt.
Save me from the distractions of the week. If anything, Matt Rhule brought some of the noise upon himself, calling out how much more* needs to be spent on the roster. Going on Pat McAfee’s show and saying all sorts of positive things about Nebraska… while still leaving the door open for the vacant Penn State head coaching job.
*I agree, for the record, but Nebraska just lost to a team that spends less on their roster than Nebraska does.
Nebraska went into Minneapolis and got absolutely punked by a football team and program that’s not as good as the recent Minnesota teams Nebraska has faced.
The Gophers entered as a team that had struggled to run the football, with a freshman quarterback who had noticeable limitations. Their defense had taken a step back, allowing Power Four opponents to score 29.8 points per game. This version of Nebraska – the 2025 version, with an offense scoring 29.8* points per game against Power teams and one of the best pass defenses in the country – would continue to show proof of concept of how things have changed. Instead, they were outscored 17-0 in the second half and never came close to threatening.
*Coming into the matchup, Nebraska had scored exactly 119 points in their four games against Power opponents. Conversely, Minnesota came in having allowed exactly 119 points across four games against Power teams.
I’m done trusting this team.
I’m done trusting Nebraska until they can find a way to win games against teams that are actually good – in the final five games, I’d say USC is the only team that fits this bill – and/or beat a team that’s had continual success against them like Minnesota, whose winning streak is now up to six in a row, or Iowa, who are 9-1 in their last ten meetings.
I’m sick of watching Nebraska football take on a program like this – one that finishes the game and in the post-game press conference, mentions “physicality” or “culture” as reasons for the win, where all you can do is nod along and shrug. A loss where you can’t argue against it. Where the game starts, and within a few drives, you realize that everything was a house of cards; they weren’t overcoming anything or showing anything different. They were just getting by against lesser teams, before they played a team – a program – like Minnesota, who put them into a locker like they always do.
And we’re sure that won’t happen against any of the final five opponents?
Northwestern plays the exact type of football that has haunted the Nebraska program for years. They’d love to drag them down into the mud.
USC’s offense, littered with dumb mistakes in their loss to Notre Dame, still has the ability to score on any given play, from any spot on the field.
UCLA has won three games in a row this season and beat Nebraska a year ago.
Penn State showed toughness in its loss to Iowa and still has one of the most talented rosters in the sport.
And Iowa is Iowa.
They might find a win against one of those five teams, but anything more than that would surprise me at this point. As I see it, a 5-7 finish is more likely now than 7-5 or 8-4. And don’t even get me started on 9-3 or 10-2.
Nebraska faced a similar situation in 2024. Following the loss to UCLA at the start of November, the team had reached a breaking point. After a 5-1 start, they had lost three games in a row, the last one against the Bruins was easily the most unforgivable.
Changes were made. Dana Holgorsen joined the staff and was named offensive coordinator. Marcus Satterfield was re-assigned* to tight ends coach. Phil Snow was added as an additional set of eyes on the defensive staff. And while Nebraska only went 1-2 in its final three regular-season games, the operation looked a little better on offense against USC before exploding in the sixth win of the season against Wisconsin.
*Oddly enough, his position group might be the most impressive and consistent across the entire team this season!
Matt Rhule looked that moment directly in the eye and made a massive change. A change that was necessary. We’d never seen something like it in Lincoln.
That same week arrives, if a bit earlier, in 2025. There’s no obvious change to be made, unless you believe in firing the offensive line coach (no chance in hell) or benching the quarterback and rolling out a different type of offense (ditto). There’s no quick fix coming. The overall operation will just have to be better.
Can it be? Sure. Do I need to see it before I believe it?
Absolutely.
Agree or disagree, if you have a comment for Josh, send him an email: joshpeterson.huskermax@gmail.com.
Stay up to date on all things Huskers by bookmarking Nebraska Cornhuskers On SI, subscribing to HuskerMax on YouTube, and visiting HuskerMax.com daily.
Nebraska
What Went Wrong for Nebraska Football Against Minnesota — and What Comes Next

The title of last week’s article was the following: Nebraska Football’s Emerging Identity – Clutch, Grit, and Closing Time. It would be fair to question everything we thought we knew about this team after their dud of a performance at Minnesota on Friday night. The Big Red either thought they could just show up and win easily, or they failed to show up entirely. Either way, it made for a dreadful performance against the Gophers.
We cover it all in the Topline Takeaways.
CHEERS TO THAT
Special Teams. It is literally hard to find anything positive to point to after that game. That said, Special Teams continues to be a bright spot for this Nebraska team, and Mike Ekeler’s unit accounted for all of the Huskers’ points on Friday night. Additionally, Archie Wilson (who had to punt five times) looked fantastic, averaging nearly 45 yards per punt, and Jacorey Barney had a nice looking 30 yard punt return. The Huskers will need Special Teams to continue to execute at a high level as they look to rebound, both next week vs. Northwestern and beyond.
Husker Nation. Hats off to you, Husker fans. After a strong contingent showed up against Maryland, Nebraska fans were again well represented in the Friday night tilt vs. Minnesota. In both games, you could actually hear the strong Husker fan presence in each respective stadium on TV. Nebraska fans are absolutely the best on planet earth, and they deserve much better than what this football team has shown for the last decade. The play on the field is going to turn around, and when it does, it will be well deserved by Husker Nation.
REASONS FOR CONCERN
Not Showing Up. Head coach Matt Rhule said after the game that the team was out of whack the entire game, and that nothing he saw in practice during the week suggested that such a performance was coming. It certainly happens to teams, but it’s pretty aggravating from a fan perspective. For Nebraska fans in particular, we never seem to have the payoff of a major win over a ranked opponent, or a special season where everything comes together. It’s only “they didn’t show up” type of games. The Big Red will still have an opportunity to get some wins that would be very meaningful to the fan base, namely against USC, Penn State, and Iowa. Winning one or more of those would go a long way toward making a game like this easier to swallow.
Sacks, Sacks, and More Sacks. At this point, the sacks are on everybody. At times, offensive linemen completely got beat by Minnesota’s defenders. Other times, quarterback Dylan Raiola held the ball too long. It’s been such a problem this season, you have to start questioning the coaching as well. What is happening with the scheme that Raiola keeps ending up on the ground? Are the offensive linemen not being coached properly? Are receivers not getting open? Is Dylan not seeing them? Why do we stick with this straight drop back game over and over? Could we not try more run-pass options, slants, screens…something to try to keep the defense off balance?!?! It’s maddening to watch, and there is absolutely more going on than just offensive linemen getting beat repeatedly.
Run. The. BALL!!!!!! According to a tweet from Omaha World Herald reporter Sam McKewon, Nebraska called 38 pass plays and only 16 runs. This is getting really old. Nebraska is flat out not committed to the run game on a consistent basis, in a league where you absolutely have to be able to run the ball. The Huskers’ inability to run the ball played right into Minnesota’s game plan, and it is sickening to watch other teams beat Nebraska at something we used to do better than anyone: smash mouth football. Rhule has talked about being committed to the run, but that’s simply not what we’ve seen this season.
It seems to me that Nebraska still doesn’t know what its identity is, especially on offense. I don’t want the Huskers ever to settle for being Minnesota or Iowa, but those teams know exactly who they are and how they want to win. It’s hard to say the same is true of Nebraska football.
BOTTOM LINE
Despite all the frustration from Friday night’s loss, my Common Fan Podcast co-host MattyO made a great point the day after the game: we still have five games left, and I want to enjoy them. We only get to do this 12 Saturdays a year, and the Huskers have nearly half a season left to play. As infuriating as it was watching the game (and still is thinking back on it), Nebraska has done a lot of good things this season, and we shouldn’t write off their ability to bounce back. Win against Northwestern this week, and they’ll be 6-2, bowl eligible, and we’ll see what they can do in November.
Speaking of Northwestern, the Wildcats will come into Lincoln at 5-2, much better than most people predicted prior to the season. They just beat Purdue (which put up 20 points on the way to almost beating Minnesota) 19-0, and this will not be an easy out for the Big Red. This is an important test for Matt Rhule’s young team. They need to get up off the mat and show that they can be the ones to throw a punch.
As always, GBR for LIFE.
Tell us what you think, Common Fans. We’d love to hear from you. Send us an email at commonfangbr@gmail.com or find us on YouTube.
Stay up to date on all things Huskers by bookmarking Nebraska Cornhuskers On SI, subscribing to HuskerMax on YouTube, and visiting HuskerMax.com daily.
Nebraska
Hundreds and hundreds of Nebraskans attend No Kings Protest in Lincoln

LINCOLN, Neb. (KOLN) — Lincolnites turned out by the hundreds for the No Kings Protest Saturday.
“This many people out here making their voices heard and exercising their right to free speech is what it means to be an American,” said State Sen. George Dungan. “And I think it’s really incredible today that people are showing up and telling the government what they care about.”
While similar protests took place in cities across the country, the themes are much the same: concern over immigration policy, LGBTQ+ rights and going after political opponents.
“I’m here for humanity,” said protester Florence Ditzler. “I’m here for peace. I’m here for the future, for the young. I’m here because I love America.”
Some conservative politicians referred to the protests as “Hate America” rallies, something attendees strongly disagreed with.
“I think how bad is that they have to picture us as as hating when that’s all they’re doing. They’re hating all the immigrants, they’re hating anybody and calling them illegal. It’s just crazy,” said Joe Meuser, at the No Kings Protest.
Veterans like Jeff Johnson said Trump should also keep the military out of American streets.
“We don’t want the military on the streets in the U.S.,” Johnson said. “For no other reason than it just erodes the public perception of what the military is really for.”
Click here to subscribe to our 10/11 NOW daily digest and breaking news alerts delivered straight to your email inbox.
Copyright 2025 KOLN. All rights reserved.
-
Augusta, GA1 week ago
‘Boom! Blew up right there’: Train slams into semi in Grovetown
-
Alaska6 days ago
More than 1,400 seeking shelter as hundreds wait to be evacuated after catastrophic Western Alaska storm, officials say
-
Education1 week ago
Video: 3 Former College Teammates Reunite on Rangers Coaching Staff
-
North Carolina1 week ago
Guide to NC State Fair 2025: Tickets, transportation, parking, new rides and special event days
-
World1 week ago
Albanian judge killed in courtroom shooting amid growing anger over justice system reforms
-
World5 days ago
What are NATO’s national caveats and why do they hinder fast response?
-
News5 days ago
Trump Halts Billions in Grants for Democratic Districts During Shutdown
-
World6 days ago
European Commission delays decision on asylum seeker quotas