OMAHA — Tanya Gifford of Carry Up Sarpy County was thrilled this summer time to study that her nonprofit was awarded $1 million to assist push back homelessness in a group nonetheless pained by the pandemic.
However her cheer, and that of about 50 different nonprofits throughout Nebraska, was short-lived.
State officers knowledgeable the bunch final week {that a} cumulative $15.5 million in awards as soon as headed to their companies for housing stability packages wouldn’t arrive in spite of everything.
Amid confusion over deadlines, the state should now return the would-be funds for Carry Up Sarpy and others to the U.S. Treasury.
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“We’re dissatisfied,” stated Gifford. “The million-dollar grant was big for us. We’re shedding the potential to assist so many households.”
‘Welfare state’
She views the loss as the newest blow within the often-contentious saga of the federal Emergency Rental Help Program that Gov. Pete Ricketts’ administration has managed for all however two of Nebraska’s 93 counties.
A crescendo in controversy got here earlier this yr when Ricketts rejected a second spherical of the emergency hire help, regardless of the Legislature’s try and power him to just accept the $120 million. The federal authorities had set that cash apart for struggling renters within the state’s 91 smaller and rural counties.
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Ricketts maintained that the worst of the COVID storm was over and that Nebraska ought to guard towards changing into a “welfare state.”
Lawmakers couldn’t muster sufficient votes to override the governor’s veto.
By then, the Ricketts administration had already accepted and began to disperse the primary spherical of ERAP, although at a sluggish tempo.
(Douglas and Lancaster Counties, in addition to the Cities of Omaha and Lincoln, apply for and oversee their very own streams of ERAP funding, individually from the state program.)
Of the state’s first spherical of $158 million for the 91 counties, the Ricketts administration ended up shifting about $97 million, largely to Omaha and Lincoln, saying the state’s bigger city metropolitan communities had better demand.
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Fund distribution replace
As of this week, in keeping with the Governor’s Workplace, the state rental help program:
* Distributed a complete of about $26 million to eligible renters or their landlords within the state’s 91 smaller counties.
* Paid about $10.4 million to Deloitte, an audit and danger administration consulting agency, for administrative assist associated to this system.
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* Had about $20 million remaining.
It was from the unspent $20 million that the $15.5 million for housing stability companies was to come back. Potential makes use of, the Nebraska Division of Well being and Human Companies informed group companies vying for the funds, excluded direct hire help however allowed a variety from eviction diversion packages to housing-related companies for survivors of home abuse.
After initially contacting the chosen organizations in mid-August to inform them they might obtain a portion of the funding, state officers final week held a digital assembly and knowledgeable them the cash as an alternative needed to be returned to the federal Treasury.
Aides to the governor blamed confusion on “late” steerage shifts by the Treasury that required the state program not solely to assign — however truly to spend — the entire first funding spherical by Sept. 30, 2022.
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Use it or lose it
“These late adjustments will eradicate the flexibility for the State to enter into $15.5 million in contractual obligations with housing stability suppliers,” Ricketts spokeswoman Alex Reuss informed the Nebraska Examiner.
Moreover, she stated, certified renters and landlords who had utilized and basically have been pre-approved for emergency hire and utility help via December wouldn’t get that help past Sept. 30.
There’s a easy resolution to the issue — there at all times has been.
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– Erin Feichtinger, Ladies’s Fund of Omaha
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Nebraska Finances Administrator Lee Will had reached out to Treasury officers to try to treatment the state of affairs. However a letter from the federal company’s Chief Restoration Officer, Jacob Leibenluft, laid out a chronology of steerage and correspondence that implies the state shouldn’t have been stunned by the Sept. 30 use-it-or-lose-it deadline.
Leibenluft, within the letter to Will, provided what a number of Nebraska housing nonprofits view as an answer. He stated the state may nonetheless settle for a part of the second spherical of rental help, which the governor for months has resisted.
“The State of Nebraska may readily take motion to keep away from any hurt to renters or landlords that might come up,” Liebenluft stated. As an alternative of the total $120 million, although, a lesser $48 million now could be obtainable in that second spherical.
“Treasury stands prepared to offer the State of Nebraska as much as $48 million in obtainable award funds … to fund the potential hire and extra housing stability companies,” Leibenluft stated.
To that, the governor’s spokesperson reiterated Ricketts’ earlier stance.
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The matter “was mentioned and debated extensively in the course of the legislative session,” Reuss stated. ”The state won’t be in search of the second spherical of funding.”
‘Cumbersome’ portal
Carolyn Pospisil of Housing Basis for Sarpy County is pissed off by the circumstances.
The company she directs had deliberate to make use of a $230,000 grant to reconnect with about 900 folks that her company is aware of had tapped emergency hire help.
Earlier than the Housing Basis discovered that the award wouldn’t be forthcoming in spite of everything, it had employed two staffers to create a brand new outreach program providing funds counseling and different companies to make sure that households keep afloat financially.
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Pospisil challenged the governor’s assertion that, based mostly on the low quantity of rental help dispersed by the state, Nebraskans don’t want the assistance.
She contends that lackluster participation had extra to do with a ”cumbersome and complex” portal system that state vendor Deloitte created to vet candidates.
Pospisil stated that instead, her group selected to show to philanthropic {dollars}, about $1 million, to cowl emergency hire wants for Sarpy County residents. That non-public stream of funds has run dry, she stated.
Erin Feichtinger, coverage director of Ladies’s Fund of Omaha, for months has been advocating for added rental help funds. She sees one other opening within the Treasury Division’s message to Will.
She says struggling residents of the 91 smaller and rural counties of Nebraska stand to be harm most.
“There’s a easy resolution to the issue — there at all times has been,” she stated.
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Housing crunch amplifies stress
In central Nebraska, Liz Mayfield of Grand Island-based Hope Harbor stated an absence of public transportation and different assist companies provides much more limitations for households impacted by the pandemic.
She stated all however two of the nonprofit’s shelter rooms are full. With the scarcity of rental dwellings within the space, Mayfield stated, homeless households who’re prepared for the following step can’t transfer out of the shelter.
“There’s a lot competitors for housing models,” she stated.
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Mayfield had deliberate to make use of a $124,000 grant from the state hire program to alleviate stressors that may result in homelessness. For instance, she stated, assist for automotive repairs is important in a group with no public transit, as a breakdown can spiral right into a misplaced job and eviction.
Mayfield stated she doesn’t view the grant mishap as malicious in any manner. She hopes the state will rethink and settle for the second spherical of emergency hire funds.
“For me, it’s simply one other indicator that Nebraska made a mistake by not taking them,” she stated. “It’s being performed from a spot of privilege and never being clued in or conscious of the particular on-the-ground state of affairs.”
Gifford, of Carry Up Sarpy, provided her fast-growing and luxury-home-heavy county for instance of how the impression of the pandemic on some households will be off the general public radar.
She stated Sarpy has no emergency shelters. Low-income housing is tough to seek out, she stated, and circumstances usually push residents into Douglas County to seek out companies.
“I’ve three veterans and 4 households in a lodge this week, all ready for housing to come back open,” she stated.
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State contractor was paid $10.4 million
A non-public contractor employed by the State of Nebraska to assist disperse federal emergency hire help “flagged” questionable functions for help that quantity to almost $23 million. That’s simply shy of the overall quantity truly awarded to struggling renters in the course of the vendor’s contract.
Deloitte vetted and accredited about $26 million in requests earlier than the Emergency Rental Help Program expired Sept. 30, added a spokeswoman for Gov. Pete Ricketts.
This system was supposed to stop pandemic-related evictions in 91 of Nebraska’s 93 counties. Residents in Douglas and Lancaster Counties have been served via separate packages.
Alex Reuss, the governor’s spokeswoman, stated the state thus far has paid Deloitte $10.4 million to manage this system. The contract allowed as much as $15.8 million, or 10% of the state’s authentic award, for administrative capability prices.
Reuss stated that restrict remained regardless that about $97 million of the unique $158 million award was reallocated to packages in jurisdictions outdoors the 91 counties.
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Deloitte’s function, Reuss stated, was to create the appliance portal utilized by greater than 50,000 registered customers. The seller processed greater than 25,000 functions and used “program integrity efforts” geared toward stopping waste, fraud and abuse.
The Deloitte system, Reuss stated, flagged about 1,500 functions. She stated the seller is working with the State Patrol to analyze what she stated may quantity to the practically $23 million in fraudulent requests.
Deloitte’s contact heart fielded about 46,000 calls over the previous 18 months, Reuss stated. The contractor additionally accomplished month-to-month and quarterly compliance reporting to the U.S. Treasury.
Erin Feichtinger, a housing and group advocate who has monitored the lifetime of this system, was skeptical about what raised the Deloitte “flag” and the way most of the functions have been confirmed as fraudulent.
She questioned the contract prices, noting issues from group teams that the help utility system was robust to navigate.
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“I’m undecided what we paid for,” stated Feichtinger, now coverage director on the Ladies’s Fund of Omaha. “They have been imagined to administer the cash and disperse it — and that didn’t occur.”
Reuss stated this system operated for over 18 months and known as for private details about candidates and landlords, together with a COVID impression assertion, wage types and leases.
“Partnering with Deloitte helped us serve over 25,000 candidates, whereas stopping fraud and abuse,” Reuss stated.
LINCOLN, Neb. (KLKN) – #6 Nebraska wrestling wins a tough battle Saturday afternoon against #4 Minnesota.
The Huskers won the first three matches leading 9-0, before The Golden Gophers took the next three winning all by major decision.
The Huskers responded with a punch, taking care of business the rest of the way. They won the final four matches, securing the first big ten win of the season, 21-13.
Saturday’s win also marked another milestone for the Huskers. Head coach Mark Manning clinched his 300th career win in Lincoln.
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Nebraska has now won 8 of the past 9 vs. Minnesota, and will be faced with an even tougher test next week.
#6 Nebraska will host #1 Penn State at the Devaney Center Friday night.
OMAHA, Neb. (WOWT) – Luke Jensen and Rob Kugler, two Nebraska born veterans, are premiering a film called ‘Crossed Paths’ to bring awareness of the struggles that veterans often face.
The film showcases the journey of Jensen and Kugler after they were deployed to Afghanistan and Iraq in the 2000s.
In their separate journeys, Kugler was faced with the loss of a family member and pet while facing his duties and building resillience through community support in the Marine Corps.
Jensen was faced with the struggle for self discovery in the Marine Corps Reserves in Omaha and in the National Guard.
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According to Jensen, he began to heal after traveling to Peru and discovering natural medicine like Ayahuasca and other meditating techniques.
Both veterans are hopeful their film can serve as a gateway for veterans that there is hope at the end of the tunnel.
“From my point of view, I think it’s always good to be willing to try something new,” Jensen said. “I think just watching it feels like you’re going on an adventure and traveling to a different place.”
The ‘Crossed Paths’ film will premiere Saturday, January 11th, at 7:00 p.m. at UNO’s Thompson Alumni Center.
Nebraska Cornhuskers (12-3, 2-2 Big Ten) at Purdue Boilermakers (12-4, 4-1 Big Ten)
West Lafayette, Indiana; Sunday, 12 p.m. EST
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BOTTOM LINE: Nebraska visits No. 20 Purdue after Brice Williams scored 28 points in Nebraska’s 97-87 overtime loss to the Iowa Hawkeyes.
The Boilermakers are 8-0 on their home court. Purdue has an 11-4 record against teams over .500.
The Cornhuskers are 2-2 in Big Ten play. Nebraska scores 77.5 points and has outscored opponents by 10.8 points per game.
Purdue’s average of 8.4 made 3-pointers per game this season is just 0.7 fewer made shots on average than the 9.1 per game Nebraska gives up. Nebraska scores 8.9 more points per game (77.5) than Purdue allows to opponents (68.6).
The Boilermakers and Cornhuskers face off Sunday for the first time in Big Ten play this season.
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TOP PERFORMERS: Trey Kaufman-Renn is scoring 17.7 points per game with 6.3 rebounds and 2.3 assists for the Boilermakers.
Williams is scoring 19.4 points per game with 3.6 rebounds and 2.4 assists for the Cornhuskers.
LAST 10 GAMES: Boilermakers: 7-3, averaging 75.0 points, 29.9 rebounds, 16.5 assists, 6.2 steals and 2.1 blocks per game while shooting 47.9% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 69.1 points per game.
Cornhuskers: 8-2, averaging 77.9 points, 34.0 rebounds, 14.6 assists, 7.8 steals and 2.5 blocks per game while shooting 48.0% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 67.6 points.
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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.