Nebraska
Woodsonia reveals new multimillion-dollar retail, sports venue option for Gretna good life district • Nebraska Examiner
GRETNA, Nebraska — An alternative multimillion-dollar retail and entertainment project surfaced Tuesday night as a potential lifeline for the embattled Gretna good life district once led by businessman Rod Yates.
Drew Snyder of Woodsonia Real Estate revealed his vision to the Gretna City Council, showcasing signature features such as a 15,000-seat outdoor concert amphitheater and a multisport facility.
His hope, which was mirrored by the City Council, is to keep alive the 2,000-acre good life district designation and related state financial incentives previously approved by state officials for the creation of a unique destination.
The future of the Gretna district — the largest and most high-profile of five allowed under the state’s Good Life Transformational Projects law — has been up in the air since Yates asked to terminate his state-approved application that established the project site.
Officials at the Nebraska Department of Economic Development have given the city and other developers until Feb. 12 to submit evidence that a transformational project is still viable at the site and that the designation should not be dissolved. The district includes and surrounds Yates’ Nebraska Crossing shopping center at Interstate 80 and Highway 31.
Snyder, in partnership with Kansas City-based 635 Holdings, said he wanted to present his development and financial plan to the council before he submitted it to the DED.
His message: “State of Nebraska, don’t shut the district down. Keep this district intact, and let us move forward with these projects. Amazing things can happen.”
‘Absolute needle-mover’
Snyder called the proposed $125 million outdoor amphitheater “an absolute needle-mover” for state tourism that would span 120 acres and host about 50 major concerts a year.
Envisioned also across about 700 acres: a Jack Nicklaus-designed golf course surrounded by housing; a St. James multisport facility, a JW Marriott hotel, a retail campus spanning 400,000 square feet and a giant Wally’s 200-pump gas station and travel center.
Altogether, Snyder said, those pieces are projected to bring in up to about $700 million in total gross revenues a year, about 30% of that in sales from out-of-state visitors.
He expects to attract up to 7.5 million visitors annually, about 2 million of them from other states.
Tourism dollars and unique attractions are key components of good life districts and considered crucial to keeping the designation, said Gretna Mayor Mike Evans.
While the City Council did not formally endorse the Woodsonia redevelopment plan Tuesday night, Evans said it is central to a separate package and economic development study the city will submit to the DED to prove the district is still viable and should retain its distinction.
Evans said that Woodsonia, as any other developer, would have to go through an approval process later if the district remained intact.
Moving parts
Other moving parts also could impact the future of the Gretna good life district — and possibly the three other state-approved districts in Omaha, Grand Island and Bellevue as well.
Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen, who has raised questions about the good life district law, seeks to “reverse” the state’s sales tax diversion and clawback the public funds that had been carved out to help build out the good life districts.
Those changes, proposed in the governor’s two-year budget, would first have to be debated by the Nebraska Legislature. At least three different state lawmakers also have introduced good life district-related bills that could spur substantial changes.
Some lawmakers have criticized how the state incentive for the good life districts played out. The Legislature cut the state sales tax within approved districts from 5.5% to 2.75%, with the idea being that the difference would be recaptured to help pay for major development of the district.
In the case of Gretna, as the process dragged on, about $2.2 million in taxes went uncollected and was essentially lost. The district did not see that money, as a special election needed to access the revenue was delayed.
City residents narrowly approved the district’s taxing authority in January. The affirmative vote allowed city officials to develop an economic development program, and the city, starting in March, will start recapturing the vacated state sales tax, Evans said Tuesday.
Yates ‘going 100 miles an hour’
Another factor in play is that Yates has not given up his pursuit of developing a mega sports-focused campus in the district that includes and surrounds his Nebraska Crossing shopping center, though he is seeking a different path and now has a slimmed down 1,000-acre version of his vision.
“We’re going 100 miles an hour,” Yates told the Nebraska Examiner on Tuesday.
Yates said his team currently is working with State Sen. Beau Ballard of Lincoln, who has introduced legislation that provides Yates another shot at the project he has worked on for two years.
The first phase would rise, Yates said, on property within the existing district boundaries, but it would be governed by different rules and incentives outlined in Ballard’s Legislative Bill 637, the Destination Nebraska Act.
Yates said he hadn’t heard details of other plans for the area and couldn’t comment on the possibility of co-existing with other developers in the general area.
He said he is awaiting the DED’s determination on whether to dissolve the Gretna good life district. “The more relevant question is where is the DED in all this?” said Yates.
One thing for sure, Yates said, is that his revised plan would not require approval from the City of Gretna, which rejected his earlier demands. Gretna officials said Yates’ terms were too risky for taxpayers and that he essentially wanted the city to use its power of eminent domain to forcibly acquire land from other property owners for his project.
Yates said he recently had a “town hall meeting” with property owners in his latest 1,000-acre quest, and was pleased with the reception.
Evans, on Tuesday, said there is room in the good life district for multiple developers and said he welcomes Yates to return to the negotiation table.
‘Let’s get the show on the road’
During his presentation, Snyder thanked Yates for his “vision and fortitude” that helped launch the good life district legislation.
He said his team — which has developed numerous multi-use projects in Nebraska, including the Topgolf Omaha development — already invested millions of dollars in preparing its plan and has partners and financial commitments in place. Woodsonia owns about 150 acres of the 700-acre campus it envisions. Snyder said the rest is under a contract to buy or in negotiations.
If DED gives the green light, he says, the proposed $400 million retail campus and 50,000-square-foot Wally’s gas and travel center would begin quickly. Wally’s, a national brand, is projected to pull in 2.5 million visitors a year who likely would shop and spend money at surrounding venues, Snyder said.
Anthony Montemarano, who owns a landscape company in the district boundaries, was among a few property owners who addressed the City Council.
Montemarano said he has always been 100% supportive of seeing a transformational project rise at the site, and also was encouraged by Yates’ plan. He said he mostly wanted to understand “what was going on” and now feels like he is better informed.
“It appears as though we’re going to begin,” said Montemarano. “Let’s get the show on the road.”
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Nebraska
Nebraska ag experts say early detection for livestock parasites, illnesses will be important during summer show season
County fairs and livestock shows are ramping up this summer as several cattle illness threats are starting to emerge in Nebraska and other states. Livestock experts aren’t raising alarm about increased spread, but they are encouraging livestock owners to pay more attention this year to biosecurity efforts and the movement of their animals.
Two threats have emerged over the last several months: the rise in a tick-born disease called Theileria and the return of a flesh-eating parasite called the New World Screwworm.
At least 10 feedlots and three breeding herds have reported cases of imported cattle having Theileria. The disease is caused by the Asian longhorn tick, most commonly found on the East Coast. The tick itself hasn’t been found in Nebraska, but the disease can be spread further by reusing needles with an infected animal or through other blood-sucking organisms such as lice. The symptoms include anemia, jaundice, loss of appetite, exercise intolerance and weakness. In some cases, the disease can be fatal.
Cattle owners have been closely watching the spread of the New World Screwworm. It wreaked havoc on U.S. herds decades ago, but it was eradicated from the country in the 1960s. Cases started appearing in Texas in early June, and cattle owners in neighboring states have assumed that the parasite will eventually spread north. The screwworms lay eggs in the flesh of live animals, which can cause infections, disease and death if left untreated.
Nebraska Extension said early detection of the parasite is “critical for successful control efforts.” Possible early signs of New World Screwworm infections include non-healing wounds, depression or restlessness, foul-smelling lesions, presence of maggots in living tissue and animals showing pain or discomfort. They could show this behavior through shaking their heads or showing pain or irritation around wounds.
Several county fairs and shows have already started this summer. The Nebraska State Fair will kick off at the end of August in Grand Island. But several other large-scale shows, including the Burwell Rodeo that brings together animals from outside Nebraska, will culminate over the next few weeks.
Vaughn Sievers, the agriculture director for the Nebraska State Fair, said fair officials work closely with an official State Fair veterinarian to evaluate the health of animals before they are allowed onto fairgrounds.
“To date, the fair has not experienced a disease outbreak,” Sievers said. “However, we coordinate closely with our security and veterinary teams to maintain response plans and designated quarantine areas in the event one were to occur.”
Officials with the Nebraska Department of Agriculture said livestock owners should start biosecurity measures even before they set out to travel to shows. The state agency is recommending livestock owners ensure all their equipment is clean and disinfected, and they should monitor their animal’s health leading up to traveling for shows.
While livestock are at fairs, the department said exhibitors shouldn’t share tools with others, and when using a community hose, they should not allow their animals to drink directly from the hose or dip the community hose in their bucket.
After the shows or fairs are over and animals are heading back to farms, livestock owners should isolate all the show animals for at least two to three weeks, just in case illnesses develop several days after returning home. Experts recommend keeping animals away from nose-to-nose contact, if they’re able.
The Nebraska State Fair has a protocol for handling biosecurity measures and subsequent contingency plans.
Nebraska Extension has provided checklists for ag producers who are taking their animals outside state lines. Lindsay Waechter-Mead, a beef educator with Nebraska Extension, recommended certain regulations with traveling cattle that can take multiple days to complete. Even domestic pets, such as cats and dogs, also require a Certified Veterinary Inspection to cross state lines.
Nebraska
Nebraska softball coaching staff finalized with a contract extension
Nebraska softball finalized its coaching staff on Wednesday. Head coach Rhonda Revelle signed an extension that runs through the 2031 season. The program also finalized several previously announced coaching changes.
Revelle earned the extension after leading Nebraska to one of its best seasons in history, bringing the team back to the Women’s College World Series for the first time since 2013. The Huskers totaled a school-record 52 wins in Revelle’s 34th season as Nebraska’s head coach, helping solidify her as the winningest coach in Nebraska athletics history.
“As we said when we had the privilege of naming the field at Bowlin Stadium in her honor, Rhonda Revelle is Nebraska Softball. Rhonda is not only a great leader of our softball program, but she is a world-class individual who elevates our entire athletic department in many ways. The trajectory of our program is at an all-time high coming off a record-breaking season and we are excited for the years ahead under the leadership of Rhonda and her outstanding staff.”
Revelle also re-worked the responsibilities of her coaching staff, elevating existing staff members and bringing in a slew of former players as assistants. This comes following the retirement of long-time assistant Lori Sippel in June.
Diane Miller has been elevated to associate head coach, and Mandie Nocita was promoted to assistant coach. Olivia Ferrell and Jordy Frahm also join the staff and will serve as assistant coaches. Hannah Coor and Hannah Camenzind have been added as graduate assistants. Lauren Camenzind will be a graduate manager for the Huskers.
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Nebraska
Gov. Jim Pillen calls for budget cuts, hiring freeze in new memo
Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen on Wednesday announced measures to further cut state spending, including a cut in state agency spending and a hiring freeze on most positions.
Pillen said in a news release that the measures are necessary after the state paid out $307 million more in state tax refunds than anticipated in fiscal year 2026, which ended June 30. Tax receipts have come in below projections in March, April and May, leading to a current expected deficit of $172 million.
That’s after lawmakers closed a $646 million budget hole in their most recent legislative session.
The governor has previously sought to cut spending to provide more property tax relief to Nebraska residents and had called for additional cuts during the current fiscal year.
“I am pleased with the progress we have made, but I’m not satisfied,” Pillen said in a news release.
Accompanying the release was a memo Pillen sent to state agencies, boards and commissions in which he called on them to “exercise additional fiscal restraint.”
Among the measures outlined in the memo:
- A freeze on creating any new positions or filling any vacancies without approval from the state budget office. The freeze does not apply to law enforcement or corrections positions.
- A 5% reduction in budgets for all state agencies.
- All agencies, boards and commissions must provide monthly cash flow projections.
- Agency leaders are directed to “concentrate” on eliminating redundant processes, services regulation and aid programs.
- Agency leaders are directed to reduce their agencies’ physical footprint and “consolidate teams and services.”
All state entities are required to submit their plans for reducing spending by the end of the month.
The memo also said agencies should “prepare for downward adjustments to appropriations” not only in the current fiscal year but also in the 2028 and 2029 fiscal years.
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