Gov Ricketts, Dept of Economic Development Announce Rural Workforce Housing Fund Recipients pressreleasepoint.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from pressreleasepoint.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
MEAD, Neb. (DTN) The owners of a small ethanol plant in Mead, Nebraska, that has become an environmental disaster are looking to sell off their adjoining 30,000-head cattle feedyard as the ethanol plant faces state litigation and angry residents.
AltEn LLC, a 24-million-gallon ethanol plant, remains idle and is facing a lawsuit from the state of Nebraska over millions of gallons of toxic water that spilled on Feb. 12-13, 2021, and 84,000 tons of distillers grains from treated corn seed piled on its property that is considered too toxic to feed to animals or spread on fields. The ethanol plant also owes more than $518,000 in back property taxes to Saunders County, Nebraska.
April 8, 2021
In our sixth edition of
Talking Urban Futures in Africa, CSIS Africa Program director Judd Devermont speaks to Tony Goins (director of the Nebraska Department of Economic Development) and Josh Davis (associate vice chancellor for global affairs at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, or UNL) about Nebraska’s growing relationship with sub-Saharan Africa. They discuss Nebraska’s robust agriculture sector and deepening ties with the region in the areas of human capacity and development as well as private sector partnerships. Tony, Josh, and Judd also take a close look at the alignment between the Nebraskan state government, UNL, Nebraskan and African companies and organizations, and even the U.S. and African governments that is so critical in making these ties flourish.
Gov Ricketts: North Platte is showcase community northplattebulletin.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from northplattebulletin.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
â¢Â  fire sprinkler system;
â¢Â  main floor restrooms with handicap accessibility;
â¢Â  newly refurbished main area with technology and a movable wall that can divide the area in two;
â¢Â  new meeting spaces;
â¢Â  cater-friendly kitchen.
â¢Â  Entries and exits that are Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) accessible.
Dedicated in 1937, the building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and has served generations of Fremont-area residents. For decades, people have come here for a host of activities from wedding receptions to pancake feeds and volleyball games.
Fremont Mayor Joey Spellerberg, whose dad Moostach Joe hosted polka parties in the auditorium for years, talked about the buildingâs importance to the city.