logo
Pillen admits he and other farmers ‘messed up,' expects new state agency to improve water management

Pillen admits he and other farmers ‘messed up,' expects new state agency to improve water management

Yahoo07-05-2025

Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen, center, shakes hands with State Sen. Tom Brandt of Plymouth, whom the governor worked with to merge two state agencies partly to focus more attention on the state's water resources. To the right is State Sen. Barry DeKay of Niobrara, chair of the Legislature's Agriculture Committee. At left are Matt Manning and Jesse Bradley, who will lead the new Nebraska Department of Water, Energy and Environment. May 7, 2025. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska Examiner)
LINCOLN — In marking the merger of two water-focused state agencies, Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen on Wednesday said he and other farmers 'messed up' in managing water resources.
'What's really, really important as we go forward, that we all just have the courage to say the way it is,' said Pillen, whose family runs a Columbus-based hog operation and who became the state's first farmer-governor in more than a century.
Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen. Dec. 27, 2023. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska Examiner)
'I'm a farmer. We don't want to admit that we messed up, but we did. We've over-applied fertilizer, we've over-applied water, and we drove nitrates down into the ground, and we have nitrates in groundwater.'
Adding that it was time to 'stop talking about it,' Pillen said a motivation behind merging two state agencies focused on water resources was to lean on new technology and scientific advancements to 'educate all farmers in Nebraska so that we fix the problem and start having measurable breakthroughs.'
With that, the governor signed into law Legislative Bill 317, which he pushed and State Sen. Tom Brandt of Plymouth helped carry over the finish line. The law combines the Nebraska Department of Environment and Energy (DEE) and the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) into the new Department of Water, Energy and Environment (DWEE).
Familiar leaders
Pillen, during the same Capitol news conference Wednesday, introduced two men already involved in the respective departments who will lead the combined agency.
Jesse Bradley takes the reins as DWEE director and Matt Manning becomes 'chief water officer.' Both described themselves as lifelong Nebraskans.
Jesse Bradley, newly appointed director of the soon-to-be Nebraska Department of Water, Energy and Environment. Bradley is currently interim director of the two agencies that will be merged in the next couple of months. May 7, 2025. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska Examiner)
Bradley, who most recently was interim director of both agencies, said he would stress collaboration with organizations across the state and building a good internal culture.
He said the department's priorities include fulfilling the Perkins County Canal project and working with the new 'Water Quality and Quantity Task Force' Pillen is launching to help adopt solutions for water issues, especially in agriculture.
Manning, most recently a DNR engineer responsible for the Perkins project, said he sees his task as building upon and improving what the two organizations already do.
Also at the event was State Sen. Barry DeKay of Niobrara, chair of the Legislature's Agriculture Committee.
'Common sense'
Asked about the potential for finding cost-savings, Pillen said he had no definitive projection or supportive data but said it made 'common sense' that efficiencies would result.
During debate on the legislative floor in April, a few lawmakers noted the lack of a clear vision for any cost savings. State Sen. Danielle Conrad of Lincoln said at the time it would be more accurate to call the merger a 'rebranding.'
Matt Manning, a civil engineer in the Nebraska Department of Natural Resources who will soon serve as the state's new chief water officer. May 7, 2025. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska Examiner)
State and federal appropriations for the two departments totaled about $203 million, according to a recent legislative fiscal impact statement. It said that over time, efficiencies from a merger should result in savings.
Pillen on Wednesday called water the second most important thing about Nebraska, behind its people.
'It's our lifeblood. It's like God's grace. You can't make it. You receive it, and we can take care of it,' he said.
Pillen said the merger was 'timely and important' and noted that many take for granted 'our pot of gold' — the Ogallala Aquifer — which the governor said irrigates almost 11 million acres in the state.
He said he has been meeting with local Natural Resources Districts over the past 18 months, and there will be a broader effort to preserve and improve water resources and to protect the aquifer.
Today's technology and science, he said, allows the state to be proactive rather than reactive in managing water, and that's a mission of the newly merged team.
'Every drop of water'
Pillen said power and water will be increasingly vital to future generations of Nebraskans. 'When you think about the production of hydrogen, you think about the advancement of biofuels, you think about all the biobased products and all that we're making out of ethanol from corn. You think about the animal processing, how our livestock industries exploded in the last 20 years.'
In response to a reporter's question, Pillen said he would continue to push construction of the Perkins County Canal. 'We're gonna fight like heck to make sure that we get every drop of water that comes to Nebraska for us,' he said.
State Sen. Tom Brandt of Plymouth. May 7, 2025. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska Examiner)
Some state lawmakers, during debate on how to close the state's budget deficit, have urged reducing funding earmarked for the western Nebraska canal, which would transport water from the Platte River in Colorado into Nebraska. The initiative has spurred water rights debates between the two states.
Pillen, reiterating his hope to turn a page on water quality and quantity in Nebraska, noted that the room in which he holds news conferences used to be dark from people smoking in it. He said that is no longer the case.
'You know, we learn and we move forward, and it's time to get after it,' he said. 'That's what I'm excited about with this merger.'
SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Remembering Tiananmen Massacre, Activists Look to the Day of CCP's Fall
Remembering Tiananmen Massacre, Activists Look to the Day of CCP's Fall

Epoch Times

time27 minutes ago

  • Epoch Times

Remembering Tiananmen Massacre, Activists Look to the Day of CCP's Fall

WASHINGTON—Activists held a memorial vigil Wednesday evening to pay tribute to pro-democracy protesters who died at China's The day, which saw Chinese authorities use tanks and guns to kill The occasion serves as a chance to commemorate those killed in the 'horrific' event, said Eric Patterson, president and chief executive officer of the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation, who hosted the vigil. But more than that, he saw a reason for hope. 'We recall that in Romania, and Hungary, and Poland, and many other countries, the lies and lawlessness of communism did fall by the wayside,' he said. What happened to these communist regimes makes him hopeful that 'there will be a new day in China at some point in the future.' Rushan Abbas, executive director of the Washington-based advocacy group Campaign for Uyghurs, said that the 1989 incident showed what the Chinese 'regime was capable of doing.' 'Today, depression flows through black cells in Tibet, the streets of Hong Kong, and the concentration camps in Xinjiang,' Abbas said at the vigil. Related Stories 6/4/2025 6/3/2025 'China's long black arm even reaches us here in the land of the free and the home of the brave through threats and transnational repression that crosses borders. 'The CCP's methods change, the targets shift, but the goal stays the same: obedience without truth, silence without peace, prosecution without accountability,' she added. 'While the CCP quietly works to replace the freedom and democracy of this authoritarian rule, the world has been trained to treat its abuses as background noise.' In retaliation against Abbas's advocacy on Beijing's mistreatment of Uyghurs, Chinese authorities 'Let's honor those who lost [their lives] with a vision for a better world, one where there is accountability for the tragedy in Tiananmen Square, and the justice for Uyghurs, Tibetans, Chinese dissidents, Hongkongers, Campaign for Uyghurs founder Rushan Abbas speaks during an event commemorating the Tiananmen Square massacre that happened in China on June 4, 1989, at the Victims of Communism Memorial in Washington on June 4, 2025. Madalina Vasiliu/The Epoch Times Rep. Chris Smith (R-N.J.), marking the day, introduced a bill to use sanctions and legal tools to address the Chinese regime's censorship and to protect U.S. citizens and legal residents from Chinese agents' intimidation. 'Outlive the CCP' Rowena He, a historian and author of the book 'Tiananmen Exiles: Voices of the Struggle for Democracy in China,' was a student in China's southeastern city of Guangzhou at the time of the massacre. She returned to campus the next day wearing a black armband in mourning, she shared, and was told by the teacher that if she didn't take it off, 'no one will protect you.' Hong Kong held a large-scale vigil to commemorate the anniversary every year Remembering what happened in 1989 matters to more than the victims and participants in the protests, she told The Epoch Times. Rowena He, senior research fellow at Civitas Institute, speaks during an event commemorating the Tiananmen Square massacre that happened in China on June 4, 1989, at the Victims of Communism Memorial in Washington on June 4, 2025. Madalina Vasiliu/The Epoch Times 'The truth is still not revealed, and justice is not done,' she said. The cover-up the regime deployed around the Tiananmen Square incident happened again during the COVID-19 pandemic, when medical doctors wanted to warn about the virus's danger, she noted in her speech. It 'became the violation of human rights of every single human being on Earth,' she said. 'So don't tell me that human rights and Tiananmen [are] about them, about China. It's about here. It's about us. It's about now.' Piero Tozzi, staff director of the bipartisan Congressional-Executive Commission on China, said the massacre was a lesson of what the world could have done. 'The nature of the regime revealed itself 36 years ago—that's the same regime that is in power today,' Tozzi told The Epoch Times. 'The difference, though, is that they're far more powerful, economically, militarily.' In 2000, Congress passed legislation to give China permanent most-favored-nation status, now known as permanent normal trade relations, which paved the way for China's accession to the World Trade Organization. The status opened the U.S. market to Chinese products with trade advantages, including reduced tariffs. 'There was a chance to really break the regime, but we bailed them out,' Tozzi said. And now, 'that monster has grown.' Piero Tozzi, staff director of the Congressional-Executive Commission on China, at an event commemorating the Tiananmen Square massacre that happened in China on June 4, 1989, at the Victims of Communism Memorial in Washington on June 4, 2025. Madalina Vasiliu/The Epoch Times 'Right now, it is an existential threat, not just to the United States but to the world.' Frances Hui, who was granted U.S asylum in September 2021, said that she was once 'baked into the national pride of China' before finding out about the massacre when she was 10 years old. The 1989 incident opened her eyes, Hui told The Epoch Times. 'I realized, wow, like in China, actually that many years ago, people longed for a democratic China, and just like us, like Hongkongers, we're fighting for it, all this time,' she said. Hui is now the advocacy coordinator for the Committee for Freedom in Hong Kong (CFHK) Foundation. Hongkongers had tried to remember through the vigil, and now that it's banned, the rest of those in the free world need to 'carry on that responsibility, to keep remembering this day,' she said. 'Because as long as we remember it, one day justice will come, although it's obviously a delayed justice.' David Yu, board chairman of the June 4th Massacre Memorial Association, noted that although the Chinese regime may seem powerful, it currently faces many internal problems that are 'irreconcilable.' David Yu, executive director of the June 4th Massacre Memorial Association, speaks during an event commemorating the Tiananmen Square massacre that happened in China on June 4, 1989, at the Victims of Communism Memorial in Washington on June 4, 2025. Madalina Vasiliu/The Epoch Times 'They are being suppressed, and you don't see them,' he told The Epoch Times. It's only a question of time before these issues explode, he said, 'and the day when they explode isn't that far away.' Yu ended his speech by expressing conviction about the CCP's eventual collapse, and Hui echoed him, expressing belief that she will 'outlive the CCP.' 'There's no forever for any governance, and I believe that authoritarians will only lead to one end, which is the end of them,' Hui said. 'So we need to prepare for it.'

Ocasio-Cortez endorses Zohran Mamdani for NYC mayor as campaign enters final stretch
Ocasio-Cortez endorses Zohran Mamdani for NYC mayor as campaign enters final stretch

Yahoo

time34 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Ocasio-Cortez endorses Zohran Mamdani for NYC mayor as campaign enters final stretch

NEW YORK — Rep. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez is endorsing Zohran Mamdani as her top pick for New York City mayor, giving the socialist upstart candidate a major boost as the 2025 race for City Hall kicks into high gear. Ocasio-Cortez, who has since being elected to Congress in 2018 become one of the Democratic Party's most prominent progressive leaders, said in an interview published Thursday she's backing Mamdani because of the grassroots support he has generated in pushing a policy platform centered around affordability. 'Assemblymember Mamdani has demonstrated a real ability on the ground to put together a coalition of working-class New Yorkers that is strongest to lead the pack,' Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., told The New York Times. 'In the final stretch of the race, we need to get very real about that.' Ocasio-Cortez's campaign didn't immediately return requests for comment. The Ocasio-Cortez endorsement was highly coveted in the June 24 mayoral primary, as she's considered the city's chief left-wing leader and regularly ranks as the Democratic Party's most popular member. Her stature as a national figure has only increased since President Donald Trump returned to the White House, as she and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders have embarked on a nationwide tour of anti-Trump rallies that each tend to draw thousands of attendees. Like Ocasio-Cortez, Mamdani, a Queens Assembly member, is affiliated with the Democratic Socialists of America. They're also both millennials — Ocasio-Cortez is 35 and Mamdani is 33 — and their western Queens-based districts overlap. 'In Washington, the Congresswoman has been a tireless advocate for working people as she has led the fight against Donald Trump. That's exactly the kind of leadership we will deliver to New York,' Mamdani said in a statement accepting her endorsement. It wasn't immediately clear if Ocasio-Cortez plans to join Mamdani on the campaign trail or appear in ads with him. As first reported by the Daily News last month, Ocasio-Cortez met privately in recent weeks with Mamdani and City Comptroller Brad Lander, another mayoral candidate, to discuss endorsements. Her pick of Mamdani marks a disappointment for Lander, a longtime ally who was endorsed by Ocasio-Cortez for his 2021 comptroller run. Given that the June 24 primary is ranked choice, Ocasio-Cortez said she's urging New Yorkers to back a slate of candidates on their ballots. But she put Lander third on that slate, giving the No. 2 spot to Council Speaker Adrienne Adams. She also put ex-Comptroller Scott Stringer in the No. 4 slot and Brooklyn state Sen. Zellnor Myrie in No. 5. Asked for comment, a spokeswoman for Lander, who has mostly polled as the No. 3 candidate in the race, pointed to a tweet he put out saying he's 'proud' to have her support. The Mamdani nod from Ocasio-Cortez comes as he has emerged as the progressive standard-bearer in the Democratic mayoral primary, pushing a platform that includes promises to freeze the rent for the city's stabilized tenants, drastically expand fully subsidized child care and make public buses free. He has consistently polled as the No. 2 candidate in the race behind front-runner Andrew Cuomo, a centrist Democrat. Some recent polls are indicating Cuomo's lead over Mamdani is narrowing, and Ocasio-Cortez said in the interview she hopes her endorsement will help beat back Cuomo, blasting him as a career politician who 'belongs to the hedge funds,' a reference to his wealthy donor base. At the same time, Mamdani has faced scrutiny in some corners of the city's electorate over his lack of executive experience (his only elected job is serving in the State Assembly since 2021) as well as his outspoken criticism of Israel's war in Gaza. Ocasio-Cortez acknowledged Mamdani's youth and hard-left stances on certain issues could pose an obstacle in seeking support from some communities, saying 'trust can't be built quickly.' But she also said she 'made my expectations of the assemblymember quite clear' in conversations with him before the endorsement. 'As someone who got elected when I was 28 years old, I know very intimately what it means to be trusted with an enormous job of immense responsibility at a very young age,' she said. 'It is not something that I take lightly.' _____

Andrew Cuomo and Zohran Mamdani's posture reveals how Dems really felt during tense NYC mayoral debate showdown: experts
Andrew Cuomo and Zohran Mamdani's posture reveals how Dems really felt during tense NYC mayoral debate showdown: experts

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

Andrew Cuomo and Zohran Mamdani's posture reveals how Dems really felt during tense NYC mayoral debate showdown: experts

Ex-Gov. Andrew Cuomo dodging an onslaught of jabs and socialist state Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani trying to snag a viral breakout moment were among the standouts from New York City's mayoral Democratic primary debate. Body language experts weighed in after the Democratic candidates sparred against each other Wednesday in the first debate of the 2025 primary election — as they jostled to outshine in each other in an already overcrowded race. Here's what they had to say of the top moments: Advertisement 5 The Democratic candidates for New York City mayor participating in a debate on June 4, 2025. Pool/ABACA/Shutterstock A rapidly blinking Cuomo Despite being the front-runner, Cuomo's body language clearly shifted as the NBC-Politico debate wore on as he was relentlessly attacked by his fellow candidates over more than two hours. The former governor, 67, dramatically increased his blinking when peppered with questions about his handling of COVID nursing home deaths and the sexual harassment scandal that led to his resignation, according to Washington DC-based body language expert Christopher Ulrich. Advertisement 'Initially confident and expressive, Cuomo's posture changed over time — particularly when he was under attack,' Ulrich said. 5 Former Gov. Andrew Cuomo looked uncomfortable as the attacks from other candidates continued, body language experts told The Post. 'We also saw an increase in blink rate when asked questions about COVID-19 nursing home deaths and sexual harassment.' The behavior, the expert noted, was a clear sign of 'increased psychological discomfort.' Hand in his pocket Advertisement Cuomo was also repeatedly spotted with his hand in his pocket as the going got tough, according to experts. 'While under verbal attack from the rest of the candidates, we see Cuomo keep his hand in his pocket, a self-soothing or protective gesture that often signals discomfort,' Ulrich said. At various points, Cuomo could be seen staring down at his podium as the attacks continued. 5 Cuomo kept on putting his hand in his pocket throughout the debate. NBC / YouTube Advertisement 'These unrelenting jabs, that obviously hit his sore spots, ultimately resulted in Cuomo looking down at his podium more than he looked up at the other candidates, the hosts or the camera,' brain and body language expert and psychiatrist Carole Lieberman said. 'To remove himself from the hostility directed at him, he began writing something and concentrated on it, so as not to be disturbed.' In search of a viral moment Mamdani, the 33-year-old socialist Queens Assemblyman, repeatedly used wild hand gestures in an apparent bid to steal the spotlight from Cuomo, the experts said. '[He] employed numerous attacks, including references to Cuomo's donors and the COVID report, to try to contrast and achieve one of those viral moments,' Ulrich said, adding that he often gestured toward Cuomo when delivering the attacks. 5 Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani used wild hand gestures to stand out during his clashes with Cuomo, experts say. Lieberman noted that Mamdani — who has zeroed in on young, white, ultra-left New Yorkers during his campaign — often used 'sensational, dramatic language' on stage at 30 Rockefeller Center. 'He is the wild card in the race, as his hand gestures, pointing in all directions, underscored,' she said. 'He was the most animated and determined to outshine Cuomo.' A statesmanlike performance A fired up Rev. Michael Blake came off as 'very stately' — even as the former Obama administration official consistently hammered Cuomo on stage, Lieberman said. Advertisement Ulrich added that Blake, a former Bronx Assembly member, tried to command attention with his Cuomo onslaught. 5 Rev. Michael Blake appeared 'stately' as he stood up to Cuomo. 'Mr. Blake stood out in some of the key moments by demanding Cuomo clarify several of his answers,' he said. 'Reporters often picked up on those demands and would repeat Blakes's clarifying questions. 'By interjecting assertively and keeping others quiet, Blake commanded attention. This approach mirrored techniques used by Trump in the 2016 Republican primary debates,' Ulrich said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store