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Head of Nebraska Environmental Trust to take post with Trump Administration
Head of Nebraska Environmental Trust to take post with Trump Administration

Yahoo

time08-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Head of Nebraska Environmental Trust to take post with Trump Administration

The historic Ferguson House, completed in 1911, served for years as the home of the Nebraska Environmental Trust. The Trust's executive director is resigning for a job offer with the Trump Administration in the nation's capital. (Paul Hammel/Nebraska Examiner) LINCOLN — The executive director of the Nebraska Environmental Trust is resigning for a job offer with the Trump Administration in the nation's capital. Karl Elmshaeuser, who has served in the post for three years, tendered a letter of resignation to the Trust Board a week ago. His last day will be May 18. Nebraska Environmental Trust executive director Karl Elmshaeuser explains the Trust's finances to the board on Jan. 10, 2023, Lincoln, Neb. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska Examiner) He was out of the office Wednesday and unavailable for comment. A press release from the Trust said that he had been 'offered' a job in Washington, D.C., and further information would be released later. Lottery proceeds The Trust awards about $20 million a year in grants from state lottery proceeds to local and state environmental groups for things like recycling programs, renovating silted-in lakes and restoring natural prairies and wildlife habitat. The agency has come under fire in recent years for rejecting too many grants as 'ineligible,' which has led to a decline in applications for funds and fewer grants. The preliminary state budget calls for diverting some of the Trust's excess funds — $15 million — for state surface water, groundwater and soil conservation projects. Elmshaeuser was the legislative liaison with the Nebraska Department of Environment and Energy prior to taking the Trust job. He had previously served as head of the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Rural Development program in Nebraska, and as a member of the Ogallala City Council. Elmshaeuser ran unsuccessfully for the Nebraska Legislature in 2016. Time of turmoil He took over the Trust at a time of turmoil, and led a 'process improvement' effort spawned by two performance audits. The Trust stirred controversy in February 2020 when the board voted to defund a handful of grants for conservation, habitat and wetland projects and instead give those funds to install ethanol blender pumps at service stations. The swap prompted a lawsuit and the formation of a watchdog group called Friends of the Environmental Trust. Both efforts maintained that the Trust was straying from its original mission of helping projects that hadn't previously found funding, and instead was financing work that should be paid for with state tax funds. The request for the ethanol pump grant, which had drawn the support of Gov. Pete Ricketts, a staunch supporter of the corn-based fuel, was later withdrawn. The Trust, in a press release, said that a national search will be conducted to replace Elmshaeuser, who was paid $120,852-a-year as of 2023. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

Senator opts against using lottery funds for nitrogen reduction program
Senator opts against using lottery funds for nitrogen reduction program

Yahoo

time26-02-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Senator opts against using lottery funds for nitrogen reduction program

State Sen. Teresa Ibach is trying to find funding for the Nitrogen Reduction Incentive Act, her program incentivizing farmers to use less nitrogen fertilizer. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska Examiner) LINCOLN – A state senator is dropping, for now, her effort to get $5 million a year in funding from the Nebraska Environmental Trust to continue a previously taxpayer-funded program to encourage reducing the use of nitrogen fertilizer. A year ago, State Sen. Teresa Ibach of Sumner obtained $1 million in state funds to launch a program incentivizing Nebraska farmers who use less of the fertilizer. The goal of the Nitrogen Reduction Incentive Act was to help farmers reduce use of the fertilizer voluntarily, partly to address concerns about nitrate contamination in groundwater. Ibach told the Legislature's Agriculture Committee on Tuesday that requests from farmers last year were more than double the $1 million available in the program. But, she said, that funding is running out amid the state's budget shortfall. The senator told committee members she is dropping her initial proposal in Legislative Bill 638 to seek $5 million a year from the Trust due to concerns about using state Lottery funds. The $5 million would have been about one-fourth of the Trust's annual grant from Nebraska Lottery proceeds. The committee was told the Trust's funds can only be used to reimburse expenses, not to be handed out and granted later. Ibach said she's now hoping to get funding from a state water resources fund. However, she added, the $41 million currently in that fund appears to be fully committed, so she is continuing to seek other ways to finance her bill. Among the possible sources: She is considering seeking donations from philanthropists. 'I would say that the intent of this bill is urgent,' Ibach said, emphasizing that funding to reduce nitrate contamination in drinking water should rank at the top of state priorities. Opponents to the bill, which included the Sierra Club and Audubon Nebraska, testified that they support the intent of the proposal, but funding shouldn't come from the Environmental Trust. Omaha State Sen. Kathleen Kauth questioned why Trust funds couldn't be used for the nitrogen reduction program since it appears that its purpose fits with the Trust's purpose of protecting the state's environment. Opponents of using Trust funding said the intent of the Trust was to finance conservation projects that the state wasn't funding, not to provide substitute funds when the state is short of money, as is the case this year. Some said state funds, not lottery funds, should be used. Nebraska Environmental Trust backers bemoan 'raid' on funds financing recycling, conservation The Agriculture Committee took no action after a public hearing on LB 638, one of at least three proposals this year to take Environmental Trust funds to finance state programs. The preliminary budget proposed by the Legislature's Appropriations Committee mirrors a proposal by Gov. Jim Pillen to transfer $7.5 million a year in Trust funds for the next two fiscal years to a water resources fund and a water sustainability fund. Both funds are managed by the Nebraska Department of Natural Resources. The fate of the third proposal is unclear. Pillen had proposed taking $20.5 million a year from the Trust – nearly all of its yearly allocation from the State Lottery – to finance improvements at state parks and bolster the water resources fund. But that idea wasn't included in the preliminary budget crafted by the Appropriations Committee. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

Nebraska Environmental Trust backers bemoan ‘raid' on funds financing recycling, conservation
Nebraska Environmental Trust backers bemoan ‘raid' on funds financing recycling, conservation

Yahoo

time17-02-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Nebraska Environmental Trust backers bemoan ‘raid' on funds financing recycling, conservation

Gov. Jim Pillen, center, greets State Sen. Dave "Woody" Wordekemper of Fremont after his annual State of the State Address. Jan. 15, 2025. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska Examiner) LINCOLN — As part of Gov. Jim Pillen's proposed budget, millions of dollars now devoted to restoring wildlife habitat and local recycling efforts would be diverted for new purposes: aiding campgrounds, marinas and cabins at state parks. Pillen also would increase money transfers to a water resources fund that finances the management of water use by farmers. All told, three pending legislative bills — two of which were introduced on behalf of the governor — would earmark nearly all of the state lottery funds now distributed via competitive grants by the Nebraska Environmental Trust. This year, the Trust had about $26 million to distribute in matching grants. Pillen's two budget bills would earmark $20.5 million of that money for other uses, while another bill seeking funds to combat nitrate contamination of groundwater would take another $5 million. 'It's essentially a raid on the Environmental Trust,' said Kristal Stoner, the executive director of Audubon Great Plains and a leader of a coalition of conservation groups that rely on Trust grants. The Nebraska Environmental Trust, established when Nebraskans approved a state lottery, receives 44.5% of the lottery proceeds. Its stated mission is 'to conserve, enhance and restore the natural environments of Nebraska.' Grant proposals are reviewed and scored by a committee of Trust Board members and then voted on by the entire 14-member board. The governor appoints nine board members. Five are state agency heads, four of which are appointed by the governor. Recent grant recipients include the Statewide Arboretum, various cities and towns from Omaha to Mullen, the Crane Trust and the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission. Former State Sen. Sandy Scofield, who was working under then-Gov. Ben Nelson when the Environmental Trust was set up in 1992, said funding 'outdoor recreation' and 'healthy public infrastructure' — as the current governor proposes — was never considered when the Trust was established. While cleaning up nitrates in groundwater, providing nicer cabins and marinas at state parks and preventing overuse of water resources are worthy projects, that's not what the Trust was set up to fund, said both Scofield and Stoner. 'The idea was that the natural world needed some help, and local communities didn't have the resources to do it — help the little guy on things that state government couldn't,' said Scofield, president of a group called 'Friends of the Environmental Trust.' The current governor, she said, is 'just madly looking at places to find money so he can fill the (budget) holes he dug last session.' Public hearings on Pillen's budget bills, Legislative Bills 261 and 264, are scheduled for Tuesday afternoon before the Legislature's Appropriations Committee. Reportedly, the committee has decided that the bill taking half of the Trust's money should be debated separately and not be part of the mainline budget, because of the expected controversy. A hearing on a third bill seeking $5 million a year from the Trust, LB 638, the nitrate reduction act, is set for Feb. 25 before the Agriculture Committee. The proposals come as the state is wrestling with an estimated budget shortfall of $432 million over the next two years. Such shortfalls usually mean cuts in spending and programs, and a search for unspent funds in state cash accounts that can be 'swept' back to close the budget gap. The gap has largely been blamed on the softening of the state's economy and lower tax revenues due to recent cuts in state income taxes. Pillen has proposed sweeping millions in excess money from cash funds held by various state agencies, and rescinding some past spending authorized by the Legislature. Among those clawback targets: funding for a now-dead sandpit lake between Omaha and Lincoln and millions to build new marinas at state parks and a new lodge at Niobrara State Park. Meanwhile, the governor is sticking with his pledge to reduce local property taxes, proposing to utilize $400 million in additional state funds to offset more of the taxes. In response to a reporter's question, the governor's budget office said that because the Environmental Trust has not granted out all its lottery funds, its excess cash has increased from $36 million to $74 million over the past five years. 'The intent is to put these funds to work for their intended purpose,' the governor's spokeswoman wrote in an email. The Trust, in recent years, has seen fewer applications for its grants and has granted out less money. In 2023, the Trust granted out only $11 million of its available $20 million. Earlier this month, the Trust approved $15 million worth of grants for 2025 out of $26 million available. Whether or not the millions held by the Trust can be shifted to general state purposes is unclear. Karl Elmshaeuser, the trust's executive director, said in an email that $62 million of the $75 million held by the Trust is 'encumbered,' which means it's already been granted to environmental groups or earmarked for spending but not yet spent or sent out. 'All (encumbrances) are subject to change by the Legislature,' he added. The 14-member Environmental Trust Board voted recently to take a neutral stance on the bills that redirect Trust funds, though Elmshaeuser was instructed to testify about 'technical and mechanical issues' raised by the proposals. Pillen, in his State of the State speech last month, said he was shaking the 'pillowcases' of state agencies to find extra funds to close the budget gap. 'To shrink government, we must eliminate its obsolete parts and clean out its closets,' Pillen said. One governor proposal, LB 264, would redefine the allowed use of lottery funds to include 'outdoor recreation' and 'healthy public infrastructure.' It would earmark 25% of the Trust's state lottery proceeds for a park improvement fund held by the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission. Another 25% of the Trust's annual funds, under LB 264, would be devoted for the state water resources cash fund that finances projects that maintain the state's surface and groundwater. Those two proposals would divert half of the $20 million to $26 million a year the Environmental Trust gets from the state lottery, taking that decision away from the Trust Board, which now decides, after reviewing grant applications, which environmental projects will get matching funds. Its supported projects include planting trees, restoring silted-in reservoirs, recycling programs, and restoring habitat. LB 261 would earmark $5 million a year in Trust funds for the state Water Sustainability Fund and $2.5 million a year for the state Soil and Water Conservation Fund, two funds now financed by general tax dollars through the Nebraska Department of Natural Resources, which manages the state's water resources and regulates dam safety. State Sen. Teresa Ibach, via LB 638, seeks to obtain $5 million a year from the Trust for a law she got passed last year, the Nitrogen Reduction Incentive Act. The Act had received state general funding for two years. Ibach seeks money to keep the program going using lottery funds instead of taxpayer funds. It pays farmers to use less nitrogen fertilizer, thus preventing leaching into groundwater.

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