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Thursday, December 4, 2025

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Supreme Court clears the way for Republican-friendly Texas voting maps; In Twin Cities, riverfront development rules get on the same page; Boston College Prison Education Program expands to women's facility; NYS bill requires timely state reimbursement to nonprofits; Share Oregon holiday spirit by donating blood.

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Trump escalates rhetoric toward Somali Americans as his administration tightens immigration vetting, while Ohio blocks expanded child labor hours and seniors face a Sunday deadline to review Medicare coverage.

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Native American tribes are left out of a new federal Rural Health Transformation Program, cold temperatures are burdening rural residents with higher energy prices and Missouri archivists says documenting queer history in rural communities is critical amid ongoing attacks on LGBTQ+ rights.

New report stresses EVs for Nebraskans' lung health

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Wednesday, May 7, 2025   

A new report from the American Lung Association found air pollution continues to be a problem even as Congress stymies efforts to bolster the electric vehicle industry.

In Nebraska, advocates said rollbacks on incentives for cleaner burning vehicles threaten to take the state's efforts at healthier air in the wrong direction. The report showed a handful of Nebraska's 93 counties are below federal clean air standards.

Laura Kate Bender, assistant vice president of nationwide healthy air for the American Lung Association, said the state's seniors, children with asthma and people with other respiratory illnesses suffer more when the air is dirty.

"We know that people of color tend to, for a variety of reasons, be disproportionately at risk from unhealthy air pollution," Bender pointed out. "We also know that if you work or exercise outdoors, you are getting more exposed on days when air pollution is unhealthy."

Washington lawmakers are currently considering using the Congressional Review Act, which allows them to roll back the Environmental Protection Agency's efforts to support cleaner fuel cars and trucks, including a transition to heavy-duty EV trucks, rules designed to reduce tailpipe pollution in Nebraska and nationwide.

Bender argued any Congressional action should be aimed at improving progress on air quality that Nebraska and the nation have made, rather than going in the other direction.

"Our vehicles are a lot cleaner than they used to be," Bender acknowledged. "But it's clear from this year's report that people are still breathing too much unhealthy air, that climate change is beginning to undo some of that progress, and that we need to work harder than ever to implement the great policies we already have on the books that can make our vehicle cleaner and make other sources of pollution cleaned up."

One of the congressional rollback measures, House Joint Resolution 87, is through the U.S. House and awaits action in the Senate.


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