MediaAppleseed in the News
Nebraska

Report: 9,369 workers in state on Medicaid
10/1/2006
Nebraska taxpayers paid health care costs last year for nearly 10,000 workers employed by some of the state's biggest businesses. At least 9,369 workers and an unknown number of their dependents received benefits through Medicaid, the taxpayer-financed health care system for the poor.
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Lincoln couple awaits consulate appointment
5/14/2006
As the U.S. Senate tries to move toward meaningful immigration reform this week, Jacqueline Cerda and her husband, Jesus Meza, anxiously await the arrival of a long envelope from another branch of government.
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Appeals court rules against state
5/4/2006
A federal appeals court said Thursday the state of Nebraska was wrong to cut Medicaid payments to some 800 single working parents in 2004.
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Iowa immigrants to take day off
4/25/2006
Advocates, including Nebraska Appleseed, are asking workers in several states to take part in a protest May 1
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Neb. Taking Steps to Monitor Meatpacking
4/22/2006
With a bill of rights and a state watchdog, Nebraska has taken extra steps to monitor working conditions in the meatpacking industry. But Milo Mumgaard, executive director of the Nebraska Appleseed Center for Law in the Public Interest, says his organization conducted a survey last summer and concluded the bill had little impact.
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Agencies worried about proposed budget
4/20/2006
How do you fund a war, a more secure nation and a constituency clamoring for tax relief? If you're President George W. Bush crafting the 2007 budget, you look for programs to cut spending. And one of the places you pick is domestic spending. The reality is, said Becky Gould, attorney with the Nebraska Appleseed Center, the proposal would cut funding while reducing revenue with tax cuts.
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Many Mexicans Have Jobs Before Crossing
4/14/2006
APPLESEED View articles under Group by Center Many Mexicans Have Jobs Before Crossing April 14, 2006 The Associated Press Julie Watson and Olga R. Rodriguez A growing number of U.S. employers and migrants are tapping into an underground employment network that matches one with the other, often before the migrants leave home. Darcy Tromanhauser, of the nonprofit law project Nebraska Appleseed, said companies in need of workers rely on the networks to "pass along the information more effectively than billboards."
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Strategy Sessions Fueled Immigrant Marches
4/12/2006
Through e-mail messages, phone calls, word of mouth, and coverage in ethnic and mainstream news media, the loose network has shared tactics and developed an ad hoc blueprint repeated from Fresno, Calif., to Omaha to Atlanta: engage Spanish-language radio DJ's, who reach millions; place leaflets in churches; and buttonhole members of Latin American soccer leagues.
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In Crete, fear could have kept people at work
4/11/2006
Twenty-five miles away in Lincoln, people from Crete and other area towns carried banners, waved tiny American flags and made a visible claim to belonging in this state and this country. By their presence, they also spoke out against the chance lawmakers will end their immigration gridlock by deporting millions of undocumented workers and building a fence along the Mexican border. In Crete, home to hundreds of immigrants who work at the nearby Farmland pork-processing plant, things were quieter.
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Reporters can make a difference in community
4/10/2006
Over the years in Alabama, dozens of landlord-tenant bills were introduced, but most didn't make it out of committee. According to Sebastian's reporting, this may have something to do with the fact that many Alabama legislators - almost 42 percent in 2002 - disclosed that they owned or had interest in rental property, according to the Center for Public Integrity.
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