Share |

Content about Nebraska

July 23, 2012

LINCOLN, Neb. — July 5 report: 47% of U.S. land area in various stages of drought

LINCOLN, Neb. — More of the United States is in moderate drought or worse than at any other time in the 12-year history of the U.S. Drought Monitor, according to officials from the National Drought Mitigation Center at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

According to a report released July 5, 46.84% of the nation’s land area was in various stages of drought, up from 42.8% a week earlier. Previous records were 45.87% in drought on Aug. 26, 2003, and 45.64% on Sept. 10, 2002.

When studying only the 48 contiguous states, the drought percentage is even higher—55.96%, also a record.

“The recent heat and dryness is catching up with us on a national scale,” explains Michael J. Hayes, the center’s director. “Now, we have a larger section of the country in these lesser categories of drought than we’ve previously experienced in the history of the Drought Monitor.”

The monitor uses a ranking system that ranges from “abnormal dryness” to “exceptional drought.” Damage to crops and pastures, as well as streams, reservoirs or wells getting low, are telltale signs of moderate drought. Exceptional drought includes widespread crop and pasture losses, as well as shortages of water in reservoirs, streams and wells, creating water emergencies.

So far, just 8.64% of the country is in either extreme or exceptional drought, but it’s early in the season and the situation bears watching. “During 2002 and 2003, there were several very significant droughts taking place that had a much greater area coverage of the more severe and extreme drought categories,” Hayes says. “Right now, we are seeing pockets of more severe drought, but it is spread out over different parts of the country.

To examine the Monitor’s drought maps and conditions, visit droughtmonitor.unl.edu.

March 3, 2010

BENTON HARBOR, Mich. — Maytag and Whirlpool Commercial Laundry have added J.H. Stuckey Distributing Inc. to their family of distributors. J.H. Stuckey now distributes Maytag and Whirlpool products to self-service laundries, hotel and motel guest laundries, and apartment and health club laundries in parts of Nebraska and Iowa.

December 16, 2009

Quality and excellence. We all want them, but what you can’t measure, you can’t improve.

When I joined The Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha eight years ago, I found performance measures. As a result, I have made the aggressive pursuit of quality and safety part of the culture at Nebraska Medical Center. Operating with quality at the forefront of all of our organizational endeavors is not only the right thing to do; the external environment now demands this. As we all know, assessment of quality by both patients and payers is on the rise.

December 2, 2009

I was just reading your story about how Superior Linen Supply Co. last year overcame a plant fire to keep servicing their customers (18 Months After Fire, KC Linen Supplier Going Strong).

October 30, 2007

Whether a laundry has enough space to efficiently produce a given workload is a subject that’s open for debate, but there’s no denying that many laundries throughout the country process thousands or even millions of pounds a year in comparatively tiny quarters.

December 1, 2006

How can a laundry manager determine if they’re getting the best results from the chemical formulas they’re using? For what key quality indicators should they be looking?

January 1, 2006

American Laundry News has selected its Panel of Experts for 2006. The esteemed group was chosen to represent the many segments of the textile care industry in answering questions in the pages of American Laundry News this year. This year’s Panel will include: