Good morning, this is Omaha Local Pulse for Friday, December twelfth, and we are glad you are with us.
We start today at City Hall, where Omaha is moving forward on a proposed partnership with the Lozier Foundation to create the Miller Park Community Center near 30th and Redick. The Omaha Daily Record reports that city leaders see this as a key investment in North Omaha families, with plans for youth programs, fitness space, and job training woven in. That means more after school options for our kids and more support for working parents in that neighborhood.
On the broader city budget front, S and P Global Ratings just affirmed an AA plus rating on new Omaha bonds, roughly ninety five million dollars in all. That strong rating helps the city borrow at lower interest rates, which matters for the road work we drive over every day and for utility projects underneath our feet.
Weather wise, we wake up to a cold, clear start across the metro. We are staying near freezing this morning, then climbing into the mid 40s this afternoon with light winds. It stays dry for high school games and holiday events tonight, but we are watching a quick shot of light snow late tomorrow night that could make bridges and overpasses like the I 480 bridge and the Kennedy Freeway a little slick early Sunday.
From the University of Nebraska system, Flatwater Free Press reports that the Board of Regents has approved cuts to several academic units, including Earth and Atmospheric Sciences and Statistics. That affects students at UNO and UNL, and we know many Omaha families are now rethinking majors and career paths. The student regent from UNO urged students to reach out for support and reminded them they do not have to go through these changes alone.
In our job market, local recruiters say Omaha is still adding positions in health care, tech support, and logistics. Major employers along Dodge and in Aksarben Village are advertising hundreds of openings, many starting around twenty dollars an hour, with sign on bonuses for night and weekend shifts.
Real estate agents report about one thousand homes on the market in the metro right now, with a typical three bedroom near 144th and Center listing in the low three hundreds. Higher mortgage rates are keeping some sellers on the sidelines, but well priced homes in Millard and Elkhorn are still moving within a couple of weeks.
Culturally, we have a full weekend. The Holland Center downtown is hosting holiday performances, while The Reader highlights outreach teams working overnight along Dodge, Leavenworth, and around the Gene Leahy Mall to bring people in from the cold. Those teams are handing out blankets, rides to warming centers, and hot drinks, and their work is quietly saving lives during the night.
On the crime front, Omaha police report a relatively calm past day, with no major citywide alerts overnight. There were a few theft reports near Westroads and along 72nd Street, and officers continue to stress locking cars, especially in apartment lots and outside gyms early in the morning. We will keep watching for any new developments.
High school sports roll on, with metro basketball and wrestling tournaments getting underway tonight at gyms from Benson to Bellevue West. Several OPS schools are celebrating strong early season starts, and coaches say student turnout in the stands has been high.
For a feel good note, volunteer groups are teaming up near the Salvation Army on North 24th Street to pack hundreds of holiday food boxes for families. Organizers say strangers are showing up side by side, kids and grandparents together, turning a cold week into something warm and hopeful for our neighbors.
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