Category Archives: What’s Up Doc / Govdocs

Free Webinars from National Network of Libraries of Medicine/MidContinental Region

Tomorrow!  Discover NLM Resources and More: Resources for K-12 Health & Science Education

Wednesday, February 22, 2017 1pm MT / 2pm CT

Register: https://nnlm.gov/class/resources-k-12-health-science-education/6792

Did you know that the National Library of Medicine has K-12 lesson plans, a resource page and twitter feed for K-12 educators, and sites designed specifically for children and teens? If you would like to learn more about these health and science resources, join us for our webinar on Wednesday, February 22. Annette Parde-Maass, MCR Education and Nebraska Outreach Coordinator, will walk through the resources, give examples on how they could be used, and ask participants to brainstorm and share additional purposes applicable to their own settings.

 

Breezing Along with the RML  

Topic: Instructional Design

Wednesday, March 15, 2017, 10 am MT/ 11 am CT

Register: https://nnlm.gov/class/instructional-design/7089

Do you want to make your classes and presentations more effective and engaging? Do you want to offer learning experiences that really matter? If so, then the NNLM MCR has a great session on instructional design (ID) to get you started with not one, not two, but three experts. ID is a model to help you determine why the training is needed, design your instructional strategy, develop materials, decide how the content will be delivered to learners, and determine if you met your expected results.  Participants will receive instruction on key elements that comprise the ID framework, practice those elements in problem-based virtual breakout groups, and then share the results with fellow virtual attendees.

Presenters: Lisha Bustos, Lead Instructional Designer, University of Colorado; Christine Mousavi Cook, eLearning & Instructional Design Professional, University of Colorado; Michael Kanzanjian, Instructional Design Professional, ECHO Colorado

 

NNLM Resource Picks: How to Make the Most of Your National Library of Medicine Traveling Banner Exhibition! 

Wednesday, March 29, 2017, 1 pm MT/ 2 pm CT

Register: https://nnlm.gov/class/how-make-most-your-national-library-medicine-traveling-banner-exhibition/277

The National Library of Medicine (NLM) provides traveling exhibitions about the social and cultural history of medicine.  In 2016, the Pacific Northwest Regional Medical Library hosted a national questionnaire asking librarians what they would like to learn about hosting one of these exhibitions. Over 250 librarians responded with questions and ideas. This webinar is shaped by their responses. Join us to learn what your colleagues are doing to reach new audiences using NLM traveling exhibitions.

Presenters: Patricia Touhy, National Library of Medicine; Jennifer Butler Keeton, Florence-Lauderdale Public Library; Eva Sclipa, Alfred University; Thomas Lawrence Long, University of Connecticut; Donna Smith, Palm Beach County Library System; Nicole Hughes, Palm Beach County Library System

 

Courses for the Consumer Health Information Specialization:

The Consumer Health Information Specialization (CHIS) provides additional expertise in the area of consumer health and keeps you current on relevant issues in the field. NNLM provides free classes for CE credit towards this specialization. Here are a few upcoming online courses:

For more information on CHIS CE requirements: http://www.mlanet.org/p/cm/ld/fid=329

For information on MCR funding to cover CHIS certificate application: https://nnlm.gov/mcr/funding/consumer-health-information-specialization-chis-certification-funding

Annette Parde-Maass
Nebraska Outreach Coordinator
National Network of Libraries of Medicine/MidContinental Region
AnnetteParde-Maass@creighton.edu
402.280.4156

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Health Information Resources for the 65 and Older Population

The 65 and older population will grow in the U.S. from 46 million in 2014 to 88 million in 2050 (Colby & Ortman, 2014, p. 5). During those decades, the percentage of 65-and-older population compared to the total population of the U.S. and World will also increase.

This growth will likely result in an increased need for treatment, management, prevention, and wellness resources specifically for older adults as well as their caregivers. There are already a number of sites created for older adults by the U.S. National Library of Medicine, the National Institutes of Health, and other Health and Human Services agencies.

NIHSeniorHealth, https://nihseniorhealth.gov/, is a portal for older adults to search many government sites at once for health topics pertinent to them and caregivers. They can also browse topics and categories such as Bladder Health, Creating a Family Health History, and Talking with Your Doctor.

NIHSeniorHealth also has a Toolkit for Trainers for those that help older adults find reliable information. The toolkit includes lesson plans, promotional flyers for students and trainers, and a tip sheet on creating a “senior friendly computer classroom.”

Go4Life®, https://go4life.nia.nih.gov/, from the National Institute on Aging at NIH focuses on fitting in exercise and physical activity into older adults’ daily lives. There are resources for various activity levels and abilities including videos, exercise guides, tips, and success stories.

MedlinePlus, https://medlineplus.gov/, has a great deal of health information for all ages. Seniors may be most interested in Health Topics such as Health Aging or Seniors’ Health. If print information is preferred, sign up for a free subscription to NIH MedlinePlus Magazine. Librarians can even order the magazine in bulk. If Spanish is the primary language, try https://medlineplus.gov/spanish/.

National Institute on Aging (NIA) Publications has resources available in Spanish and a few other languages. Many of these are easy to read online, save, or print. Examples include Menopause: Treatment for Symptoms, Caring for a Person with Alzheimer’s Disease, and Online Health Information: Can You Trust It? AgePage. One that seniors and caregivers may find useful in communicating with doctors, surgeons, and other health professionals is Talking with Your Doctor: A Guide for Older People.

A document that seniors may want to have when talking with their doctors is the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) Pill Card. People can download this document to customize their own card for keeping track of medicines.

In addition to these online resources, don’t forget about area agencies on aging. In Omaha, we have the Eastern Nebraska Office on Aging, and other Nebraska area agencies can be found at http://nebaaaa.org/locations.html.

If you have questions about these resources, please contact me at AnnetteParde-Maass@creighton.edu or 402-280-4156.

Works Cited

Colby, S. L. & J. M. Ortman. (2014). Projections of the size and composition of the U.S. population: 2014 to 2060. Current Population Reports, P25-1143. Washington, DC:  U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved from https://www.census.gov/content/dam/Census/library/publications/2015/demo/p25-1143.pdf

*Note: 65 and Older Population will also be referred to as “seniors” and “older adults.” These terms can also include a larger age-range and many of the resources listed here are relevant to those ages as well.

**Information provided by:

Annette Parde-Maass
Community and Global Health Librarian
Creighton University Health Sciences Library
National Network of Libraries of Medicine MidContinental Region
AnnetteParde-Maass@creighton.edu
402.280.4156

 

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CIA’s Once-Secret Stash Now Online

The largest collection of declassified CIA records is now accessible online. The documents were previously only available to the public at the National Archives in Maryland. Approximately 930,000 documents, totaling more than 12 million pages, are now available in the CIA’s Electronic Reading Room on CIA’s website.

Since 1999, the CIA has regularly released its historical declassified records to the standalone CIA Records Search Tool (CREST) system that was only accessible in person at the National Archives Records Administration (NARA) in College Park, Maryland. Moving these documents online highlights the CIA’s commitment to increasing the accessibility of declassified records to the public.

“Access to this historically significant collection is no longer limited by geography. The American public can access these documents from the comfort of their homes,” notes Joseph Lambert, the CIA Director of Information Management.

The CREST collection covers a myriad of topics, such as the early CIA history, the Cold War, Vietnam, the Berlin Tunnel project, the Korean War, and the U-2 reconnaissance aircraft. The documents also extensively address developments on terrorism, as well as worldwide military and economic issues.

The documents include a wide variety of records, including collections of finished intelligence from the 1940s to the 1990s prepared by the Directorate of Analysis (or its predecessors, such as the Directorate of Intelligence), Directorate of Operations reports from the late 1940s through the early 1960s, Directorate of Science and Technology research and development files, Director of the Central Intelligence Agency policy files and memoranda, National Intelligence Council estimates, National Intelligence Surveys, Office of Strategic Services (OSS) records, Directorate of Support administrative records, and imagery reports from the former National Photographic Interpretation Center (reviewed jointly with the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA)).

CREST records also include large specialized collections of foreign translations, scientific abstracts, ground photo descriptions, and special collections such as STAR GATE remote viewing program files, Henry Kissinger Library of Congress files, and other miscellaneous CIA records.

The declassification of 25-year-old records is mandated by Executive Order 13526, which requires agencies to review all such records categorized as permanent under the Federal Records Act for declassification. As a result, following CIA’s review, documents are regularly added to this collection.

The CIA’s Electronic Reading room offers a full-text search capability of CREST records, and the collection can be viewed at CREST: 25-Year Program Archive.

Reprinted from CIA Press Release, CIA.gov, January 17, 2017.

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State Agency Publications Received at the Nebraska Library Commission in 2016

Nebraska State Government Publications 2016 is a compilation of the state publications received in 2016 by the Nebraska Publications Clearinghouse, a service of the Nebraska Library Commission.  The items are arranged in two separate lists: by broad subject categories and alphabetically by title.

All documents have been cataloged, and the OCLC number is listed.  To make access to the documents as user friendly as possible, you can click on the link above, or scroll through the .pdf below and click on the URL for the item.  Clicking on the URL will take you directly to the item online, where you can read it or print it out.

For more information about the Nebraska Publications Clearinghouse and Nebraska state agency publications, please contact Mary Sauers or Bonnie Henzel at the Library Commission:

 

Mary Sauers | Government Information Services Librarian | Nebraska Library Commission | 402-471-4017 | Mary Sauers

Bonnie Henzel | State Documents Staff Assistant | Nebraska Library Commission | 402-471-6285 | Bonnie Henzel

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What’s Up Doc? New State Agency Publications at the Nebraska Library Commission

New state agency publications have been received at the Nebraska Library Commission for January 2017.  Included are titles from the Mid-America Transportation Center, the Nebraska Crime Commission, the Nebraska Department of Economic Development, the Nebraska Environmental Trust, and the University of Nebraska, to name a few.

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Bill of Rights Exhibit at the Nebraska Library Commission

The Bill of Rights and You exhibit is now on display at the Nebraska Library Commission. This new free-standing exhibit from the National Archives commemorates the 225th anniversary of the ratification of the Bill of Rights.  Explore the first ten amendments to the U.S. Constitution, collectively known as the Bill of Rights, and learn how Americans have exercised those rights through the exhibit and Resource Guide.  The exhibit is brought to us by Humanities Nebraska and the Federation of State Humanities Councils.

 

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Nebraska Statehood Stamp

As part of the celebration of the 150th anniversary of Nebraska Statehood, the United States Postal Service will issue this stamp on March 1, 2017, in Lincoln. Known for agriculture, Nebraska (the Cornhusker State), became the 37th state on March 1, 1867. Nebraska photographer Michael Forsberg set up among prairie grasses on the riverbank between the small cities of Grand Island and Kearney to capture the image shown on the stamp. In the photograph, sandhill cranes fly low to scout for shelter from nighttime predators. This mid-migratory rest for half a million birds along the Platte River is unique to Nebraska. Forsberg captured this image as winter thawed into spring around the year 2000. USPS Art Director Derry Noyes designed the stamp using Forsberg’s existing photograph.

The 5-cent stamp commemorating the 100th anniversary of Nebraska statehood was first placed on sale at Lincoln, Nebraska, on July 29, 1967.

Julian K. Billings of Omaha, Nebraska, designed the stamp. An ear of yellow corn with its green husk is the background against which the artist placed a reddish-brown Hereford cow. Yellow and green were printed offset; brown was applied by the Giori press. It was issued in panes of fifty and was authorized for an initial printing of 120 million.

 

For those interested in other statehood stamps issued by the United States Postal Service, you can visit their website.

 

 

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What’s Up Doc? New State Agency Publications at the Nebraska Library Commission

New state agency publications have been received at the Nebraska Library Commission for December 2016.  Included are titles from the Nebraska Courts, the Nebraska Department of Economic Development, the Nebraska Legislature, and the Nebraska Public Employees Retirement System, to name a few.

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End-of-Term (EOT) Government Website Harvest Enlists Librarians, Educators, Students

As the United States—and the world—prepare for the January 20, 2017 presidential inauguration, libraries, institutions, and citizens are joining forces to identify federal government websites to be captured and saved in the End of Term (EOT) Web Archive.

The archive currently holds government web content from the administration changes of 2008 and 2012, and in July resumed collection efforts for EOT 2016 content. Government document and subject experts have been joined by librarians, academics, political and social science researchers, educators and their students, and other volunteer nominators in semester-long efforts and all-day “nominatathons” to identify URLs that are then submitted for inclusion in the EOT Archive. Those that are in-scope and not duplicates are assigned a weighted score by project specialists and given a priority level for web crawling.

A collaboration between the Library of Congress (LC), California Digital Library (CDL), University of North Texas (UNT) Libraries, Internet Archive (IA), George Washington University Libraries, Stanford University Libraries, and the U.S. Government Publishing Office, the EOT Presidential Harvest 2016 preserves federal government websites (.gov, .mil, etc.) from the legislative, executive, and judicial branches of government. According to the EOT Harvest website, the archive is “intended to document federal agencies’ presence on the World Wide Web during the transition of Presidential administrations and to enhance the existing collections of the partner institutions.” The public access copy of the archive is kept at IA; LC holds a preservation copy, and an additional copy is held at UNT for data analysis.

COLLABORATIVE WEB PRESERVATION

The idea for the partnership was born at the International Internet Preservation Consortium (IIPC) meeting in Canberra, Australia, in summer 2008.

“We had just found out that the National Archives was not going to do their dot-gov crawl that they had done in 2004,” explained LC digital library project manager Abbie Grotke. “A number of us sitting around the room at the IIPC meeting who were already collecting government material in one way or another at our own institutions said, ‘Well, let’s do this together collaboratively.’ And one of the big goals of that was to share a copy of the data among all the partners.”

The CDL, IA, LC, UNT, and GPO—all members of IIPC and partners in the National Digital Information Infrastructure and Preservation Program (NDIIPP)—decided to join forces to document changes to government websites during the administration change from George W. Bush to Barack Obama. “Digital government information is considered at-risk, with an estimated life span of 44 days for a website,” noted NDIIPP director of program management Martha Anderson in a press release at the time. “This collection will provide an historical record of value to the American people.”

Several of the organizations were already active in preserving government web content. LC has preserved congressional websites on a monthly basis since December 2003. UNT Libraries, as part of the GPO’s Federal Depository Library Program (FDLP), created its CyberCemetery in 1997 to capture and provide access to the websites and publications of defunct U.S. government agencies and commissions.

While organizations such as FDLP have focused on collecting, preserving, and providing access to printed publications, they do not have the infrastructure to archive digital material. Government document librarians across the country had for some time been aware of the need for an organized web collection effort.

“I’ve been really active for ten years at least trying to move the documents community towards collecting and preserving digital government information,” Stanford University U.S. government information librarian James R. Jacobs, one of the original participants, told LJ. Jacobs’s website, Free Government Information, has been supporting the preservation of digital government material for more than a dozen years.

HARVESTING HISTORY

Each partner contributed to aspects of the new project, from organization to application development. The nomination tool, a simple front-end interface designed to identify, prioritize, and describe the thousands of government web hosts, was built by UNT. The content collection was performed with the open-source Heritrix web crawler, developed by IA with support from IIPC. In order to aggregate EOT content, LC developed BagIt Library, an open source Java large-scale data transfer tool, as well as a desktop version, Bagger.

Beginning in August 2008, IA began a broad crawl of government sites, supplemented with crawls by the other project partners. The URLs were collected in December 2008, and again after the January 2009 inauguration. Final comprehensive crawls were performed in spring and fall 2009 to document any final changes. Ultimately, each partner transferred their collected content to a single consolidated archive. Metadata and thumbnail images were generated by IA’s in-house tools, with CDL providing input on Dublin Core format. Once the data transfer was complete, in mid-2010, a total of 15.9 terabytes of data had been collected.

In November 2011, the EOT Harvest resumed to document changes between Obama’s two terms—this time with the help of LIS students.

After reading a post about the project on LC’s blog about the 2012 EOT Harvest, Debbie Rabina, a professor at New York’s Pratt Institute School of Information, thought that it would be a good project for students in her Government Information Sources class. She contacted Grotke, and the two developed a plan for Rabina’s students to identify government social media sites as a semester-long project.

The class used government directories to search each agency for social media accounts, such as the U.S. Government Manual and the A-Z agency list available on USA.gov. They eventually nominated some 1,500 accounts found on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Flickr, Pinterest, GitHub, Foursquare, and others. Eventually, all 2012 EOT Harvest partners captured some 21 terabytes of data.

MOBILIZING IN 2016

Four years later, in the wake of the 2016 election, Rabina felt the need to further expand the harvesting efforts’ reach. “I was trying to think about what I could do as a librarian,” she told LJ. Drawing on her previous experience with the EOT Harvest, she said, “I thought this would be a good way for me to do something.”

Rabina reached out to Grotke and Jacobs, as well as librarians from local New York organizations. The New York Academy of Medicine (NYAM) was to be the host of the 18th International Conference on Grey Literature—published material produced outside of commercial or academic publishing, which is often not easily accessible—from November 28–29, and Rabina proposed that it also host an EOT nominating session that week.

On December 1, ten volunteers at gathered at NYAM library to spend an afternoon identifying URLs. Rabina provided a handout with instructions for the nomination process—although it is relatively straightforward, certain kinds of content, such as PDFs or FTP (file transfer protocol), are not readily crawlable by Heritrix and need to be traced back to an originating http or https URL.

Rabina’s handout also identified areas for participants to explore, mainly subdomains of science.gov, which may be most at risk of changing after the transition; when new reports are commissioned, for example, there is no requirement to save older ones. “The law has different levels of requirements for preservation, and for maintaining versions, for different types of government information,” explained Rabina. “The ones that are afforded the most protections for preservation and retention are things from the legislative branch, like our laws and bills and budget. But the stuff that comes from the agencies… like EPA reports about the level of water toxins in New Jersey, a lot of that just isn’t retained and gets lost.”

Especially with new agency heads in a new administration, she added, “their own vision can be anything from ‘I don’t believe in global warming’ to ‘I just want to update this website because it’s ugly, so let’s throw it all out.’”

In addition, noted Jacobs, “Government agencies change their content management systems all the time. You might have a link to a document or webpage that you like or want to use for your research or have an interest in, and that URL could change.”

THIS YEAR’S CROP

The 2016 harvest is projected to be the largest yet.

“The first thing to stress is that it’s not coming out of any sort of paranoia about the new administration, necessarily,” Jacobs told LJ. “This is our third go-around. We’re basically focusing on the dot-gov, dot-mil internet domain, and trying to collect as much information from those domains as we can in order to put a marker there for every four years.”

Groups at other institutions, including Simmons College and Brandeis University in Massachusetts and the University of Toronto, have also expressed interest in convening nominatathons. Rabina has put together a new handout for interested participants, with an eye to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, OSHA, NASA, and the Transportation Research Board. “We’re focusing on areas where we feel that there will be leaders who will bring another vision,” Rabina told LJ, “All of the science and the environment stuff. As far as I’m concerned, Department of Defense is kind of my last priority to get to.”

The EOT Archive has asked for particular assistance in identifying Judicial Branch websites; important content or subdomains on very large websites, such as NASA.gov, that might be related to current presidential policies; and government content on non-government domains, such as .com or .edu.

The nomination tool allows users to submit URLs for inclusion and lets the EOT Archive filter out duplicates. In-scope web pages include those of federal government websites and social media accounts—particularly those that may change significantly or disappear during the transition. Local or state government websites, and any non-government sites including news sites and those documenting the U.S. elections, are out of the EOT Harvest scope. Each URL submitted is assigned a weighted score by project specialists, according to whether it is in or out of scope and its priority for crawling.

Volunteers are asked to submit some simple metadata, including the nominated site’s title, agency, branch, and comments. While these are not required, they help identify resources for future reference. A bookmarklet is available for Firefox, Google Chrome, and Internet Explorer on the EOT nomination tool website. Nominators can also submit via a simple Google form.

The Internet Archive will perform a comprehensive crawl across the entire .gov domain, supplemented by in-depth crawls by partners and volunteers based on the submitted lists of URLs. “We also ramp up our own collecting of government websites during this time to share with the project,” noted LC’s Grotke. “We’re already collecting house and senate sites, legislative branch content, some executive branch content…. We’re getting a little bit more in-depth coverage before and after inauguration day.”

NOMINATIONS WELCOME

Anyone interested in helping nominate websites for collection can email the EOT team at uc3@ucop.edu, or consult the EOT Web Archive site for more information.

“We would welcome any nominations of federal government websites,” said Grotke. “Nominate sites you feel are important or most at risk of disappearing or changing. We recommend including both top level (e.g. epa.gov) as well as subdomains (nepis.epa.gov). You might want to pick a topic to focus on, but we’re happy to accept any and all nominations you come up with. One way you could do this is to do searches for topic(s) of interest and include the .gov search parameter (“environment site:*.gov”). That will only search .gov domain for that keyword and you’ll quickly find the government sites of interest to you. Don’t worry about whether your nominated site has already been nominated. We’ll de-duplicate our list of seeds.”

She added, “This time around we’re really excited by all the community engagement like [Rabina’s] events she’s holding in New York…and also there have been these self-organizing groups,” Grotke told LJ. “They’re just sort of emerging with communities…that are concerned about the subject matter or just interested in the project and nominating websites.”

Reprinted from Library Journal / Library Hotline, by Lisa Peet, December 13, 2016.

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Schedule an AARP Fraud Watch Network Presentation

Did you know there are nearly 8,000 consumer complaints of ID theft and fraud from Nebraskans every year?

Whether it’s over the phone, through the mail, online or even at the front door, con artists are constantly scheming to get inside wallets. The AARP Fraud Watch Network helps with the tools needed to fight fraud and protect personal information.

Trained volunteer educators help Nebraskans protect themselves from fraud and scams. The volunteers are ready to speak to community groups about how to recognize and avoid the most common scams along with steps to take to guard personal information. They can also discuss how to stay safe online.

Says volunteer educator Kathy Beers from Omaha, “If you don’t think you could be a victim, think again. During my presentations, I have heard people say ‘really, this just can’t be.’ But fraudsters can hurt anybody and they do.”

To schedule a fraud presentation for your organization, or if you are interested in being trained as a volunteer presenter, send email to aarpne@aarp.org or call 1-866-389-5651.

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Great News for Nebraska Population Estimates!

The U.S. Census Bureau released its 2016 state population estimates Tuesday, and Nebraska’s population is growing at a higher rate than 32 other states, with the state exceeding 1.9 million residents for the first time.

Nebraska’s population grew by 13,351 people from last year’s estimate, a 0.7 percent increase that matched the national rate. Nebraska’s growth rate ranks 17th among states, exceeding neighboring states Iowa, Kansas, Missouri and Wyoming.

Based on current growth and projections, Nebraska could top 2 million in population by 2025.

The growth also makes it very unlikely Nebraska would lose a congressional seat in 2020, said David Drozd, research coordinator at the Center for Public Affairs Research at the University of Nebraska at Omaha.

Drozd said Nebraska could have zero growth the rest of the decade, and, if growth trends in other states stay the same, it would not lose a seat.

“There’s always the possibility the estimates are off, or something major could happen between now and 2020 in our state or nationally, but as of right now Nebraska is in much better position to keep the current three seats than at the beginning of the decade or even last year,” he said in an email.

Nebraska’s population has grown 4.4 percent since 2010. Births exceeded deaths by 67,000 over that period, and the loss of 9,700 Nebraska residents to other states was more than offset by increases of 24,300 people from foreign countries.

“This growth means more people than ever realize Nebraska is the best place in the world to live, work, and raise a family,” Gov. Pete Ricketts said in a statement.

But Drozd cautioned that the closing of the Fort Calhoun nuclear plant, the sale of Cabela’s and ConAgra’s decision to move its corporate headquarters from Omaha to Chicago could all have negative effects on the state’s migration patterns in the next few years.

David Drozd, M.S.
Research Coordinator
Center for Public Affairs Research (CPAR)
Nebraska State Data Center (SDC) Lead Agency
108 CPACS
University of Nebraska at Omaha (UNO) | cpar.unomaha.edu
402.554.2132 (office – direct line)
ddrozd@unomaha.edu
Follow our work by liking our Facebook: facebook.com/unocpar

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Free Video–Nebraska Mental Health: Who’s Responding?

“Nebraska Mental Health: Who’s Responding?”   This video, aired December 15th on NET, examines how law enforcement first responders  and communities are dealing with mental health calls. Experts discuss an innovative program of peer counseling in Lincoln, and the special challenges of providing services in rural areas.

The program is hosted by NET’s Fred Knapp, and includes the following guests:  Sgt. John Walsh (Lincoln Police Department), Ashley Wilksen (Peer Support Specialist at Mental Health Association of Nebraska), Mel McNea (CEO of Great Plains Health in North Platte, NE), and State Senator Kate Bolz (Chair of the Nebraska Legislature’s Mental and Behavioral Health Task Force).

Discussion includes different types of mental health calls received by law enforcement, trained peer counselors making follow-up calls, determining emergency or outpatient treatment that may include substance abuse, available mental health workers, ability to pay for services, and safe housing following treatment.

To read about and listen to this 30 minute program, visit “Nebraska Mental Health: Who’s Responding?” at NetNebraska.org/news.

For more information and resources, visit Nebraska Mental Health.

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Open Enrollment Deadline for Health Coverage

This is your last weekend to enroll before the deadline

(Urgent: Deadline Approaching December 15)

Six days — that’s all the time you have left to get health coverage effective January 1.

This year, more than 8 out of 10 people who enroll through HealthCare.gov qualify for financial help, lowering most people’s monthly premiums to $50 – $100.

Take a moment this weekend to find out if you qualify to save, too, and beat the December 15 deadline:

Submit Yellow 3D

Enroll today and avoid potentially paying a penalty of $695 or more for going uninsured. Remember: you may qualify for monthly savings in 2017.

DEADLINE: December 15 for coverage starting January 1

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What’s Up Doc? New Nebraska State Agency Publications Received at the Library Commission

Nebraska-150-logoNew Nebraska state agency publications have been received at the Nebraska Library Commission for November 2016.  Included are titles from the Nebraska Department of Agriculture, the Nebraska Department of Insurance, the Nebraska Department of Natural Resources, the Nebraska Secretary of State Elections Division, and the University of Nebraska Press, to name a few.

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Free Class! From A(norexia) to Z(its): Providing Health Information to Teens

National Library of Medicine (NLM) LogoThursday, December 8, 2016, 10-11 am CT (1 hour webinar on Dec. 8th with class continuing online via Moodle)

Registration is required: https://nnlm.gov/ntc/classes/class_details.html?class_id=503

This class is designed for public, elementary and secondary school library staff, teachers, nurses, and counselors. The hands-on class will present an overview of health information needs of teenagers and their information seeking behaviors; review communication skills needed during reference interviews with teenagers; and explore credible health information resources that are designed for teens. This course is approved for 3 MLA CE credits and qualifies for the MLA Consumer Health Information Specialization certificate. Attendees must complete both the webinar and the Moodle portion of the class to receive the CEs.

Interested in pursuing the Consumer Health Information Specialization (CHIS) certificate? This certification is open to all librarians. Classes are free, and there is a fee to apply for the certificate. The NN/LM MidContinental Region does provide funding to cover the certificate application fee. For more information, visit: https://nnlm.gov/chisfund

Christian Minter, MLIS

Nebraska Outreach/Education Coordinator

National Network of Libraries of Medicine | MidContinental Region

McGoogan Library of Medicine | 986705 Nebraska Medical Center | Omaha, NE 68198-6705

402-559-7226 | christian.minter@unmc.eduhttp://nnlm.gov/mcr

 

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The History of Voting Rights in the United States

voteVoting is central to the equality of all Americans, so in honor of our constitutional right to vote, following is a brief history of voting rights in the United States.

 1776: Although the Declaration of Independence has just been signed and the United States’ independent status has not yet been recognized by many countries, the right to vote begins in America as a legal privilege almost exclusively available to white, property-owning, Protestant men.

1788: With the ratification of the Constitution, all slaves are counted as 3/5’s of a single person on the national census.

1790: The Naturalization Act bars all persons of Asian descent from becoming naturalized. Only “free white” immigrants are recognized as eligible for naturalization.

1792: New Hampshire becomes the first state to eliminate its property requirements, thereby extending the right to vote to almost all white men.

1807: Women lose the right to vote in every state in the US for the next 113 years. 

1828: Maryland becomes the last state to remove religious restrictions when it passes legislation enfranchising Jews. White men can no longer be denied the right to vote on the basis of their religion.

1848: The Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo renders the lands now known as Arizona, California, New Mexico, Texas, and Nevada US territory. All Mexican persons within these territories are declared US citizens, but simultaneously denied the right to vote by English proficiency, literacy, and property requirements along with violence, intimidation, and racist nativism.

1856: North Carolina becomes the last state to eliminate its pr operty requirements. The right to vote is extended to all white men in America.

1857: In the landmark case Dred Scott v. Sandford, the US Supreme Court rules that “a black man has no rights a white man is bound to respect.” African Americans are further deprived of the right to citizenship and, by extension, the right to vote.

1866: The first Civil Rights Act grants citizenship, but not the right to vote, to all persons born in the USA.

1869-70: The Fifteenth Amendment is passed in Congress and ratified by the states. The right to vote is now legally guaranteed to all male citizens regardless of “race, color, or previous condition of servitude.”

1882: Congress passes the Chinese Exclusion Act, which establishes restrictions and quotas on Chinese immigration while legally excluding Chinese persons from citizenship and voting.

1889-1890: Poll taxes and literacy tests specifically designed to reduce African American voting power are introduced in Southern states for the first time.

1890: The Indian Naturalization Act allows Native Americans to acquire citizenship.

1896: Louisiana is the first state to implement a grandfather clause in its election policy. No male citizen whose grandparent was deprived of the right to vote may exercise that right himself.

1915: The US Supreme Court finds Oklahoma’s grandfather clause unconstitutional in Guinn v. United States.

1919-20: The Nineteenth Amendment is adopted by Congress and ratified by the states into law. The right to vote is now guaranteed to all citizens regardless of gender.

1922: The US Supreme Court rules that persons of Japanese origin are insufficiently white to qualify for citizenship in Takao Ozawa v. United States.

1923: The US Supreme Court declares persons of Indian descent, even “high caste Hindus”, as ineligible for citizenship because they cannot be legally recognized as “white” persons.

1924: The Indian Citizenship Act of 1924 declares all non-citizen Native Americans born in the USA to be citizens with the right to vote.

1937: Georgia’s poll taxes are found constitutional by the US Supreme Court in Breedlove v. Suttles.

1943: The Chinese Exclusion Act is repealed, and Chinese persons are now eligible for naturalization.

1946: Filipinos receive the right to naturalization after almost 50 years of colonialism.

1946: Federal courts find white primary systems in Georgia unconstitutional in King v. Chapman.

1948: The last state laws denying Native Americans the right to vote are overturned.

1952: The McCarran-Walter Act recognizes the right to citizenship of first-generation Japanese Americans.

1957: The Civil Rights Act of 1957 authorizes the US Attorney General to file lawsuits on behalf of African Americans denied the right to vote.

1960: The Civil Rights Act of 1960 is passed, making collection of state voter records mandatory and authorizing the Justice Department to investigate and access the voter data and history of all states in order to carry out civil rights litigation.

1964: The passage and ratification of the 24th Amendment outlaws poll taxes nationwide.

1964: The concept of one person, one vote is upheld by the US Supreme Court as the national standard applying to all legislative bodies in Reynolds v. Sims.

1964: The Civil Rights Act of 1964 is passed, making discrimination on the basis of race, national origin, gender, or religion in voting, public areas, the workplace, and schools illegal.

1965: The Voting Rights Act is signed into law, prohibiting any election practice that denies the right to vote to citizens on the basis of race and forces jurisdictions with histories of voter discrimination to submit any changes to its election laws to the government for federal approval prior to taking effect.

1966: The Supreme Court affirms the Voting Rights Act’s constitutionality in South Carolina v. Katzenbach.

1970: Temporary provisions of the Voting Rights Act are renewed for the next five years.

1971: The 26th Amendment sets the national voting age to 18 and over.

1974: The Supreme Court rules that states may deny convicted felons the right to vote in Richardson v. Ramirez.

1975: The Voting Rights Act’s special provisions are once again extended. New amendments permanently banning literacy tests and mandating assistance to language minority voters are also added.

1975: The US Supreme Court finds Texas redistricting in Bexar County unconstitutional due to its enervating effects on minority voting power in White v. Regester.

1976: The Supreme Court rules in Beer v. United States that preclearance of election changes deemed unfair to minority voters are in compliance with the Voting Rights Act so long as “retrogressive” changes do not occur.

1986: Voting rights for people of color are strengthened by the US Supreme Court’s decision to declare multi-member state legislative districts in North Carolina unconstitutional in the Thomburg v. Gingles case.

1990: The passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act ensures that election workers and polling sites provide a variety of services designed to ensure the possibility of persons with disabilities to vote.

1992: The language minority provisions of the Voting Rights Act are extended for the next 15 years.

1993: The National Voter Registration Act requires states to permit mail-in registration, and make registration services available at DMVs, unemployment offices, and other state agencies.

1995: The Supreme Court rules that race may not be the “predominant factor” in redistricting in Miller v. Johnson.

2002: The Help America Vote Act creates minimal standards of election administration, provides for provisional ballot voting, and sets aside funds to help states improve outdated voter systems.

2004: The Supreme Court found claims of partisan gerrymandering nonjusticiable in Vieth v. Jubelirer.

2006: The Voting Rights Act is extended for another 25 years.

2009: The Military and Overseas Empowerment Act establishes more efficient means for troops stationed overseas and expatriates to request and receive absentee ballots through the mail or electronically.

If you want to exercise your constitutional right to vote, and you need help finding your voting location–go to VoterCheck and enter your county, name, and date of birth.

Reprinted in part from http://massvote.org/voterinfo/history-of-voting-rights/

 

 

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What’s Up Doc? New State Agency Publications Received at the Library Commission

Nebraska-150-logoNew state agency publications have been received at the Nebraska Library Commission for October 2016.  Included are titles from the Nebraska Auditor of Public Accounts, Nebraska Emergency Management Agency, the Nebraska Department of Labor, and the Nebraska Real Estate Commission, to name a few.

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Department of Insurance Releases Health Insurance Rates Ahead of Open Enrollment

ndoi-logoIn an effort to help Nebraska consumers navigate through open enrollment, the Department of Insurance has developed the 2017 Health Plan and Rate Preview tool. This powerful tool will help aid consumers in their search for an affordable health plan. The 2017 Health Plan and Rate Preview tool is user-friendly and lets consumers see the true cost of a health plan based on where they live, their age and if they use tobacco products. “With rising healthcare premiums and confusion over health insurance plans, I hope that individuals use this tool to research which plans best fit their current situation,” said Director of Insurance Bruce Ramge.

The 2017 Health Plan and Rate Preview tool not only gives plan information for individual health insurance plans but also gives consumers the ability to look at small group plan rates. The Department of Insurance hopes that the 2017 rate information will help consumers be better informed about the health insurance plan choices that they have available.

The Department of Insurance would like to remind consumers that open enrollment begins on November 1, 2016, and ends on January 31, 2017. Consumers need to enroll in a health plan by December 15, 2016, to have continuous insurance coverage. To find out more about the Affordable Care Act and open enrollment, go to http://nehealthinsuranceinfo.gov/

*Released by Nebraska Department of Insurance, 10/25/2016

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Free Webinar! Serving Older Adults in a Changing World

webjunction-logoDate:  November 8, 2016

Time : 3:00-4:00 EST, 2:00-3:00 CST

Register to attend

With longer life expectancy and increasing diversity, older adults are reinventing aging and changing perceptions of their demographic. It’s time to rethink how our libraries serve this important and growing segment of our patron base. This webinar will focus on trends and impacts of the aging population, and will share creative strategies for library staff to meet the evolving needs of older adults in a changing world.

King County Library System was recently recognized by Urban Libraries Council as a 2016 Top Innovator for their work with older adults. Congratulations!

Presented by: Wendy Pender, Older Adults Project Specialist, King County Library System (WA)

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Free Government e-Resources for Youth

free-government-e-resources-for-youthWe have a new book in our collection here at the Nebraska Library Commission:  Free Government e-Resources for Youth, by Dorothy Ormes.  146 p. Z688.G6 O76 2016

Specifically focusing on federal government resources available online, this book supports the education of young citizens and points to ideas for conducting programs for youth about the government.

Government documents offer a wealth of useful information that is often ignored or misinterpreted—even by librarians. And while improved search engines have improved access to online documents in recent years, patrons—especially young people—typically need help navigating and understanding the sites. Free Government e-Resources for Youth helps librarians promote online government information to youth and to assist youth in using it to become informed and educated about our federal government and how it works.

Author Dorothy Ormes—a Federal Depository Library Program librarian at Southern Oregon University—has created a guide to government resources that public and school librarians can use to support the education of young citizens. The book covers various areas of K–12 curriculum, highlighting activities and lesson plans based on national and state standards, and gives helpful directions for creating displays and conducting programs for youth on the government. The book also provides a brief explanation of the Federal Depository Library Program (FDLP) and describes how a public library can work with FDLP librarians or take advantage of an unprecedented opportunity to join the FDLP as active participants and benefit the community.

Features:

  • Introduces librarians to a vast range of no-cost resources that can be added to their list of youth services, including reference, programming, and displays
  • Helps librarians educate young people about their government and how it works
  • Supports teachers and homeschoolers in K–12 education with a breadth of government resources available on a variety of subjects that are linked to national standards

If you would like to check out  or reserve this book from our collection, please send us an email!

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