

Join us on April 29 at 10am to celebrate Arbor Day and our achievement of Tree Campus USA certification with a tree planting event. Interested in volunteering at the event? Click here. Seedlings and wildflower seed packets will also be available, courtesy of the NRD. Our annual event, hosted in collaboration with UNO. Personal Document Shredding and Electronic, Battery, and Techno Trash Recycling – Tuesday April 19, 10am-6pm and Wednesday April 20, 6am-2pm Register here and add the event to your calendar!
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Peter will give a presentation about eating a nutritious diet, followed by a cooking demo from Lauren about how to cook and eat healthy and sustainable meals. Virtual event with guests Peter Pellerito from the Center for Healthy Living and Lauren Monroe-Neal from Prepped by Lauren. Įating Healthy and Sustainably – April 12, 6-7:30pm

Join this virtual webinar hosted by MCC/Creighton/UNMC/UNO to hear from local organizations (including Hillside Solutions, City Sprouts, MAPA, Metro Transit, Omaha Permaculture, and OPPD) about their programs and how you can get involved. Invite your friends and family to participate -the more, the merrier! Join our team to earn points, win prizes, and make the planet better (oh, and help us beat UNO’s team!). Visit the website to pledge to take a simple action, including educating yourself on a new topic. We aim to provide events that are fun, educational, improve health and always leave the earth a better place to live! We also use this time to celebrate Nebraska’s own Arbor Day! Earth Month 2022Īpril 22 is Earth Day, and the Med Center is celebrating Earth Month all April long! Check out the list below to find out how you can participate in our Earth Month celebration.

In November, a task force unveiled a new agreement that local officials, public safety agencies and promoters said will clearly outline the responsibilities of all parties involved in such events to ensure they are safe.įinner said Thursday that elevated platforms are now mandatory at such shows and they will be staffed by Houston police, firefighters and others who will all have authority to halt an event if they see problems.Each year UNMC and Nebraska Medicine celebrate Earth Day by hosting a month’s worth of events, know as Earth Month. But it did not include information on what to do in the event of a crowd surge. Kevin Haynes, a Houston attorney whose firm is representing hundreds of people injured at the concert, said he was disappointed by the grand jury’s decision but the civil cases will continue “to ensure responsible parties are held accountable in the ongoing pursuit of justice.”Ībout 50,000 people attended the festival.Ī 56-page event operations plan for the event had detailed protocols for various dangerous scenarios including a shooting, bomb or terrorist threats and severe weather. More than 500 lawsuits were filed over the deaths and injuries at the concert, including many against Live Nation and Scott. An attorney for Silberstein did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment. The grand jury declined to indict five other people, including festival manager Brent Silberstein. “Bringing criminal charges against him will not ease their pain.” “But Travis is not responsible,” Schaffer said.

Schaffer said he feels sympathy for those who were killed at the festival and their families. I simply want people to read (the offense report), read the entire investigation and everybody will see, very, very complicated,” Finner said. “The chief of police is not going to get up here and point fingers at anybody. Finner said police plan to make the more than 1,000-page report in the case public so people can read all the information investigators reviewed. During a news conference Thursday afternoon after the grand jury’s decision, police presented various details from their investigation including a timeline of events during Scott’s performance, the location at the concert site where the deaths occurred and video showing areas where crowds of people collapsed on each other.īut Police Chief Troy Finner declined to say what the overall conclusion of his agency’s investigation was or whether police should have stopped the concert sooner.
