Jan 07, 2026

North Platte City Council Kicks Off 2026 with Key Decisions and Updates

Posted Jan 07, 2026 6:14 PM

By Allison Peck | North Platte Post

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Listen to the full interview with Mayor Brandon Kelliher on our Kubota Podcast

North Platte, NE – The City of North Platte started the new year with its first council meeting of 2026, tackling a variety of items from city vehicle purchases to a conditional use permit for a new solar farm. Mayor Brandon Kelleher joined the discussion alongside council members, emphasizing transparency and careful use of taxpayer dollars.

During the meeting, council members approved the annual appointment of Brent R. Berkeland as City Street Superintendent. Mayor Kelleher noted, “I believe he’s been the city street superintendent for the last probably three, maybe four years. He does a great job as a city engineer and also as a city street superintendent.”

Council also approved the purchase of a small bus for North Platte Public Transit, with 80% of funding provided through the Federal Transportation Assistance Program. Kelleher explained, “From a purchase perspective, raw money, it’s a good deal,” highlighting the benefit to the city.

North Platte, Ne Mayor Brandon Kelliher
North Platte, Ne Mayor Brandon Kelliher

The sanitation department will receive two small semi-trailers, totaling $264,400, to support hauling waste to the Ogallala landfill. Kelleher added, “These are the trailers for the tractors…this is the equipment that’s used to haul trash from the station out there by the lake to Ogallala to the landfill.”

The council also approved vehicle purchases for the city’s power, water, and sewer departments. Kelleher said, “Several of these, the difference was $8,000 or $9,000 to the next up bid. We ended up going with the lowest bids to have the best use of tax dollars.”

Other highlights included approving Oak Creek Engineering for annual bridge inspections and adopting the city’s “one-in-six” road plan for 2025–2031. Kelleher encouraged residents to view city road projects, saying, “I’d encourage you, if you’re interested, go look at the YouTube video from the city so you can kind of see what…likely road improvements for the next year.”

A major item on the agenda was a conditional use permit for a commercial solar farm at Victoria Lane and East State Farm Road. The item was approved with conditions.

Kelleher explained the decision, “The developer has to come back with a contract…basically showing who the power is gonna be sold to…It’s more than likely a good deal for the city, but we’ll have to see the contracts.”

He expected those contracts to come back in about 60 days. 

The council also approved a lease with RS Roloff Solutions for temporary storage of wood debris from the Masonite door manufacturing facility. Kelleher said, “As long as there aren’t any environmental concerns, which there shouldn’t be, then we will continue to do this. It’s a good deal for the city too.”

Finally, Jim Nisly was re-elected as city council president for 2026. Kelleher praised his expertise, saying, “He’s been the council president for a long time…he does a nice job filling in for me when I’m stuck on a plane somewhere.”

The mayor encouraged residents to watch future meetings in person or online, noting improvements in city video broadcasts: “The IT department…did a fantastic job. The quality of the YouTube video is much greater than it has been in the past.”

The next council meeting is scheduled for January 20, 2026.