State Initiatives: Nebraska

Nebraska’s prison population increased by 34 percent between 1995 and 2005, and its corrections budget nearly tripled.[i] In 2006 and 2007, Nebraska began addressing this by enhancing the availability of less costly, community-based options for nonviolent offenders. Policymakers created the Community Corrections Council that launched new day and night reporting centers established by the state’s Community Corrections Council. Governor Dave Heineman, a Republican, praised these centers and emphasized the state’s commitment to community corrections, which he said “can help provide better results than simply building more maximum-security prisons in our state.”[ii]

While this initiative resulted in fewer nonviolent, low-risk offenders, particularly drug possession offenders, entering Nebraska prisons, the state continues to face prison overcrowding. There are nine lockups that are currently over 140 percent of capacity, which triggers automatic notification to the governor.[iii] Faced with the overflowing prisons and a tight budget, corrections officials are looking at various policy options that would address budgetary and capacity pressures while improving public safety.



[i] Nebraska Profile, Pew Center on the States, http://www.pewcenteronthestates.org/uploadedFiles/Nebraska.pdf.
[ii] Ibid.
[iii] JoAnne Young, “Prisons look to parole 260 to ease crowding,” Lincoln Journal-Star, 6 Nov. 2010, http://journalstar.com/news/local/govt-and-politics/article_da5871dc-ea0d-11df-9b8e-001cc4c03286.html.

  • Send Nebraska’s State Inmates to County Jail?

    Posted in Nebraska, ROC Blog, State Initiatives: November 26, 2010 by vreddy

    According to The Omaha World-Herald, Nebraska may seek to alleviate its prison overcrowding crisis (the state prison system is 40% over capacity) by transferring the inmates to county jails.

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