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State Data Overview
Across Nebraska, there is a shortage of rental homes affordable and available to extremely low income households (ELI), whose incomes are at or below the poverty guideline or 30% of their area median income (AMI). Many of these households are severely cost burdened, spending more than half of their income on housing. Severely cost burdened poor households are more likely than other renters to sacrifice other necessities like healthy food and healthcare to pay the rent, and to experience unstable housing situations like evictions.
KeyFacts67,077Or24%Renter households that are extremely low income-45,275Shortage of rental homes affordable and available for extremely low income renters$29,460Average income limit for 4-person extremely low income household$42,267Annual household income needed to afford a two-bedroom rental home at HUD's Fair Market Rent.73%Percent of extremely low income renter households with severe cost burden -
State Level PartnersState Partners
Nebraska Housing Developers Association
3883 Normal Boulevard
#106
Lincoln, NE 68506
P (402) 435-0315
F (402) 435-0331
www.housingdevelopers.orgAmber Marker, Executive Director
[email protected]Carol Bodeen, Director of Policy & Outreach
Become an NLIHC State Partner
NLIHC’s affiliation with our state coalition partners is central to our advocacy efforts. Although our partners' involvement varies, they are all housing and homeless advocacy organizations engaged at the state and federal level. Many are traditional coalitions with a range of members; others are local organizations that serve more informally as NLIHC's point of contact.
Inquire about becoming a state partner by contacting [email protected]
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Housing Trust FundHTF Implementation Information
NLIHC continues working with leaders in each state and the District of Columbia who will mobilize advocates in support of HTF allocation plans that benefit ELI renters to the greatest extent possible. Please contact the point person coordinating with NLIHC in your state (below) to find out about the public participation process and how you can be involved. Email Brooke Schipporeit with any questions.
Current Year HTF Allocation$3,076,650
HTF State Resources2020
2019
State media release (June 25, 2020) announces 2019 HTF awards (PDF)
Annual Action Plan with HTF Allocation Plan on page 197 (PDF)
2018
Proposed 2018 Annual Action Plan with HTF information clustered on pages 92-97 and 164-178 (PDF)
HTF Application Guidelines for CoC and Special Needs (PDF)
HTF Application Instructions (PDF)
Final 2018 Annual Action Plan with HTF Allocation Plan on page 187 and 478 (PDF)
2017
HTF Application Guidelines for CoC and Special Needs (PDF)
HTF Application Instructions (PDF)
Proposed 2017 HTF Allocation Plan (PDF)
Proposed 2017 HTF Allocation Plan in Draft Action Plan (PDF)
Proposed Annual Action Plan (PDF)
2016
HUD-Approved HTF Allocation Plan (PDF)
December 2016 version of HTF Allocation Plan (PDF)
Final National Housing Trust Fund (HTF) Allocation Plan, August 17, 2016 (PDF)
NLIHC Point Person for HTF AdvocacyState Designated Entity:Official Directly Involved with HTF Implementation:Mechele Grimes
Housing Specialist
Lynn Kohout
Director of Housing and Field Operations
Department of Economic Development
State Entity Webpage
Nebraska Dept. of Economic Development
NHTF-specific page
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ResourcesResources
Housing Profiles
State Housing Profile
State Housing Profile: Nebraska (PDF) (JPG)
Congressional District Housing Profile
Congressional District Profile: Nebraska (PDF)
Research and Data
National Housing Preservation Database
The National Housing Preservation Database is an address-level inventory of federally assisted rental housing in the United States.
Out of Reach: The High Cost of Housing
Out of Reach documents the gap between renters’ wages and the cost of rental housing. In Nebraska and Nationwide
The Gap: A Shortage of Affordable Rental Homes
The Gap represents data on the affordable housing supply and housing cost burdens at the national, state, and metropolitan levels. In Nebraska and Nationwide
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Take Action
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COVID-19 ResourcesCOVID-19 Resources
Rental Assistance
NLIHC has estimated a need for no less than $100 billion in emergency rental assistance and broke down the need and cost for each state (download Excel spreadsheet).
In response to COVID-19 and its economic fallout, many cities and states are creating or expanding rental assistance programs to support individuals and families impacted by the pandemic, and NLIHC is tracking in-depth information on these programs.
You can use the interactive map and searchable database to find state and local emergency rental assistance programs near you. You can also see the latest news on rental assistance programs through the state-by-state news tracker. Note that this is not a comprehensive list of all rental assistance programs as we continue to update frequently. If you are aware of a program not included in our database, please contact [email protected].
Shelter Closings
Across the country, homeless service providers are struggling to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic. In order to follow public health guidelines and help ensure people’s safety, some shelters are being forced to reduce services, restrict admittance, or close entirely. The loss of these critical resources puts people experiencing homelessness at even higher risk of illness. Check NLIHC's cumulative list of shelter closings.
Below is a list of shelters that have had to majorly alter services or completely close:
Connection Homeless Shelter is not taking new residents in order to help stop the spread of coronavirus among residents.
State and Local News
Omaha received an additional $61 million in federal emergency rental assistance funds, including $50 million from Nebraska and $11 million in reallocated funds from across the country.
An attempt to override Governor Pete Ricketts’s veto of a federal rental assistance bill fell one vote short on April 5. The legislation would have forced Governor Ricketts to apply for Nebraska’s second round of emergency rental assistance (ERA2).
Updated on May 23, 2022
Nebraska’s statewide Tenant Assistance Program, a collaboration of 20 programs that provide representation for tenants facing eviction, has reduced immediate eviction judgments from 90% to less than 2%.
Updated on January 30, 2022
Eviction filings in Lancaster County have doubled over the last six months. In November, 210 eviction hearings were filed in the county – a 106% increase from June when the federal eviction moratorium was still in effect.
Updated on December 13, 2021
Nebraska Public Media reports Douglas County is seeing a rise in evictions due to the end of the federal eviction moratorium in August, with 80 evictions filed last week. Rental assistance has helped keep families in their homes, and there are still funds available to Nebraskans in need of relief.
Updated on November 15, 2021
Eviction cases ending with a judgment for an immediate eviction have dropped from 90% to 2% in Douglas County since the Tenant Assistance Program (TAP) was launched. Through the program, a collaboration among over 20 organizations, volunteer lawyers provide legal representation for residents facing eviction. TAP helps connect tenants to emergency rental assistance and has partnered with Legal Aid of Nebraska on outreach efforts.
Updated on October 25, 2021
Douglas County Commissioners approved $410,000 in federal aid to further support the volunteer-based Tenant Assistance Project, a program that launched in August 2021.
Updated on October 13, 2021
Advocates and organizations serving Lincoln tenants facing eviction report the number of evictions continues to grow as eviction protections are set to expire at the end of March. Renters facing eviction are encouraged to reach out to the Lincoln Tenant Assistance Project and Community Action’s Tenant Support Services resources website.
Nebraska is now accepting applications for its $200 million Emergency Rental Assistance Program. Nebraska residents, except those in Douglas or Lancaster Counties, can apply for assistance now.
Lincoln and Lancaster County together have received nearly $15 million in federal rental and utility assistance funds. More than 1,100 people contacted Lincoln’s rental assistance administrators since the program began last year, and 850 payments have been approved. Both counties are preparing to staff and launch an online portal to help an influx of applicants for the new funds. Housing advocates have called on the city to enact its own blanket eviction moratorium, but neither the city council nor the mayor has proposed one.
Updated on March 01, 2021
The Douglas County Board on January 26 decided to allocate $2 million of its $10 million unspent CARES Act funds for rent and mortgage assistance. The county will give the funds to the Metro Area Continuum of Care for the Homeless to distribute. Omaha is expected to receive about $22 million in rent relief from the new COVID-19 relief bill, and the county will receive about $4 million to help Douglas County residents who live outside city limits.
Nebraska senators on January 27 discussed a group of bills that would address long-standing issues that were laid bare in 2020 amid the pandemic, economic fallout, and looming eviction crisis.
Updated on February 01, 2021
Legal Aid of Nebraska has handled more than 800 eviction cases since March, with more than a third of those occurring in Lancaster County, and just over half in Douglas County. Many renters are unaware that they must take action to be protected by the federal eviction moratorium.
Updated on January 25, 2021
The eight development districts in Nebraska have CARES Act funds available to landlords who have documented financial loss due to the COVID-19 pandemic and rent to low-to-moderate income tenants. Landlords can request up to $2,400 for lost rent or utility payments as a result of the pandemic.
Updated on November 17, 2020
Omaha Tenants United and Legal Aid of Nebraska held a virtual town hall to answer renters’ questions about their housing situation and eviction protections.
Updated on October 14, 2020
Despite the state and federal eviction moratoriums, 466 evictions have occurred in Omaha during the pandemic. According to the Understanding Evictions in Omaha study, evictions are not evenly distributed across Omaha, with communities of color disproportionately impacted due to the city’s history of racial inequity.
Updated on October 5, 2020
The Nebraska legislature rejected an attempt by Lincoln Senator Adam Morfeld to enact an eviction moratorium. Morfield attempted to attach an amendment to a housing bill that would enact an eviction moratorium during a public health emergency, such as COVID-19, but it failed on a largely partisan vote.
Updated on August 4, 2020.
More households across central Nebraska are struggling to pay rent due to COVID-19. Tri-city homeless shelters are preparing for a potential rise in people requesting emergency housing. According to the associate executive director at the Crossroads Center Rescue Mission in Kearney, resident numbers in the organization’s shelters rose 30% over the past week.
Updated on July 28, 2020.
Lincoln Mayor Leirion Gaylor Baird announced on July 7 that the city will allocate approximately $906,000 in Community Development Block Grant (CDBG-CV) and Emergency Solutions Grants (ESG) to provide rent, mortgage, and utility payments. Approximately $2.7 million in ESG-CV will be used to assist people experiencing homelessness.
Updated on July 13, 2020.
Governor Ricketts’ signed an executive order on March 25 to protect Nebraska residents facing eviction due to COVID-19.
State Level Guidance
No information at this time.
Eviction Update
Federal, state, and local eviction moratoriums are rapidly expiring and the CARES Act supplemental unemployment benefits will end soon; at that time, millions of low-income renters will be at risk of losing their homes. The NLIHC estimates at least $100 billion in emergency rental assistance is needed to keep low-income renters stably housed during and after the pandemic. This tracker links to news reports of the growing evictions crisis in various cities and states. Check NLIHC's cumulative list of eviction updates.
Governor’s executive order deferring landlord’s ability to proceed in a trial in eviction action if the tenant can prove unpaid rent is due to loss of income due to COVID, expired May 31. Eviction cases are being conducted remotely and in person.
Updated: July 31
In the third week of July, 13.4% of adults in Nebraska reported they had missed their previous housing payment or had little confidence they would make their next one on time, according to a weekly survey conducted by the Census. In the same survey, 19,318 renters reported they had not paid their previous rental payment.
On July 27, the state legislature voted against a bill to create a statewide eviction moratorium.
Lancaster In the immediate wake of the eviction moratorium expiration on May 31, 64 evictions were enforced. July 27 Updated: July 29
According to a weekly survey by the Census, 1 in 5 adults in the state either missed their last housing payment or have little/no confidence of being able to make next month’s housing payment.
Updated: July 16
COVID-19 Resources OtherNational Media
What to Know About Housing and Rent During the COVID-19 Emergency? https://tinyurl.com/y74ox85d
Arbor Realty Trust launched an innovative $2 million rental assistance program to help thousands of tenants and families significantly impacted by the COVID-19 outbreak. Arbor is contributing $1 million to the program and participating borrowers will match Arbor's advances to its tenants in need to help fill the rent gap during the hard-hit months of May and June. Together, the partnership program will provide $2 million in relief. https://tinyurl.com/y9r6x9vb