Effective Government to Grow Nebraska


By Governor Pete Ricketts

You’ll often hear me say that the vision for my administration is to grow Nebraska.  While private sector job creators are the economic engine of Nebraska, state government helps provide the framework and infrastructure that can either support or hinder growth.  Over the past two years, my team has worked to make state government more effective, more efficient, and more customer-focused to help grow Nebraska.  Whether it’s launching our first-in-the-nation reemployment program or putting more services online, our team is making state government work for the taxpayers of Nebraska.

 

Our first-in-the-nation reemployment program has been producing real results in the year and a half since it’s been launched.  Not only are job seekers getting back to work more quickly, but Nebraska’s job creators are seeing relief from unemployment taxes.  Because our reemployment system paid out $14 million less in unemployment claims last year, we were able to reduce Nebraska’s unemployment insurance tax by 25 percent for this year, an over $17 million tax cut.  The reemployment program has even been winning national awards, including the 2016 Full Employment Best Practices Award and the J. Eldred Hill Award for excellence in the public policy arena.  Thank you to Commissioner John Albin and the Department of Labor for all their great work to help our jobseekers find new opportunities.

 

My administration has also put a focus on delivering more state services online.  For example, the Nebraska Department of Environmental Quality (NDEQ) has put the application process for their storm water construction permits online.  Since November 2015, the agency has delivered over 1,000 permits online, helping both the private and public sector deliver projects quickly.  The new online process has prevented the need for NDEQ staff to re-input information submitted by the applicant, and reduces lag time of paperwork being sent back and forth between the applicant and state agencies.  Thank you to Director Jim Macy and his team for all their work to make our permitting processes more efficient.

 

To help drive this mindset of delivering better customer service throughout state government, my administration has created the Center for Operational Excellence.  At the beginning of this year, we announced that over 12,000 team members in my agencies had received basic fundamentals of process improvement to create a culture of operational excellence in state government.  Understanding process improvement is fundamental to making state government more effective and more efficient because it helps team members understand how to deliver a higher level of service at the same or lower cost.

 

Take the Nebraska Department of Correctional Services (NDCS) for example.  They are using process improvement to avoid costly spending on required inmate healthcare.  Over the years, the agency has been required to transport inmates outside of prisons to receive specialized medical care.  Recently, NDCS developed a review process to minimize such travel orders.  With this process in place, the agency has successfully avoided over 1,900 hours of overtime and hundreds of thousands of dollars of expenses associated with travel orders.  With these changes, NDCS has been able to maintain healthcare quality, utilize resources more efficiently, and protect our Corrections Officers and the public.

 

We are not only improving processes and services in specific programs, but I have also worked with the Legislature to merge state agencies to deliver a higher level of customer service.  This session, Senator John Murante and I worked together to consolidate state services for veterans into a single agency.  This creates a one stop shop for our 143,000 veterans.  After successfully working with Senator Curt Friesen and the Legislature, we are merging the Departments of Roads and Aeronautics to create a Department of Transportation.  This move will allow us to focus more resources on roads and runways to create the infrastructure to grow Nebraska.

 

These are just a few of the areas that your team at the State of Nebraska are working on to support the private sector in growing Nebraska.  These initiatives are not only improving services for each agency’s customers, but they are also helping to transform the culture and mindset of state government.  If you have any suggestions on how we can better serve Nebraska taxpayers, I hope you’ll contact my office by emailingpete.ricketts@nebraska.gov or by calling 402-471-2244.  We look forward to hearing from you!

Protect Public Safety


By Governor Ricketts

Events over the past two years have resulted in a renewed focus on the importance of public safety and the role of state government in administering justice and upholding the rule of law. From errors that resulted in the early release of convicted murderer Nikko Jenkins and sentencing miscalculations to incendiary comments made in a committee hearing by State Senator Ernie Chambers, public safety has been at the center of conversations at the State Capitol and across Nebraska.

 

These events and conversations have served as the basis for a variety of reports and advocacy for a number of approaches to address concerns about the way our corrections system has operated in the past. Groups ranging from the Council of State Governments (CSG) to the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) have made policy recommendations to the Legislature to address concerns they have about overcrowding in our prisons, the utilization of solitary confinement, and the availability of mental health services to inmates. Several senators have introduced legislation generated from these advocacy groups this year. In the final eight weeks of this legislative session, senators will be considering what new resources they may provide to our corrections system and which policy recommendations are worthy of adoption.

 

During this upcoming discussion, it is imperative that any changes in policy are motivated by a desire to put public safety first. Nebraskans tell me that they want to see an approach to reform that is tough on criminals. Some of the proposed policies under consideration in the Legislature, however, are out of step with the desire of Nebraskans to be tough on crime. For example, the Legislature’s Judiciary Committee has advanced a plan introduced by Senator Ernie Chambers to do away with mandatory minimum sentences for certain classes of felonies, and to provide for more lenient sentencing guidelines. If the Chambers plan is adopted, some sex offenders could end up receiving early parole for which they are not currently eligible.

 

Senator Chambers’ plan to repeal the death penalty is another troubling proposal. The death penalty remains an important tool for Nebraska’s prosecutors when seeking proportional punishment for the most heinous crimes.  Some have tried to argue that the death penalty is too costly; however, the costs of litigating the appeals that are filed in death penalty cases are negligible to the state and in no way offset the death penalty’s usefulness in sentencing the worst criminals. In fact, the fiscal note for the death penalty repeal shows no cost savings to taxpayers should this repeal effort succeed. As I have said before, I will veto any attempt to repeal the death penalty here in our state. This proposal is the wrong direction and would soften our state’s approach to dealing with criminals.

 

While the Unicameral considers legislation, Nebraska Department of Correctional Services (NDCS) Director Scott Frakes has already been hard at work making critical changes to his agency’s policies and programs. Within weeks of his appointment, Frakes ended a furlough program that had previously given violent offenders early release. Recently, my office announced with NDCS that important software upgrades will be made to sentence calculation software to eliminate manual processes that had previously resulted in sentence calculation errors. Additionally, I am working with both NDCS and the Attorney General to develop alternative protocols to ensure that the State of Nebraska can effectively carry out the death penalty. These first steps represent a commitment from my administration to continually seek new ways to put public safety first.

 

There is more to be done and my administration will continue to work closely with the Legislature to ensure that reforms that are made to our corrections system protect public safety. If you share these concerns about the future of our corrections system, I would urge to you to have a conversation with your state senator about the importance of supporting policies that protect Nebraskans. You can find all the information you need to contact your state senator at www.NebraskaLegislature.gov.

Governor Pete Ricketts

Governor Pete Ricketts