Contact

Nebraska State Authority serves as a reference resource for navigating the state's governmental structure, agencies, and county-level offices across all 93 Nebraska counties. This page explains how to reach the editorial team, what kinds of questions get answered and which ones get redirected elsewhere, and what the reasonable expectations are for response time. The site does not represent any Nebraska government agency and cannot act on behalf of one.

Response expectations

The volume of questions that arrive through a reference site like this one follows a predictable pattern. Most fall into one of three categories: clarifying questions about how a specific agency or court works, requests for help locating the right official office for a particular matter, and corrections or updates to information on the site.

The first two are handled directly. The third is actively welcomed — factual accuracy is the point of the whole operation, and a reader who spots an outdated fee schedule or a reorganized department name is doing genuinely useful work.

What does not get answered: legal questions requiring licensed counsel, questions about the status of a pending application or case at a state agency, and requests to intervene in a dispute with a government office. Those require the agencies themselves, not a reference resource. The Nebraska State Government Overview page maps out which offices handle which functions, and it's the fastest path to finding the right place.

Response time for general editorial inquiries runs 2–4 business days. Correction notices, where there's a specific factual error with a verifiable source, are typically reviewed within 1 business day.

Additional contact options

For questions that extend into state government structure at a broader level — how Nebraska's executive agencies are organized, how the unicameral legislature functions, how state and county jurisdictions relate to each other — the Nebraska Government Authority site covers that terrain in substantial depth. It addresses the constitutional framework, the relationship between state and federal jurisdiction, and the specific powers held by each branch of Nebraska government. It is particularly useful when the question is structural rather than transactional.

Email is the primary channel. Phone and postal contact options are not published for this type of reference property.

How to reach this office

Email: [email protected]

That address reaches the editorial team responsible for Nebraska State Authority content. Messages should include the specific page or topic in question — a subject line like "Correction: Douglas County page" or "Question: Workers' Compensation Court jurisdiction" routes things considerably faster than a blank subject field.

For structured feedback, the most useful submissions include:

  1. The specific page URL or topic area
  2. The factual claim in question
  3. The source that contradicts or updates it (a state agency URL, statute citation, or official document)

This structure is not a bureaucratic formality. It just means the correction can be verified and applied without a back-and-forth exchange that takes longer than the fix itself.

Service area covered

Nebraska State Authority covers the full geographic and governmental scope of the State of Nebraska. That means all 93 counties — from Douglas County in the east, home to Omaha and roughly 571,000 residents according to the U.S. Census Bureau, to Arthur County in the Sandhills, which holds fewer than 500. The same reference standard applies regardless of whether a county has a population that fills a stadium or one that would struggle to fill a school gymnasium.

Coverage includes state-level constitutional offices, executive agencies, the judiciary from the Nebraska Supreme Court through district courts, and the Legislature. It also includes independent bodies like the Nebraska Public Service Commission and the Nebraska Workers' Compensation Court, which operate outside the standard executive agency structure and are often the source of genuine confusion about who handles what.

The focus is Nebraska specifically — not federal agencies operating within Nebraska, not municipal government (Lincoln, Omaha, and the state's other cities have their own governing structures), and not multi-state bodies that happen to include Nebraska in their jurisdiction. When a question lands outside that scope, the response will say so clearly and, where possible, point toward the correct resource.

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