Politics & Government
Shortage Of Court Staff Adding Stress, Overtime To Work At Douglas County Court
As of Jan. 1, the court system reported 121 job vacancies in positions including probation officer, records clerk and drug technician.

By Paul Hammel
February 21, 2023
Find out what's happening in Omahafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
LINCOLN β Ron Murtaugh, the administrator of the Douglas County Court, remembers the days when a job opening used to draw 100 applicants.
Now, he said, heβs lucky to get 20.
Find out what's happening in Omahafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
βWe have openings that are so hard to fill that some are now labeled, βOpen Until Filled,β β Murtaugh said.
His supervisors are constantly training new staff, he said, because turnover has also increased.
Just like the state prison system, State Patrol and state transportation department, the Nebraska judicial branch has struggled to retain and replace employees, in positions ranging from court reporters to probation officers. They are jobs that pay from $28,000 a year to up to $58,000 a year.
The chief justice of the Nebraska Supreme Court, Mike Heavican, in his annual βState of the Judiciaryβ on Tuesday, highlighted the judicial branchβs efforts to address its workforce shortages.
Bonuses, job fairs, videos
An official who heads up the court systemβs hiring efforts said several new steps have been taken to recruit new workers, including offering hiring and referral bonuses, attending more job fairs at colleges and producing videos touting the benefits of working in public service.
Additionally, salary increases were approved last year for about a third of the judicial branchβs employees, mostly trial court staff.
Several agencies affected
The Judicial Branch didnβt report the most job vacancies among state agencies as of Jan. 1.
The quarterly vacancy report required of state agencies showed that the leader was the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services, with 902 vacant positions.
The Nebraska Department of Corrections had 362 vacancies, mainly in corrections corporal and caseworker positions.
The Nebraska Department of Veterans Affairs indicated that it had 273 vacancies, mostly in staff at veterans homes.
The Nebraska Department of Transportation, which has had trouble hiring diesel mechanics and snow plow drivers, reported 215 vacancies.
Gene Cotter, the deputy administrator for operations, said those efforts are paying off in many areas of the state, though workers shortages remain in some positions and in some areas of the state, he said, citing Douglas County.
As of Jan. 1, the court system reported 121 job vacancies in positions including probation officer, records clerk and drug technician (who conduct drug tests on probationers).
Vacancies drop
As of Feb. 15, the number of vacancies had dropped to 89 out of about 1,600 positions under the Nebraska Supreme Court, county courts and probation offices.
That 5% vacancy rate statewide is about where it was before the COVID-19 pandemic, Cotter said. Itβs quite an improvement from last summer, when the judicial branch had nearly 200 vacant jobs.
βItβs still a number,β he said of the 89 vacancies. βItβs not a sky-is-falling number.β
Meanwhile, Murtaugh said about one in five jobs in the Douglas County Court system are unfilled, and the vacancy rate in the probate division, which deals with guardianships, wills, estates and adoptions, is 45%.
Murtaugh said his court personnel are doing the best they can and using more overtime. The pool of available labor is just smaller, he said, and while the judicial system has raised salaries, so have other agencies and private employers.
Compensation study
The Nebraska Legislature is being asked this year to grant salary increases for probation staff, based on a compensation study done by the judicial branch. Hiring bonuses, first offered in 2021, have been increased to $3,000.
Cotter said many people donβt realize the broad nature of jobs in the court and probation systems. So recruitment videos have focused on employee testimonials about their work, he said.
To help judicial districts that are short of probation officers, Cotter added that some officers have been shifted to one district to another to help out.
Nebraskans want accountability from their elected officials and government. They want to know whether their tax dollars are being well-spent, whether state agencies and local governments are responsive to the people and whether officials, programs and policies are working for the common good. The Nebraska Examiner is a nonprofit, independent news source committed to providing news, scoops and reports important to our state.