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Missing Middle Housing Legislation in Nebraska

Illustration by Wynton Henderson

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Background

Nebraska has a shortage of affordable homes for low-income households, with only 77 units affordable and available for every 100 renters with incomes at 50% of the area median. Two- to 4-unit housing has seen a steady decline in the state: in the 2010s, Nebraska permitted more than 2,000 units in 2- to 4-unit buildings, compared to over 6,000 in the 1970s.

Reforms Implemented

In response to Nebraska’s housing affordability challenges, State Senator Matt Hansen developed statewide legislation to allow more housing to be built, gaining support from local realtors and AARP Nebraska. Sen. Hansen said he did not have “very much negative feedback.”

In 2020, the Nebraska State Legislature passed LB866, which included the Municipal Density and Missing Middle Housing Act, a version of Sen. Hansen’s bill, by a vote of 31-7. LB866 is a less prescriptive policy tool than other reforms in this series of case studies. Rather than setting specific zoning or land use requirements or preempting local laws, the bill requires cities to provide detailed information about their housing needs and existing land use practices. The bill also requires cities to develop their own action plans to increase affordable, denser housing, through zoning reforms and other actions.

ProvisionDescription
City biennial reportsEvery two years, cities must submit detailed reports including:

- An overview of current zoning requirements

- Percentage of city areas zoned to allow multifamily housing

- A breakdown of new housing by type


- An estimate of per-unit housing cost


- Availability of density bonuses or other concessions for developers

- Whether accessory dwelling units (ADUs) are allowed

- Incentives to encourage affordable housing, including direct and regulatory measures

- An analysis of city housing needs
Affordable housing action plans Cities with populations over 50,000 must adopt an action plan including the following aspects by January 1, 2023, while cities with 20,000 to 50,000 people must adopt such plans by January 1, 2024:

- Goals for the construction of new affordable, multifamily housing, including metrics such as number of units and geographic locations

- Goals for the percentage of areas zoned for multifamily housing

- Plans to utilize federal, state, and local incentives to encourage affordable housing

Any city that fails to adopt an affordable housing action plan will be required to allow for missing middle housing in all residential areas of the city.
Workforce housing grants The bill establishes the Middle Income Housing Investment Fund to support workforce housing in counties of 100,000 or more residents. The fund will receive $10 million, available only to non-profit organizations and will require one-to-one matching funds.

While not as prescriptive as statewide zoning reform laws in California and Oregon, Nebraska’s approach through LB866 may build more buy-in from cities by encouraging them to be proactive about developing comprehensive, impactful plans to meet their specific needs. Additionally, the law’s information reporting requirements will help the state understand its needs in extensive detail. Finally, the law pairs its zoning reforms with new grants for middle-income housing development—a strategic approach, as zoning reform alone is not sufficient to meet housing supply gaps.

Early Evidence

The deadline for larger cities to adopt new action plans was in January 2023, and the deadline for smaller cities is January 2024, so it is still far too early to measure the impact of LB866 in terms of the development of new housing. But early city action plans provide an indication of how seriously cities are taking the state’s mandate to carry out zoning reform.

Omaha’s action plan declares the city should revise its Zoning Ordinance to “make it easier to build a variety of building types while still respecting existing neighborhood character.” It proposes—though does not commit to—modifying the Zoning Ordinance to allow for more triplexes, fourplexes, and smaller-scale multifamily housing. It also proposes allowing for more ADUs and modifying minimum parking requirements.

Lincoln’s more detailed action plan proposes reducing or eliminating parking requirements for affordable units within half a mile of bus lines, as well as allowing more residential housing in commercial areas. The plan also proposes allowing a by-right development process for housing types that have been allowed as exceptions to existing ordinances in the past.

These proposals outline modest but meaningful measures to allow for more affordable housing options. The degree to which cities like Omaha and Lincoln take action to implement these measures in the coming years will determine whether Nebraska’s nonprescriptive approach to zoning reform is a success.

Read more zoning and land use case studies here.

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