Public Policy & NGOs
Here's a look at documents from public policy and non-governmental organizations
Featured Stories
WORLD IP DAY 2026: "Ready, Set, Innovate"
WASHINGTON, April 25 [Category: Business] -- The Small Business and Entrepreneurship Council issued the following news release:
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WORLD IP DAY 2026: "Ready, Set, Innovate"
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Small Businesses, Innovators, Creators Drive Innovation and Growth
SBE Council is proud to join our small business allies and fellow organizations - all dedicated to fueling innovation and protecting intellectual property (IP) - in celebrating WORLD IP DAY 2026. The goal of the day is to increase the general understanding of the importance of IP. As we note in our message below:
"On this World IP Day, we call on
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WASHINGTON, April 25 [Category: Business] -- The Small Business and Entrepreneurship Council issued the following news release:
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WORLD IP DAY 2026: "Ready, Set, Innovate"
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Small Businesses, Innovators, Creators Drive Innovation and Growth
SBE Council is proud to join our small business allies and fellow organizations - all dedicated to fueling innovation and protecting intellectual property (IP) - in celebrating WORLD IP DAY 2026. The goal of the day is to increase the general understanding of the importance of IP. As we note in our message below:
"On this World IP Day, we call onleaders in Congress and the White House to protect the IP system that powers American innovation, because behind every patent filed, every trademark registered, and every trade secret protected is a competitive entrepreneur pursuing the next great American idea."
Signers include:
Alliance of U.S. Startups and Inventors for Jobs
American Intellectual Property Law Association
AUTM
Bayh-Dole Coalition
Center for Individual Freedom
Center for Innovation and Free Enterprise
Citizens Against Government Waste (CAGW)
Information Technology and Innovation Foundation
Innovation Alliance
Innovation and Technology Policy Center, CAGW
Intellectual Property Owners Association
International Franchise Association
Licensing Executives Society (US and Canada) Inc.
Market Institute
National Asian Pacific Islander American Chamber of Commerce and Entrepreneurship
National Association of Manufacturers
National LGBTQ+ and Allied Chamber of Commerce
National Puerto Rican Chamber of Commerce
National Small Business Association
Small Business & Entrepreneurship Council
The Latino Coalition
Trade Alliance to Promote Prosperity
U.S. Chamber of Commerce's Global Innovation Policy Center
U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce
Women Impacting Public Policy
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Original text here: https://sbecouncil.org/2026/04/25/world-ip-day-2026-ready-set-innovate/
Victory for Goats - Macy's, Bloomingdales, and TJX Ditch Mohair After PETA Push
NORFOLK, Virginia, April 25 -- People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals issued the following news release:
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Victory for Goats! Macy's, Bloomingdales, and TJX Ditch Mohair After PETA Push
After learning from PETA that terrified goats are beaten and left with bleeding wounds in the mohair industry, TJX--the parent company of TJ Maxx, Marshalls, HomeGoods, and more--has banned mohair and Macy's Inc.--which owns Bloomingdale's--has no plans to sell it in the collections of any of its private labels, including I.N.C, Bar III, Charter Club, and Alfani. In thanks, PETA is sending the companies
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NORFOLK, Virginia, April 25 -- People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals issued the following news release:
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Victory for Goats! Macy's, Bloomingdales, and TJX Ditch Mohair After PETA Push
After learning from PETA that terrified goats are beaten and left with bleeding wounds in the mohair industry, TJX--the parent company of TJ Maxx, Marshalls, HomeGoods, and more--has banned mohair and Macy's Inc.--which owns Bloomingdale's--has no plans to sell it in the collections of any of its private labels, including I.N.C, Bar III, Charter Club, and Alfani. In thanks, PETA is sending the companiesdelicious goat-shaped vegan chocolates.
The move comes after PETA shared with the companies a damning new video expose into mohair operations in Lesotho and South Africa--which took place at several facilities certified by the misleadingly named "Responsible Mohair Standard"--showing the bodies of several dead goats, including a baby goat, discarded in a heap, and workers violently striking goats with brooms and poles and shearing the animals so roughly that some were left wounded and bleeding.
"Behind every mohair sweater is a terrified goat who was pinned to the floor and sliced to ribbons for their coat," says PETA President Tracy Reiman. "PETA is calling on retailers everywhere to follow the compassionate lead of Macy's Inc. and TJX and ban mohair."
PETA notes that mother goats form strong bonds with their babies and that both mother and baby recognise each other's distinct calls--or "bleats"--shortly after birth. In the mohair industry, goat kids are shorn starting as early as four months old. PETA's undercover investigation documented goat kids screaming in pain and fear as they were shorn for the first time. As soon as their hair quality declines or they're deemed no longer useful, their throats are cut and the goats are killed--well short of their natural 10-year life expectancy.
Macy's Inc. and TJX join a growing number of companies and brands--including Zara, Gap, Banana Republic, ASOS, UNIQLO, Ralph Lauren, and Express--that have banned mohair after hearing from PETA. PETA is calling on H&M to follow suit and reinstate the mohair ban it abandoned in 2020--despite previously professing to ban it "permanently."
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PETA--whose motto reads, in part, that "animals are not ours to wear"--points out that Every Animal Is Someone and offers free Empathy Kits for people who need a lesson in kindness. For more information, please visit PETA.org or follow PETA on X, Facebook, or Instagram.
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Original text here: https://www.peta.org/media/news-releases/victory-for-goats-macys-bloomingdales-and-tjx-ditch-mohair-after-peta-push/
[Category: Animals]
Save the Children: Rohingya Boat Departures Increase as Aid Cuts and Insecurity Force Families Out of Camps
WESTPORT, Connecticut, April 25 -- Save the Children, an organization that says it is giving children a healthy start in life, opportunity to learn and protection from harm, posted the following news release:
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Rohingya Boat Departures Increase as Aid Cuts and Insecurity Force Families out of Camps
COX'S BAZAR, Bangladesh - The number of Rohingya refugees leaving Bangladesh and Myanmar by boat in the first three months of the year has increased about 85% compared to last year, with children among the thousands making perilous boat journeys.[1]
Analysis of UN data by Save the Children shows
... Show Full Article
WESTPORT, Connecticut, April 25 -- Save the Children, an organization that says it is giving children a healthy start in life, opportunity to learn and protection from harm, posted the following news release:
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Rohingya Boat Departures Increase as Aid Cuts and Insecurity Force Families out of Camps
COX'S BAZAR, Bangladesh - The number of Rohingya refugees leaving Bangladesh and Myanmar by boat in the first three months of the year has increased about 85% compared to last year, with children among the thousands making perilous boat journeys.[1]
Analysis of UN data by Save the Children showsthat 2,907 people departed Bangladesh and Myanmar by boat between Jan. 1 and March 31, 2026, compared to 1,571 people between Jan. 1 and March 31, 2025. More than half of those who leave Bangladesh and Myanmar by boat are women and children, according to the UNHCR (https://data.unhcr.org/en/situations/myanmar).
The worrying increase comes ahead of the region's annual monsoon season, which brings heavy rains and winds, and puts refugees fleeing by boat at heightened risk of capsize on choppy seas.
A fresh round of food ration cuts inside the camps in Bangladesh earlier this month have affected at least half a million Rohingya refugee children and is putting further strain on families, with reduced food security inside the camps driving more refugees to attempt dangerous sea journeys.
This as well as other factors, including lack of access to education and employment, has driven Rohingya refugees to take risky boat journeys which put children at risk of abuse or even death at sea.
About 250 people, including children, are feared missing or dead after a fishing trawler carrying Rohingya refugees and people from Bangladesh sunk in the Andaman Sea last week - the latest tragedy that highlights the increasingly desperate measures taken by Rohingya refugees.
Nearly nine years since they were forced to flee their homes in Myanmar, more than one million Rohingya refugees remain in the camps in Cox's Bazar in Southeastern Bangladesh. The refugees are stateless and are almost entirely dependent on humanitarian aid to survive.
Golam Mostofa, Cox's Bazar Area Director for Save the Children, said:
"These camps are among the most densely populated places on earth and the situation for Rohingya refugees living in these camps in Bangladesh is precarious. Children and their families face rising insecurity and inadequate aid. Add to that severe restrictions on movement, limited livelihood opportunities, inadequate resources and mental health crises and what you have is a recipe for disaster with children once again bearing the brunt.
"Many families feel that they have no choice but to risk their lives and leave by boat but their journeys are fraught with danger, including for children who risk abuse at sea and sometimes travel unaccompanied.
"Save the Children is calling on donors to urgently increase funding for education, livelihoods, and all actors to prioritize improved security in the camps to ensure children are safe and protected."
Save the Children is one of the leading international NGOs working in the Cox's Bazar camps in Bangladesh, providing child protection, access to learning, health and nutrition, water, sanitation and hygiene services, and distribution of shelter and food items. The organization has reached more than 600,000 Rohingya refugees, including more than 320,000 children, since our response began in 2017.
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NOTES:
[1] Save the Children analysis of UNHCR figures between Jan. 1 and March 31, 2026 https://data.unhcr.org/en/situations/myanmar; 2,907 people departed between Jan. 1 - March 31, 2026; 1,571 people between Jan. 1 - March 31, 2025, indicating an 85 % increase.
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Save the Children believes every child deserves a future. Since our founding more than 100 years ago, we've been advocating for the rights of children worldwide. In the United States and around the world, we give children a healthy start in life, the opportunity to learn and protection from harm. We do whatever it takes for children - every day and in times of crisis - transforming the future we share. Our results, financial statements and charity ratings reaffirm that Save the Children is a charity you can trust. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, X and YouTube.
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Original text here: https://www.savethechildren.org/us/about-us/media-and-news/2026-press-releases/rohingya-boat-departures-aid-cuts-camps
[Category: Sociological]
KFF: One-Pager on What's Wrong With U.S. Health Care
SAN FRANCISCO, California, April 25 -- KFF, an organization that says it focuses on health policy, issued the following commentary on April 23, 2026, by President and CEO Drew Altman:
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A One-Pager on What's Wrong with U.S. Health Care
The other day, I was asked for a one-pager on what's wrong with the U.S. health system. "Just one page." To my amazement, with our thousands of fact sheets and policy briefs and even our Health Policy 101, we didn't have anything short or current, nor could I find one elsewhere to send along. The closest we came was this 2022 policy brief. So, while this isn't
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SAN FRANCISCO, California, April 25 -- KFF, an organization that says it focuses on health policy, issued the following commentary on April 23, 2026, by President and CEO Drew Altman:
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A One-Pager on What's Wrong with U.S. Health Care
The other day, I was asked for a one-pager on what's wrong with the U.S. health system. "Just one page." To my amazement, with our thousands of fact sheets and policy briefs and even our Health Policy 101, we didn't have anything short or current, nor could I find one elsewhere to send along. The closest we came was this 2022 policy brief. So, while this isn'tmy usual column about current issues, and it's only about problems, not the reasons for them or solutions, it might be useful to some of you.
First, our health system is not affordable, either for people or for the country. About a quarter of the public struggle with their medical bills and the numbers rise sharply for people with chronic illnesses or major diseases who need a lot of care. About 100 million deal with medical debt. We spend almost twice per capita what other wealthy nations spend, putting pressure on other national priorities and for employers on wages.
Despite progress, we still have 27 million people who are uninsured, and according to projections from the Congressional Budget Office, cuts in the One Big Beautiful Bill will bring that total to about 40 million if the cuts aren't reversed.
The system is beyond complex and challenging to navigate. The poster child of this is prior authorization review, which almost everyone hates. People tell us on surveys that it's their single greatest problem getting care.
As is well known, although we spend much more than other wealthy nations, our health outcomes lag behind theirs in most cases. There are a lot of different ingredients in that stew, but our well-heeled health system has not lifted our health outcomes.
Trust in health professionals remains strong, but trust in critical agencies such as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administration is at a low point. The agencies take it on the chin for different reasons from both Democrats and Republicans. If we have another COVID-like crisis, we'll pay a big price for that; national emergencies, like wars, cannot be handled state by state.
If I were to nominate one more item for the list, it would be the "crisis" in primary care. In many parts of the country, it's just not easily available, and in some, like the Silicon Valley where I live, much of it has been skimmed off to expensive concierge practices with long waiting lists.
Finally, the politics of health care are as broken as the system (and are a reason it is broken). For decades, Democrats and Republicans have not been able to agree on any major solutions to our health care problems and disagree sharply on the role of the federal government in health, forcing us to gravitate to smaller incremental changes where there might be some agreement. They also blow their importance out of proportion. I won't name names in this short piece.
The result: we have neither a competitive health care system nor a regulated one--we have a fragmented, micromanaged health system that fails to control costs and makes both patients and health professionals more miserable than they should be.
Of course, if you have a problem requiring a world-renowned specialist or the very latest drug and can get to and afford her, him, or it, it can be the greatest health system in the world.
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Original text here: https://www.kff.org/from-drew-altman/a-one-pager-on-whats-wrong-with-u-s-health-care/
[Category: Health Care]
CAIR-CT Welcomes Bethel Board of Education's Recognition of Eid Al-Fitr as an Official School Holiday
WASHINGTON, April 25 -- The Council on American-Islamic Relations posted the following news release on April 24, 2026:
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CAIR-CT Welcomes Bethel Board of Education's Recognition of Eid al-Fitr as an Official School Holiday
The Connecticut chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-CT), a chapter of the nation's largest Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization, today welcomed the Bethel Board of Education's decision to officially recognize Eid al-Fitr as a school holiday.
"Recognizing Eid al-Fitr is more than a calendar change - it is a statement of inclusion, dignity,
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WASHINGTON, April 25 -- The Council on American-Islamic Relations posted the following news release on April 24, 2026:
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CAIR-CT Welcomes Bethel Board of Education's Recognition of Eid al-Fitr as an Official School Holiday
The Connecticut chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-CT), a chapter of the nation's largest Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization, today welcomed the Bethel Board of Education's decision to officially recognize Eid al-Fitr as a school holiday.
"Recognizing Eid al-Fitr is more than a calendar change - it is a statement of inclusion, dignity,and respect," said Farhan Memon, Chairman of CAIR-CT. "When Muslim students see their holidays acknowledged, they know they are fully seen and fully valued. This kind of leadership helps create safer, more welcoming schools for all children."
He said CAIR-CT extended gratitude to the Bethel Board of Education, Superintendent Dr. Christine Carver, and the Board of Education for their thoughtful consideration and commitment to fostering an inclusive educational environment.
Memon added: "This historic decision affirms that Muslim students belong. It sends a clear message that their faith, traditions, and identities are valued and respected within the school community. This recognition can have a profound positive impact on students' mental health by reducing feelings of exclusion, anxiety, and isolation that many Muslim students have historically experienced.
"The decision will also help foster greater understanding among students of all backgrounds. When schools recognize diverse religious and cultural traditions, they create opportunities for students to learn about one another, build empathy, and strengthen relationships across communities. That understanding is essential in combating bullying, discrimination, and hate."
Eman Beshtawii, the president of Al-Hedaya Islamic Center added: "This recognition is a meaningful step toward ensuring that every student feels a true sense of belonging. It creates an environment where diversity is celebrated and all families feel welcomed. It's a clear message that affirms Bethel's appreciation of diversity, inclusion, and equity. "
Zia, a student in Bethel Public Schools who led the effort, said: "The moment our Board voted to recognize Eid was heartwarming. I felt a greater sense of belonging and felt truly seen. Seeing Eid recognized by our school district means so much to Muslim students like me. It makes us feel included and respected, and it shows that our community matters."
This achievement would not have been possible without the dedication and leadership of local students, community organizers, and Al Hidaya Islamic Center. Their advocacy, persistence, and commitment to their community were instrumental in bringing about this meaningful change. The fifth-grade student Mariam, and Mysha, a student at Bethel Middle School, were overjoyed when the Board of Education officially recognized Eid al-Fitr.
Unfortunately, anti-Muslim bullying remains a serious concern in Connecticut schools. Last year, two Muslim students in Waterbury were violently assaulted in what authorities later classified as a hate crime. Read more HERE. CAIR-CT has also heard from numerous Muslim families across the state whose children have experienced harassment, many of which go unreported.
CAIR-CT encourages school districts across Connecticut to follow Bethel's example and adopt inclusive policies that reflect the diversity of their student populations including Danbury, Cheshire, Berline, Meriden, Monroe and others.
CAIR-CT offers a comprehensive resource, the Back to School Resource Guide to help educators, administrators, and families foster safe and inclusive school environments.
CAIR-CT also offers the Educator's Guide to Islamic Religious Practices designed to assist teachers, principals, administrators and other educators in formulating and implementing policies and programs that will help to create a supportive academic environment.
CAIR-CT is the Connecticut chapter of the nation's largest Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization. Its mission is to enhance understanding of Islam, protect civil rights, promote justice, and empower American Muslims.
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CAIR's mission is to protect civil rights, enhance understanding of Islam, promote justice, and empower American Muslims.
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Original text here: https://www.cair.com/press_releases/cair-ct-welcomes-bethel-board-of-educations-recognition-of-eid-al-fitr-as-an-official-school-holiday/
[Category: Sociological]
Building a Better Delivery System for Gene Editing Machines by Re-engineering the Cellular Factory
CAMBRIDGE, Massachusetts, April 25 -- The Whitehead Institute issued the following news:
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Building a better delivery system for gene editing machines by re-engineering the cellular factory
Written by Mackenzie White
Gene editing has emerged as a powerful approach for targeting the genetic causes of disease, but getting the editing machinery into the right cells efficiently, safely, and at the scale needed for therapies remains one of the biggest set of challenges in the field. Among the leading delivery vehicles are engineered virus-like particles, which resemble viruses - and share their
... Show Full Article
CAMBRIDGE, Massachusetts, April 25 -- The Whitehead Institute issued the following news:
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Building a better delivery system for gene editing machines by re-engineering the cellular factory
Written by Mackenzie White
Gene editing has emerged as a powerful approach for targeting the genetic causes of disease, but getting the editing machinery into the right cells efficiently, safely, and at the scale needed for therapies remains one of the biggest set of challenges in the field. Among the leading delivery vehicles are engineered virus-like particles, which resemble viruses - and share theirknack for entering human cells - but carry no viral genes. Scientists load them with gene editing tools and use them to make precise changes in targeted cells.
Most efforts to improve these particles have focused on redesigning the particles themselves. A new study led by Valhalla Fellow at Whitehead Institute Aditya Raguram and lab technician Diana Ly focuses instead on the human cells that produce them. Published on April 24 in Nature Communications, the research introduces a platform for systematically identifying which genes in these cells drive or block particle assembly, and using those findings to engineer cells that yield more potent delivery vehicles.
"We can engineer the particles as much as we want, but if we don't understand how the producer cells are actually making the particles, we're limited in how much we can improve production," Raguram says.
Engineering the optimal producer cell
Because virus-like particles are assembled inside cultured human cells, Ly and colleagues ran a genome-wide search to identify which of those cells' genes matter most to the production process.
They created a large pool of producer cells in which nearly every gene in the human genome was switched off somewhere in the population, one gene per cell. The way virus-like particles package their cargo - the gene editing tools -- meant that each particle ended up carrying a small piece of genetic material identifying the gene that had been switched off in the cell that made it. By reading those genetic tags in the final particles, the team could see which gene shutdowns helped particle production, which ones hurt it, and which ones had no effect.
"One thing that surprised me was how clearly the search was able to highlight specific pathways that play a major role in the production of these particles," Ly says.
A standout gene
The single gene whose removal most boosted production normally acts as a brake on the cell's output of guide RNAs--short pieces of RNA that direct gene editors to their targets. When the researchers disabled that gene, producer cells generated more guide RNAs, and each particle carried more functional cargo.
The improvement also extended across different gene editing tools and particle designs: the team tested the modified producer cells with several kinds of gene editors and with four other delivery-vehicle systems from other labs, and in every case, the engineered cells produced better particles.
"Because guide RNA loading is basically universal across different cargo types and particle types, this improvement could be quite broadly useful beyond the particles we've developed," Raguram says.
The search also identified a group of genes that had a more complicated effect. Removing these genes increased production of the protein components of the particles, but decreased delivery potency. In specialized production settings where protein cargo is the limiting ingredient, however, the same modified cells substantially boosted potency.
Expanding the platform
The Raguram Lab is already extending the screening platform in new directions, moving beyond simply switching off one gene at a time to examine how other kinds of cellular changes influence particle production. The team is sharing its engineered cell lines with the research community and collaborating with other groups to improve the delivery of gene editing tools into immune cells, neurons, and other cell types important for treating disease.
For Raguram, the work speaks to a broader task facing the gene editing field.
"This delivery challenge is one of the last remaining bottlenecks that really limits the widespread application of gene editing technologies," he says. "Solving the challenges associated with production could move virus-like particles closer to being ready for use in patients."
The ultimate goal, Ly says, is to use these particles to treat genetic diseases.
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Notes
Ly, D., Jang, H., Goel, A. et al. Genome-wide screening reveals producer-cell modifications that improve virus-like particle production and delivery potency. Nat Commun 17, 3695 (2026). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-026-71925-8
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Original text here: https://wi.mit.edu/news/building-better-delivery-system-gene-editing-machines-re-engineering-cellular-factory
[Category: Healthcare]
Americans for Tax Reform: Nebraska Session Ends With Expanded Truth in Taxation Protections, Falls Short of Real Property Tax Reform
WASHINGTON, April 25 -- Americans for Tax Reform posted the following commentary by Jack Baum:
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Nebraska Session Ends with Expanded Truth in Taxation Protections, Falls Short of Real Property Tax Reform
With the 2026 legislative session concluded, Nebraska lawmakers deserve credit for taking a meaningful step toward greater transparency and accountability in the property tax system. But while progress was made, the legislature ultimately fell short of delivering the kind of comprehensive reform needed to provide lasting relief to taxpayers.
One of the major successes achieved this session
... Show Full Article
WASHINGTON, April 25 -- Americans for Tax Reform posted the following commentary by Jack Baum:
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Nebraska Session Ends with Expanded Truth in Taxation Protections, Falls Short of Real Property Tax Reform
With the 2026 legislative session concluded, Nebraska lawmakers deserve credit for taking a meaningful step toward greater transparency and accountability in the property tax system. But while progress was made, the legislature ultimately fell short of delivering the kind of comprehensive reform needed to provide lasting relief to taxpayers.
One of the major successes achieved this sessionwas the passage of LB 803, legislation to strengthen Nebraska's Truth in Taxation framework in ways that will make a real difference for taxpayers. By moving public hearings earlier in the budget process, taxpayers will now have the opportunity to weigh in before decisions are finalized. Prior to these reforms, taxpayers were often left in the dark, as the opportunity for public input often came when budgets had already been settled.
The law also tightens limitations on property tax collection growth. When property valuations rise, local governments can no longer automatically collect more revenue without explicitly asking for it. Doing so now requires a public hearing and a two-thirds vote. That change directly addresses one of the biggest frustrations taxpayers face: rising property tax bills even when rates stay the same.
These reforms are a strong step in the right direction. They won't directly lower property tax bills, but they will slow the pace of growth and inject much-needed accountability into the system. Just as importantly, they lay the groundwork for future reforms by putting guardrails in place that make it harder for unchecked revenue growth to continue.
However, transparency alone is not a substitute for structural reform. While LB 803 improves the process, it does not fully address the core driver of Nebraska's property tax problem: the steady growth in local government spending and, by extension, total property tax collections.
Proposals like LB 1219, which stalled in the legislature, sought to address this problem by focusing on limiting total property tax collections rather than simply adjusting rates or relying on temporary relief measures.
Specifically, the bill caps how much more a political subdivision can collect in total property taxes compared to the previous year. Because the bill limits how fast overall property tax collections can grow, it puts downward pressure on levy rates when valuations rise. That means increases in assessed value alone cannot drive higher property tax collections, and levy rates must fall to stay within the cap. As a result, property tax bills grow more slowly and predictably, rather than automatically rising alongside property values.
This approach recognizes a fundamental truth: as long as local governments are allowed to collect more revenue year after year, property tax bills will continue to rise, regardless of how the system is restructured on paper.
Nebraska lawmakers made meaningful progress this session by strengthening Truth in Taxation and giving taxpayers a louder voice in the process. But the job is far from finished. With a stronger foundation now in place, the legislature should build on this momentum and pursue reforms that directly limit spending growth and deliver real, lasting property tax relief.
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Original text here: https://atr.org/nebraska-session-ends-with-expanded-truth-in-taxation-protections-falls-short-of-real-property-tax-reform/
[Category: Political]