Today’s Legislative agenda includes second-round debate for LB 121 – which would end Nebraska’s harmful lifetime SNAP ban for those with certain drug-related convictions.

If passed, the bill would help provide food security for some of Nebraska’s most vulnerable families, create a bridge to self-sufficiency and promote a safer, more equitable state.

Preventing access to nutritional assistance doesn’t just affect the previously incarcerated; it spreads to the livelihood of their families. Approximately one in ten children in Nebraska have a parent who is incarcerated.

While families are still eligible to receive SNAP when a member is banned, the banned individual’s income still counts toward the household and results in fewer SNAP benefits for the household. A 2018 University of Maryland study showed that depriving individuals with drug felony convictions access to SNAP in Florida increased their rate of recidivism by approximately 9.5%.[1] Given Nebraska’s recidivism rate (30.3%),[2] cost of incarceration ($46,000 per year),[3] and number of individuals incarcerated for drug related offenses (870),[4] ending our state ban would result in 23 fewer individuals recidivating, saving more than $1 million in tax dollars.

People of color are arrested more frequently, charged more harshly, and therefore more subject to the drug ban than white people. Eliminating this ban would reduce disparities in our criminal justice system rather than filling our prisons with non-violent, low level offenders.[5]

You can email your senator here to ask them to support LB 121Nebraska Public Media will stream legislative debate on the bill live.


[1] Tuttle, Cody, “Snapping Back: Food Stamp Bans and Criminal Recidivism,” American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, Vol. 11, No. 2, May 2019.
[2] Nebraska Department of Correctional Services, Quarterly Data Sheet, January – March 2020, available at https://corrections.nebraska.gov/sites/default/files/ndcs_quarterly_data_sheet_fy20-q3_0.pdf.
[3] Based on public statements by Scott Frakes, Director of Nebraska State Department of Corrections.
[4] See Note 2.
[5] Nebraska Appleseed (2022). LB121 SNAP Reentry Fact Sheet.