Several York County commissioners summarized takeaways from the recent Nebraska Association of County Officials (NACO) conference, focusing on energy policy briefings and strains in the mental-health system.
Commissioners described sessions featuring utility representatives and discussions about multiple energy sources. Speaker 3 said panels discussed OPPD and NPPD and noted “seeing that building natural gas and whatever else as well besides nuclear,” and characterized natural gas as “quicker and less regulation” in some contexts. Speaker 6 criticized parts of the battery-storage presentation as appearing biased toward a single set of expert sources and urged caution when using those presentations to shape local zoning decisions.
Mental health emerged as a major local concern. Speaker 1 said a recurring theme from the conference was that the state’s closure of some mental-health facilities has left counties to absorb people who previously received institutional care, including placement in county jails. Speaker 1 recounted a Douglas County commissioner’s remarks that long-acting medication injections are available but access and cost limit immediate use.
Operational details and local follow-ups were also mentioned: Speaker 6 said the county identified a $6,700 generator option that could address a potential $60,000 need, noting the selected unit lacks automatic automatic-start capability and would require manual activation. Commissioners said the networking at NACO—sharing experiences with counties as diverse as Scottsbluff and Douglas—was among the most valuable elements of the conference.
Speakers emphasized the need for the state’s assistance on mental-health capacity and suggested the board may press state officials for solutions. No formal county policy or binding directive resulted directly from the conference reports in the transcript.