“She never made me feel less than. She was 100 percent there. She listened. She was patient. There need to be more Caitlins in the world. She didn’t judge my situation. She didn’t make me feel like I owed her anything. She guided me every step.” -Traci, Legal Aid of Nebraska client
“It’s hard to think about financial things when you are worried about your child. Parents are pulled in a million different directions,” said Cristy. Legal Aid’s assistance helped to carry some of the weight that was on this family’s shoulders.
Legal Aid of Nebraska client receives settlement after pregnancy discrimination case at meat packing plant
Legal Aid successfully keeps creditor from garnishing stimulus check of unemployed, pregnant mother
“When you’re falling through the cracks, and you feel like nobody else will help you, and you don’t know where to go — Legal Aid was there,” said Angie. “She was the first person that said, ‘I’m going to help you. I’m going to try my best to help you get what you need,” Angie said she couldn’t even begin to describe the enormity of the task her Legal Aid attorney took on. “But she did it. She knocked it out of the park.”
“Legal Aid of Nebraska and [our attorney] Phil was there for us, standing up for us with the banks when they continued to try and take advantage of us,"
‘I feel hope when I talk to you’: How a Legal Aid paralegal helped a struggling Grand Island woman with more than just a bankruptcy
After she was late with rent, Priscilla’s landlord accused her of smoking in the unit and threatened her with eviction. She was ready to go to court to defend herself rather than lose her apartment and be forced to move.
"I knew I deserved better and I know my baby deserved to grow up in a safe place full of love, not anger.”
The brutal assault happened in 2017. Her husband used pieces of wood and broken bottles to beat Jennifer over the head, resulting in six staples to close a three-inch laceration. Her husband went to prison for the assault, but was released after 18 months.
COVID-19 hits home: Legal Aid helps Grand Island woman receive unemployment benefits
Last October, Nancy started getting letters in the mail from the Small Business Administration (SBA) - which was odd, because she had never applied for a business loan and is not a business owner. She received a letter from the US Treasury about a Small Business Loan she never applied for. One of the letters even threatened to withhold money from her social security checks.
Read our 2024 Impact Report
Big numbers, personal impact:
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Requests for assistance in 2024
19,887
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Cases closed
13,923
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Economic impact
$12,276,796







