Nebraska has not enacted predictive or fair-scheduling legislation. Employers follow federal Fair Labor Standards Act and Nebraska Wage and Hour Act rules, and no statute expressly preempts local scheduling ordinances, though none have been adopted.
Unlike Oregon or New York City, Nebraska has no statewide predictive scheduling, advance-notice, or right-to-rest law. The Wage and Hour Act, Neb. Rev. Stat. 48-1201 to 48-1209.04, sets minimum wage, overtime exemptions, and pay frequency, but does not require advance schedule posting, premium pay for shift changes, or rest between shifts. Federal FLSA overtime rules still apply. Nebraska does not preempt local scheduling ordinances, so cities could enact such rules under home rule, but none has. Employees may pursue Wage Payment and Collection Act remedies under sections 48-1228 to 48-1234 for unpaid agreed wages, including cancelled shifts if minimum hours were promised.
Failure to pay agreed wages for scheduled work can support a Wage Payment and Collection Act claim, with remedies including unpaid wages, costs, attorney's fees, and a statutory penalty up to two times the unpaid wages on judgment.
See how Papillion's worker scheduling preemption rules stack up against other locations.
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