CASA - Court Appointed Special Advocates
Feb 13, 2026
Dawn Rockey, Executive Director
CASA - Court Appointed Special Advocates

Presiding: Brad Carter

BIO

Dawn Rockey joined CASA (Court Appointed Special Advocates) for Lancaster County as Executive Director in December 2006.
 
Dawn came to CASA with a background in state government and commercial banking.  Dawn worked for the State of Nebraska for 12 years, in both the legislative and executive branches, serving as Nebraska State Treasurer from 1991-1995.  She spent the next nearly 12 years with First National Bank of Omaha in several commercial banking related positions and as a Second Vice President in Treasury Services working with corporate bank customers on their cash management needs.
 
Dawn has served as on the following boards: Cause Collective Lincoln (formerly Human Services Federation, 2024 to present), Lincoln Electric System Administrative Board (2005-2011), Nebraska Accountability and Disclosure Commission (1997-2003), the Nebraska CASA Association (2013-2020), the United Way of Lincoln and Lancaster County Board (2020-2023),  Aiding Angels Foundation (2013 to present), the Nebraska State Historical Society Foundation Board (2021 to present, current President), and the Community Action Head Start Policy Council (2025 to present). 
 
Dawn is a graduate of UNL, with a bachelor’s degree in International Affairs and completed graduate hours in Public Administration and Political Science. She has lived in Lincoln for more than 40 years.  Her husband, Brian, is the Director of the Nebraska Lottery and they have a 27-year-old son.
 
CASA or Court Appointed Special Advocates for Lancaster County is a local non-profit organization that recruits, trains and supports community volunteers who advocate on behalf of abused and neglected children in juvenile court. CASA volunteers get to know their assigned children and gather information. Volunteers then submit reports directly to the judge with their findings and recommendations. The goal is to provide the judge with more information and to move the children more quickly to permanency (a safe, stable, permanent home). CASA volunteers keep cases moving and make sure children and their families are receiving the services they need to correct the problems that brought them into the system.  Ultimately, the role of the CASA volunteer is to make recommendations that are in the children’s best interests