Council of State Governments
The Council of State Governments (CSG) is a nonpartisan non-profit organization in the United States serving the state governments. It serves state legislatures, state courts, and executive branch officials and agencies, and is the only multi-branch organization of state governments in the United States. CSG was founded by Colorado Senator Henry Toll in 1933. CSG also serves the U.S. territories of Puerto Rico and the Northern Mariana Islands (commonwealths) as well as Guam and the United States Virgin Islands.
CSG is headquartered in Lexington, Kentucky, and also operates four regional offices, for the East, Midwest, West, and South. The Council also maintains an office in Washington, D.C. to monitor federal government activities and their impact on state issues and programs. CSG's Justice Center, based in New York City and with offices around the country, provides practical, nonpartisan advice and consensus-driven strategies—informed by available evidence—to increase public safety and strengthen communities
CSG is funded by annual dues paid by each state and territory to support CSG's operations, in addition to revenue derived from publication sales, registration fees, corporate grants and contributions, and investment income.
The organization is headed by a governor who serves as President and a member of a state legislature who serves as chairman.
Several Canadian provinces are international members of some of CSG's regional subdivisions, notably the "Eastern Regional Conference" or ERC. In fact, Quebec City was chosen as the venue for CSG's annual national meeting in 1999, Halifax, Nova Scotia as ERC's annual regional meeting in the summer of 2011, and Edmonton, Alberta in the summer of 2012.
CSG is the precursor and partner of the National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL), with which it shares Executive Committee members, and is the umbrella organization for multiple state leaders' organizations as well as research entities, such as the Healthy States Initiatives, founded by CSG and the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), headquartered in Atlanta, GA, as well as the National Hispanic Caucus of State Legislators.
Regional offices
- CSG West – Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washing, Wyoming, American Samoa, Guam, Northern Mariana Islands
- CSG Midwest – Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, Wisconsin
- CSG South – Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, West Virginia
- CSG East – Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands
CSG Presidents and Chairs
- 2016 – Vice Chairman Nebraska Sen. Beau McCoy
- 2015 – Chairman-Elect New York Sen. Carl Marcellino
- 2014 – West Virginia Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin and Tennessee Sen. Mark Norris (U.S. politician)
- 2013 – Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon and Alaska Senate Majority Leader Gary Stevens (Alaska politician)
- 2012 – Puerto Rico Gov. Luis Fortuño and Kansas Senate Majority Leader Jay Emler
- 2011 – Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer and Connecticut Deputy Speaker Robert (Bob) Godfrey
- 2009 – South Dakota Gov. Mike Rounds and Kentucky Senate President David Williams
- 2008 – Connecticut Gov. M. Jodi Rell and North Dakota Rep. Kim Koppelman
- 2007 – Oklahoma Gov. Brad Henry and Delaware Rep. Deborah Hudson
- 2006 – Vermont Gov. Jim Douglas and West Virginia Senate President Earl Ray Tomblin
- 2005 – Delaware Gov. Ruth Ann Minner[2] and Nevada Assemblyman Lynn Hetrick
- 2004 – Alaska Gov. Frank Murkowski and Minnesota Sen. John Hottinger
- 2003 – Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and Massachusetts Rep. Dan Bosley
- 2002 – Maryland Gov. Parris Glendening and Virginia Sen. John Chichester
- 2001 – Idaho Gov. Dirk Kempthorne and New Mexico Sen. Manny Aragón[3]
- 2000 – Kentucky Gov. Paul E. Patton and Illinois Rep. Tom Ryder
- 1999 – Wisconsin Gov. Tommy Thompson and Puerto Rico Sen. Kenneth McClintock[4]
- 1998 – Puerto Rico Gov. Pedro Rosselló[5] and Mississippi Rep. Charlie Williams
- 1997 – New York Gov. George Pataki and Colorado Sen. Jeff Wells
- 1996 – Utah Gov. Mike Leavitt and Ohio Senate President Stan Aronoff
- 1995 – Missouri Gov. Mel Carnahan and New York Assemblyman Bob Wertz
- 1994 – Nebraska Gov. Ben Nelson and North Carolina Rep. Bob Hunter
- 1993 – Illinois Gov. Jim Edgar and Oregon Sen. Jeannette Hamby
- 1992 – Georgia Gov. Zell Miller and Iowa Rep. John Connors
- 1991 – Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad and Massachusetts Sen. W. Paul White
- 1990 – Delaware Gov. Michael N. Castle and Georgia Speaker Thomas B. Murphy
- 1989 – Connecticut Gov. William A. O'Neill and Utah Senate Pres. Arnold Christensen
- 1988 – North Carolina Gov. James Martin and South Dakota Senate President Pro Tem Mary McClure
- 1987 – Nevada Gov. Richard H. Bryan and New York Sen. Hugh Farley
- 1986 – Indiana Gov. Robert D. Orr and Arkansas Rep. John E. Miller
- 1985 – Virginia Gov. Charles S. Robb and Nevada Sen. James I. Gibson
- 1984 – Illinois Gov. James R. Thompson and North Dakota Rep. Roy Hausauer
- 1983 – Utah Gov. Scott M. Matheson and Connecticut Rep. Timothy J. Moynihan
- 1982 – Vermont Gov. Richard A. Snelling and North Carolina Sen. Kenneth C. Royall Jr.
- 1981 – Georgia Gov. George Busbee and Oregon Rep. William Grannell
- 1980 – Indiana Gov. Otis R. Bowen, M.D. and Ohio Senate Pres. Oliver Ocasek
- 1979 – Kentucky Gov. Julian M. Carroll and Connecticut Speaker James J. Kennelly
- 1978 – Michigan Gov. William G. Milliken and Texas Speaker Bill Clayton
- 1977 – Florida Gov. Reubin O'Donovan Askew and Indiana Speaker Pro Tem John J. Thomas
- 1976 – Iowa Gov. Robert D. Ray and Virginia Sen. J. Harry Michael Jr.
- 1975 – Utah Gov. Calvin L. Rampton and New York Sen. John J. Marchi
- 1974 – Washington Gov. Daniel J. Evans and Idaho Speaker William J. Lanting
- 1973 – Maryland Gov. Marvin Mandel and California Assemblyman Charles J. Conrad
- 1972 –
- 1971 –
- 1970 –
- 1969 –
- 1968 –
- 1967 –
- 1966 –
- 1965 –
- 1964 –
- 1963 –
- 1962 –
- 1961 –
- 1960 –
- 1959 –
- 1958 –
- 1957 – Virginia Gov. Thomas B. Stanley and Wisconsin Sen. Frank E. Panzer
- 1956 – Washington Gov. Arthur B. Langlie and Louisiana Sen. Robert A. Ainsworth, Jr.
- 1955 – Louisiana Gov. Robert F. Kennon and Vermont Sen. Carleton G. Howe
- 1954 – Colorado Gov. Dan Thornton and Mississippi Sen. Stanton Hall
- 1953 – Texas Gov. Allan Shivers and New York Rep. Elisha T. Barrett
- 1952 – Nebraska Gov. Val Peterson and Virginia Rep. J. Maynard Magruder
- 1951 – Ohio Gov. Frank J. Lausche and Illinois Rep. Bernice T. Van der Vries[6]
- 1950 – Kansas Gov. Frank Carlson and Missouri Sen. John W. Noble
- 1949 – Maryland Gov. William Preston Lane Jr. and Maine Sen. Burton M. Cross
- 1948 – Maine Gov. Horace Hildreth and North Carolina Sen. Charles H. Jenkins
- 1947 – Florida Gov. Millard F. Caldwell and Indiana Sen. John W. Van Ness
- 1946 – Pennsylvania Gov. Edward Martin and Maryland Rep. S. Denmead Kolb
- 1945 – Utah Gov. Herbert B. Maw and Nebraska Sen. C. Petrus Peterson
- 1944 – Massachusetts Gov. Leverett Saltonstall and Utah Sen. Grant Macfarlane
- 1943 – Maryland Gov. Herbert R. O'Conor and Indiana Sen. Thurman A. Biddinger
- 1942 – Minnesota Gov. Harold E. Stassen and New Jersey Sen. Robert C. Hendrickson
- 1941 – Minnesota Gov. Harold E. Stassen and South Carolina Sen. Edgar Brown
- 1940 – Missouri Gov. Lloyd C. Stark and Pennsylvania Rep. Ellwood J. Turner
- 1939 – Nebraska Gov. Robert L. Cochran and New York Assemblyman Harold C. Ostertag
- 1938 – Nebraska Gov. Robert L. Cochran and Illinois Sen. T.V. Smith
References
- Reentry Policy Council
- http://www.intute.ac.uk/socialsciences/cgi-bin/fullrecord.pl?handle=sosig982243563-22610
- Consensus Project: A Guide to Mental Health Court Design and Implementation
- http://www.lib.umich.edu/govdocs/state.html
- http://www.charitynavigator.org/index.cfm?bay=search.summary&orgid=3579
- State of Illinois Wins National Award for Efficiency Efforts (example of interest in States Innovation Awards)
- Pennsylvania Wins Second Innovations Award (example of interest in States Innovation Awards)
- http://www.releases.gov.nl.ca/releases/1999/exec/0806n05.htm