Council of State Governments
The Council of State Governments is a nonpartisan, non-profit organization in the United States that serves all three branches of state government.
Founded in 1933 by Colorado state Sen. Henry W. Toll, CSG is a region-based forum that fosters the exchange of insights and ideas to help state officials shape public policy.
The CSG National Headquarters is located in Lexington, Kentucky, but the council also operates regional offices in Atlanta, Chicago, New York City and Sacramento, California. CSG maintains an office in Washington, D.C. that monitors federal government activities and their impact on state issues and programs.
As a national organization with a regional focus, The Council of State Governments is committed to providing its members with unique opportunities for personal and professional growth at the regional and national levels. Leadership development opportunities with CSG include the annual Henry Toll Fellowship Program, which brings together some of the nation's top officials from all three branches of government for an intensive program designed to stimulate personal assessment and growth while providing networking and relationship-building opportunities. Leadership development programs offered in each of the CSG regions—East, Midwest, South and West—are designed to equip talented state policymakers with the skills and strategies to meet the challenges they face in their states and regions.
Other CSG services include policy academies, research briefs, webinars and at the national and regional levels.
The [|CSG Justice Center], which is based in New York City and has offices across the country, provides practical, nonpartisan advice and consensus-driven strategies—informed by available evidence—to increase public safety and strengthen communities.
CSG national leadership includes a governor, who serves as the national president, and a member of a state legislature, who serves as national chair. CSG regions are chaired by state legislators.
CSG membership includes 56 U.S. states and territories; six Canadian provinces also partner with the council. Annual dues are paid by each state and territory to support the council's operations. In addition, revenue is derived from publication sales, registration fees, corporate grants and contributions, and investment income.
The CSG is considered part of the 'Big Seven', a group of organisations that represent local and state government in the United States.
History
In 1925, Henry Wolcott Toll, then a Colorado state senator, created the American Legislators’ Association, the forerunner to CSG, which provided legislators with information and opportunities to connect. Toll believed interstate cooperation was imperative for states to maintain control over inherent state issues.CSG—the only national organization that serves all three branches of state government—was created in 1933. "Probably 12 or 15 of us sat around a table in a small room," Toll recalled 25 years later. "The Council of State Governments had never been heard of before that day."
About five years after CSG was conceived, a new building at 1313 East 60th St., in Chicago became the council's central home. In 1967, CSG and the Commonwealth of Kentucky entered into an agreement that provided CSG with a headquarters building in Lexington, Kentucky. The building was dedicated on June 9, 1969. In 1993, the state financed the construction of a second building to facilitate the council's continued growth.
Some CSG services have been offered since the early years. The Book of the States, which provides comprehensive data and analysis about state governments and their operations, was first published in 1935. State Government News, which later became the CSG bimonthly magazine, Capitol Ideas, was first published in 1958.
The Eastern Regional Conference was established in 1937. CSG opened a Washington, D.C. office in 1938. The Midwestern Legislative Conference was established in 1945. Both the Southern Conference—now the Southern Legislative Conference—and the Western Regional Conference—now CSG West—were established in 1947. In 2006, the CSG Justice Center was formed.
The CSG Henry Toll Fellowship program, a leadership development program for state officials, was established in 1986.
Timeline
- 1925 – The American Legislators' Association was established in Denver, CO
- 1930 – The headquarters of the American Legislators' Association moved to Chicago, IL
- 1935 – The Council of State Governments was established
- 1937 – The Eastern Regional Conference was established as the eastern regional office of CSG
- 1938 – CSG opened a Washington D.C. office
- 1945 – The Midwestern Legislative Conference is established as the midwestern regional office of CSG
- 1947 – The Southern Conference and the Western Regional Conference are established to support CSG's work in the southern and western regions
- 1969 – The CSG headquarters were moved to Lexington, KY
- 1986 – The CSG Henry Toll Fellowship, a leadership development program for state officials was established
- 2006 – The CSG Justice Center was formed out of the ERC justice program
- 2015 – CSG rededicates its national headquarters after a $5.5 million renovation to the original headquarters building
- 2016 – CSG changes address to 1776 Avenue of the States
Regional offices
Region | Headquarters | U.S. States | U.S. Territories | Associate Members | Website |
CSG West | Sacramento | Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Wyoming | American Samoa, Guam, Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands | Alberta, British Columbia | |
CSG Midwest | Chicago | Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, Wisconsin | Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario | ||
CSG South | Atlanta | Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, West Virginia | |||
CSG East | New York City | Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont | Puerto Rico, United States Virgin Islands, Washington, D.C. | New Brunswick, Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Prince Edward Island, Quebec |
Justice Center
On December 3, 2006, The Council of State Governments' Governing Board voted to transform the Eastern Regional Conference's criminal justice program into a national Justice Center. The Justice Center's Board of Directors includes state legislative leaders, judges, corrections administrators, juvenile justice agency directors, and law enforcement professionals, who together represent a cross-section of the senior-level state officials who shape criminal justice policy across the country. The Justice Center is headquartered in New York City with additional offices in Austin, Seattle, Bethesda, and Washington, D.C.Affiliate organizations
Affiliate organizations contribute specialized expertise, information, resources and issues to the overall mission of CSG. In turn, CSG offers a mechanism by which affiliates may tap into CSG's products and services, and a forum for bringing issues to a broader, collective state audience.-
Publications
- Capitol Ideas
- The Current State
- The Book of the States
- Shared State Legislation or SSL
CSG Presidents and Chairs
Year | President | State | Chair | State |
1938 | Gov. Robert L. Cochran | Nebraska | Sen. Thomas Vernor Smith | Illinois |
1939 | Gov. Robert L. Cochran | Nebraska | Assemblyman Harold C. Ostertag | New York |
1940 | Gov. Lloyd C. Stark | Missouri | Rep. Ellwood J. Turner | Pennsylvania |
1941 | Gov. Harold E. Stassen | Minnesota | Sen. Edgar Brown | South Carolina |
1942 | Gov. Harold E. Stassen | Minnesota | Sen. Robert C. Hendrickson | New Jersey |
1943 | Gov. Herbert R. O'Conor | Maryland | Sen. Thurman A. Biddinger | Indiana |
1944 | Gov. Leverett Saltonstall | Massachusetts | Sen. Grant Macfarlane | Utah |
1945 | Gov. Herbert B. Maw | Utah | Sen. C. Petrus Peterson | Nebraska |
1946 | Gov. Edward Martin | Pennsylvania | Rep. S. Denmead Kolb | Maryland |
1947 | Gov. Millard F. Caldwell | Florida | Sen. John W. Van Ness | Indiana |
1948 | Gov. Horace Hildreth | Maine | Sen. Charles H. Jenkins | North Carolina |
1949 | Gov. William Preston Lane Jr. | Maryland | Sen. Burton M. Cross | Maine |
1950 | Gov. Frank Carlson | Kansas | Sen. John W. Noble | Missouri |
1951 | Gov. Frank J. Lausche | Ohio | Rep. Bernice T. Van der Vries | Illinois |
1952 | Gov. Val Peterson | Nebraska | Rep. J. Maynard Magruder | Virginia |
1953 | Gov. Allan Shivers | Texas | Rep. Elisha T. Barrett | New York |
1954 | Gov. Dan Thornton | Colorado | Sen. Stanton Hall | Mississippi |
1955 | Gov. Robert F. Kennon | Louisiana | Sen. Carleton G. Howe | Vermont |
1956 | Gov. Arthur B. Langlie | Washington | Sen. Robert A. Ainsworth, Jr. | Louisiana |
1957 | Gov. Thomas B. Stanley | Virginia | Sen. Frank E. Panzer | Wisconsin |
1958 | Gov. William G. Stratton | Illinois | Sen. John W. Noble | Missouri |
1959 | Gov. LeRoy Collins | Florida | Sen. Elisha T. Barrett | New York |
1960 | Gov. J. Caleb Boggs | Delaware | Sen. James J. McBride | California |
1961 | Gov. Stephen L.R. McNichols | Colorado | Sen. Hal Bridenbaugh | Nebraska |
1962 | Gov. Wesley Powell | New Hampshire | Speaker J. D. McCarty | Oklahoma |
1963 | Gov. Albert D. Rosellini | Washington | Sen. David Davis | Illinois |
1964 | Gov. John Anderson Jr. | Kansas | Sen. Clarence L. Carpenter | Arizona |
1965 | Gov. Grant Sawyer | Nevada | Sen. C. George DeStefano | Rhode Island |
1966 | Gov. John H. Reed | Maine | Sen. Albert M. Spradling Jr. | Missouri |
1967 | Gov. William L. Guy | North Dakota | Sen. Charles Welch Jr. | Utah |
1968 | Gov. John A. Volpe | Massachusetts | Sen. Edward L. Marcus | Connecticut |
1969 | Gov. Buford Ellington | Tennessee | Sen. Edwin C. Becker | North Dakota |
1970 | Gov. John A. Love | Colorado | Sen. Charles L. Delaney | Vermont |
1971 | Gov. Warren E. Hearnes | Missouri | Sen. Charles L. Delaney | Vermont |
1972 | Gov. Arch A. Moore Jr. | West Virginia | Speaker Ray S. Smith, Jr. | Arkansas |
1973 | Gov. Marvin Mandel | Maryland | Assemblyman Charles J. Conrad | California |
1974 | Gov. Daniel J. Evans | Washington | Speaker William J. Lanting | Idaho |
1975 | Gov. Cal Rampton | Utah | Sen. John J. Marchi | New York |
1976 | Gov. Robert D. Ray | Iowa | Sen. J. Harry Michael Jr. | Virginia |
1977 | Gov. Reubin O'Donovan Askew | Florida | Speaker Pro Tem John J. Thomas | Indiana |
1978 | Gov. William G. Milliken | Michigan | Speaker Bill Clayton | Texas |
1979 | Gov. Julian M. Carroll | Kentucky | Speaker James J. Kennelly | Connecticut |
1980 | Gov. Otis R. Bowen, M.D. | Indiana | Senate Pres. Oliver Ocasek | Ohio |
1981 | Gov. George Busbee | Georgia | Rep. William Grannell | Oregon |
1982 | Gov. Richard A. Snelling | Vermont | Sen. Kenneth C. Royall Jr. | North Carolina |
1983 | Gov. Scott M. Matheson | Utah | Rep. Timothy J. Moynihan | Connecticut |
1984 | Gov. James R. Thompson | Illinois | Rep. Roy Hausauer | North Dakota |
1985 | Gov. Charles S. Robb | Virginia | Sen. James I. Gibson | Nevada |
1986 | Gov. Robert D. Orr | Indiana | Rep. John E. Miller | Arkansas |
1987 | Gov. Richard H. Bryan | Nevada | Sen. Hugh Farley | New York |
1988 | Gov. James Martin | North Carolina | Senate President Pro Tem Mary McClure | South Dakota |
1989 | Gov. William A. O'Neill | Connecticut | Senate President Arnold Christensen | Utah |
1990 | Gov. Michael N. Castle | Delaware | Speaker Thomas B. Murphy | Georgia |
1991 | Gov. Terry Branstad | Iowa | Sen. W. Paul White | Massachusetts |
1992 | Gov. Zell Miller | Georgia | Rep. John Connors | Iowa |
1993 | Gov. Jim Edgar | Illinois | Sen. Jeannette Hamby | Oregon |
1994 | Gov. Ben Nelson | Nebraska | Rep. Bob Hunter | North Carolina |
1995 | Gov. Mel Carnahan | Missouri | Assemblyman Bob Wertz | New York |
1996 | Gov. Mike Leavitt | Utah | Senate President Stan Aronoff | Ohio |
1997 | Gov. George Pataki | New York | Sen. Jeff Wells | Colorado |
1998 | Gov. Pedro Rosselló | Puerto Rico | Rep. Charlie Williams | Mississippi |
1999 | Gov. Tommy Thompson | Wisconsin | Sen. Kenneth McClintock | Puerto Rico |
2000 | Gov. Paul E. Patton | Kentucky | Rep. Tom Ryder | Illinois |
2001 | Gov. Dirk Kempthorne | Idaho | Sen. Manny Aragón | New Mexico |
2002 | Gov. Parris Glendening | Maryland | Sen. John Chichester | Virginia |
2003 | Gov. Mike Huckabee | Arkansas | Rep. Dan Bosley | Massachusetts |
2004 | Gov. Frank Murkowski | Alaska | Sen. John Hottinger | Minnesota |
2005 | Gov. Ruth Ann Minner | Delaware | Assemblyman Lynn Hettrick | Nevada |
2006 | Gov. Jim Douglas | Vermont | Senate President Earl Ray Tomblin | West Virginia |
2007 | Gov. Brad Henry | Oklahoma | Rep. Deborah Hudson | Delaware |
2008 | Gov. M. Jodi Rell | Connecticut | Rep. Kim Koppelman | North Dakota |
2009 | Gov. Joe Manchin III | West Virginia | Senator Bart Davis | Idaho |
2010 | Gov. Mike Rounds | South Dakota | Senate President David Williams | Kentucky |
2011 | Gov. Brian Schweitzer | Montana | Rep. Robert Godfrey | Connecticut |
2012 | Gov. Luis Fortuño | Puerto Rico | Sen. Jay Emler | Kansas |
2013 | Gov. Jay Nixon | Missouri | Sen. Gary Stevens | Alaska |
2014 | Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin | West Virginia | Sen. Mark Norris | Tennessee |
2015 | Gov. Brian Sandoval | Nevada | Sen. Carl Marcellino | New York |
2016 | Gov. Jack Markell | Delaware | Sen. Beau McCoy | Nebraska |
2017 | Gov. Kate Brown | Oregon | Sen. Kelvin Atkinson | Nevada |
2018 | Gov. Gary Herbert | Utah | Senate President Robert Stivers | Kentucky |
2019 | Gov. Ricardo Rosselló | Puerto Rico | Sen. Lou D'Allesandro | New Hampshire |